Drive Removal of USB Drives in Total Commander
Moderators: Hacker, petermad, Stefan2, white
Drive Removal of USB Drives in Total Commander
Hello,
I'm using Windows- and now Total-Commander for a long time and I could not miss it any more. Thank you for this extraordinary tool!
In the last months I'm working oftenly with multiple USB drives. But I hate the removal action with Window's 'hardware removal'.
So I would greatly appreciate, if the removal option could be integrated also in the right click context menu of the drive buttons of total commander.
Kind regards and a Happy New Year
Jürgen
I'm using Windows- and now Total-Commander for a long time and I could not miss it any more. Thank you for this extraordinary tool!
In the last months I'm working oftenly with multiple USB drives. But I hate the removal action with Window's 'hardware removal'.
So I would greatly appreciate, if the removal option could be integrated also in the right click context menu of the drive buttons of total commander.
Kind regards and a Happy New Year
Jürgen
Hello JFalke,
Roman
Do you have the "Eject" item in the context menu of the USB drive?So I would greatly appreciate, if the removal option could be integrated also in the right click context menu of the drive buttons of total commander.
Roman
Mal angenommen, du drückst Strg+F, wählst die FTP-Verbindung (mit gespeichertem Passwort), klickst aber nicht auf Verbinden, sondern fällst tot um.
Re: Drive Removal of USB Drives in Total Commander
Exactly what do you hate about it?JFalke wrote:But I hate the removal action with Window's 'hardware removal'.
So I would greatly appreciate, if the removal option could be integrated also in the right click context menu of the drive buttons of total commander.
Exactly what do you want from such functionality?
- Balderstrom
- Power Member
- Posts: 2148
- Joined: 2005-10-11, 10:10 UTC
USB Disk Ejector
Command Line Options wrote:
- Eject the drive that the program is running from.
- Eject a drive by specifying a drive letter.
- Eject a drive by specifying a drive name.
- Eject a drive by specifying a partial drive name.
Hi infimum,
the process is not very praticable:
first klick on the left arrow icon in the right bottom screen place, the iconlist of the miniicons of some tasks appears, find the hardware removal icon between different others, click on it, then select the drive to remove. These are four clicks, where you have to place your mouse very precisely (think of a laptop!). If you miss by bad mouse position or laptop one of the clicks, the procedure starts from begin.
I would prefer a simple right click on total commanders drive buttons, click removal that's all, like its realized for removal of a network drivem e.g.
the process is not very praticable:
first klick on the left arrow icon in the right bottom screen place, the iconlist of the miniicons of some tasks appears, find the hardware removal icon between different others, click on it, then select the drive to remove. These are four clicks, where you have to place your mouse very precisely (think of a laptop!). If you miss by bad mouse position or laptop one of the clicks, the procedure starts from begin.
I would prefer a simple right click on total commanders drive buttons, click removal that's all, like its realized for removal of a network drivem e.g.
I agree for another reason - clicking the Safely Remove Hardware and Eject Media tray icon always spins up my secondary hard disk, which is asleep most of the time.JFalke wrote:the process is not very praticable
Roman
Mal angenommen, du drückst Strg+F, wählst die FTP-Verbindung (mit gespeichertem Passwort), klickst aber nicht auf Verbinden, sondern fällst tot um.
- Balderstrom
- Power Member
- Posts: 2148
- Joined: 2005-10-11, 10:10 UTC
http://safelyremove.com/
Hi at all,
I meanwhile discovered another program - commercial, but much more powerful: USB Safely Remove. Not very expensive (20$) and a very good alternative (may be configured to hide unused usb memory card slots) until drive buttons context menu becomes expanded.
I meanwhile discovered another program - commercial, but much more powerful: USB Safely Remove. Not very expensive (20$) and a very good alternative (may be configured to hide unused usb memory card slots) until drive buttons context menu becomes expanded.
- Balderstrom
- Power Member
- Posts: 2148
- Joined: 2005-10-11, 10:10 UTC
@JFalke, USB Management is fairly easy if you use the tools Windows provides.
E.G.
Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Computer Management
..
Storage
+ Disk Management
(Or, %SystemRoot%\system32\compmgmt.msc /s )
Find your USB drive in the list. Assign a specific Drive to the USB card.
Find your Memory Card in the list. Assign a specific PATH to that Memory Card. Windows uses the unique hardware ID of the USB Drive/Memory Card. So only that specific card (or usb drive) will ever utilize that particular Drive or Folder.
E.G.
Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Computer Management
..
Storage
+ Disk Management
(Or, %SystemRoot%\system32\compmgmt.msc /s )
Find your USB drive in the list. Assign a specific Drive to the USB card.
Find your Memory Card in the list. Assign a specific PATH to that Memory Card. Windows uses the unique hardware ID of the USB Drive/Memory Card. So only that specific card (or usb drive) will ever utilize that particular Drive or Folder.
*BLINK* TC9 Added WM_COPYDATA and WM_USER queries for scripting.