
IF: null-if-id state: N/A speed: N/A duplex: N/A mac: N/Aĭrives: HDD Total Size: 4000.8GB (60.3% used) IF: enp9s0 state: up speed: 100 Mbps duplex: full mac:

Sound: Advanced Linux Sound Architecture v: k4.4.0-21-generic GLX Version: 4.5.0 NVIDIA 367.35 Direct Rendering: YesĪudio: Card-1 Intel 8 Series/C220 Series High Definition Audio ControllerĬard-2 Intel Xeon E3-1200 v3/4th Gen Core Processor HD Audio Controller Resolution: Renderer: GeForce GTX 860M/PCIe/SSE2 Graphics: Card-1: Intel 4th Gen Core Processor Integrated Graphics ControllerĬard-2: NVIDIA GM107M bus-ID: 01:00.0ĭisplay Server: X.Org 1.18.3 driver: nvidia Machine: System: LENOVO product: 20349 v: Lenovo Y50-70 Touch I don't think it's necessary for troubleshooting purposes, but here's my machine's data just in case: This is a dual boot machine, so I do have the option of restarting in Windows mode and downloading a program called Similarity, the free version of which works well, but I shouldn't have to do that, should I?Īm I doing something wrong? I've played with the options and haven't gotten any better results. All the way down to 1% and still nothing.

I put those files in the ignore list and tried it again-after adjusting the "filter hardness" down from 95% to 85%. I was hoping that DupeGuru would discover them and allow me to choose which ones to keep (based on size, resolution, etc.). They are the exact same photos but different dimensions.

I know for a fact that I have many duplicate files (at least 117) because I know that I downloaded them and put them on my external hard drive. The files it found were very similar, but not duplicates. I ran it for the first time last night and it found 4 duplicate files. I downloaded and installed DupeGuru after reading about how highly regarded it is.
