Hi all,
I found .max files on my old database. Please advise how can I read them.
Thanks
Regards
Hi all,
I found .max files on my old database. Please advise how can I read them.
Thanks
Regards
I have started using Recoll to index all my files on my Ubuntu 22.04 desktop. Although on first pass it takes a long time to index the universe of files thereafter it is very useful. Update index from time to time as files are added, relocated, renamed. Blacklist paths you do not need.
I have looked at my index and I user Query field: ext:max
This means ... " list all indexed files with extension [ext] = [max]". Hover mouse over Query field to see "cheat sheet". Examples of queries.
I see :
index.js
LICENSE
package.json
README.md
They spring from node.js it seems.
Last edited by dragonfly41; 2 Weeks Ago at 07:51 PM.
cat, more, less, hexedit…
Much depends on _how many_ files to be previewed and commands then applied, file by file. I still maintain that Recoll is a very convenient tool to go through hundreds of archived files. I have found one *.max file which represents SageMath. But one click in Recoll index I can preview the content. It is the usual choice of GUI versus CLI. Leverage both in my thinking. Or in Recoll you can map MIME types to custom MIME type viewers including a custom script as suggested which runs, cat, more, less, hexedit. Orchestrate desktop assets. I have no knowledge of PaperPort.
As I wrote I have no knowledge of PaperPort. But a quick research shows this.
https://support.hp.com/ph-en/document/bps01259
So should the question be "how to view Windows source *.max files in Ubuntu?"
And this surfaces.
https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2143591
https://sourceforge.net/projects/maxview/
If you are using Recoll (although you write you only have 2-4 *.max files, hardly a sole reason to leverage Recoll), you could set the Recoll GUI to open installed app "maxview" when you click on any indexed *.max file seen in Recoll. For example I have many (hundreds) CherryTree files with extension *.ctd indexed and I changed the mapping to launch cherrytree %f (open the indexed file in app cherrytree). Or I could map to an XML editor XMLCopyEditor. Same mapping method applies to all extensions (MIME types). Often the Default Viewer setting needs to be customised (particularly so when different apps share the same MIME type. For such scenario I map to a routing script which then opens the indexed file from a list of apps.
[Postscript]
PhotoRec mentions PaperPort in recovery options.
https://www.bikechatforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=2390043
https://cse.google.com/cse?cx=partne...generic..0.0.0.
Last edited by dragonfly41; 1 Week Ago at 02:08 PM. Reason: Spotted PhotoRec in very old (20 years old) discussion.
The . max file format was developed by Autodesk for the 3ds Max application. 3ds Max is a 3D modeling, animation, and rendering solution used to create 3D animation for game development, design visualization, feature film and television effects, and education.
Source: Google.
So...this nonsense:
https://www.autodesk.com/support/tec...xWlSY4HVt.html
May want to switch to an RPM based distribution if this is the main use (I don't know if this is right. I don't use stuff like this but my Google-fu is strong)
Crafting this prompt to AI assistant
"Which applications use .max extension and how can they be viewed in Ubuntu?"
leads to here ..
https://github.com/sjg20/paperman
and possibly try importing into Blender.
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