I don't know exactly, but since you usally know the size of the QuickTime movies you download, it's easy enough to perform a
find . -size +nk in your home directory where "n" is the size in kilobytes. Choose a number on the low side and this command will find everything that size and larger. Miark On Tue, 12 Nov 2002 15:30:21 -0500 Todd Slater <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tue, Nov 12, 2002 at 03:25:03PM -0500, Miark wrote: > > You can copy it out of your cache while it's still open in QuickTime. > > > > Miark > > I've seen temporary Internet files in Winblows, but where do you find > the cache on Linux (never had a reason to check it). Like for instance, > Mozilla or Phoenix? > > Thanks, > Todd > > > > On Tue, 12 Nov 2002 15:17:59 -0500 > > Todd Slater <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > You want the second link (the href= part of the embed). The problem is I > > > can't download it directly, either. I can open it as a url in QuickTime > > > (Windows) and even save it using QT Pro, but can do neither with the > > > free player. It has cache set to false, so I don't think your browser's > > > going to keep it in cache, either. > > > > > > I'd be interested in your solution, if you find one. > >
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