Dcommander 3 0
Our software library provides a free download of DCommander 3.8.9 for Mac. The application lies within System Tools, more precisely File Managers. The most popular versions among the application users are 2.5, 2.1 and 1.2. The unique ID for this application's bundle is com.devstorm.dcommander. This application is suitable for Mac OS X 10.6. برنامه DCommander یک برنامه حرفهای برای مدیریت فایلهای شما در سیستم عامل مک است. این برنامه یک بهبوددهنده و تسهیلگر برای کاربرانی است که از سیستمعاملهای دیگر به سیستمعامل مک مهاجرت کردهاند. ویژگیها ۲ پنجره. David Fravor (born c. 1965) is a retired naval pilot and Commander of VFA-41 also known as 'The Black Aces'. He is one of the primary witness in the 2004 USS Nimitz UFO incident. DCommander features. DCommander is a straightforward file manager built to handle jobs of any size. Its dual-panel interface is the fastest way to copy files and keep track of both source files and destination files, reducing guesswork and ensuring the transparency of each operation.
Born | c. 1965 Ohio |
---|---|
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | Navy |
Rank | Naval flight commander |
Commander 300
David Fravor (born c. 1965) is a retired naval pilot and Commander of VFA-41 also known as 'The Black Aces'. He is one of the primary witness in the 2004 USS Nimitz UFO incident.[1] He was featured in the 2008 PBS documentary Carrier[2] and has been interviewed on Joe Rogan's podcast The Joe Rogan Experience.
Military career[edit]
Fravor joined the military at the age of 17. He has a career spanning 24 years, 18 of which was as a Navy pilot. He had completed five tours to the Persian Gulf starting after Operation Desert Storm.[3] He commanded a squadron of 12 airplanes consisting of 330 people. Fravor retired in 2006.[4]
USS Nimitz UFO incident[edit]
Prior to the incident, in early November 2004, the Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser USS Princeton, part of Carrier Strike Group 11, started recording intermittent radar tracks on an advanced AN/SPY-1B passive scanning phased array radar.[5][6] Thinking the brand new radar was malfunctioning, the Princeton sailors restarted and recalibrated the system but the tracks became sharper and clearer.[7] On or around 10 November, Navy Chief Petty Officer (E-7) Kevin Day, stationed on Princeton, noticed groups of five to 10 radar traces that were travelling southwards in a loose though fixed formation at 28,000 feet (8,500 m) in the immediate vicinity of Catalina and San Clemente islands.[7] He was startled by their slow speed of 100 knots (190 km/h; 120 mph) at such an altitude,[7] but received confirmation of their presence from radar operators on other vessels.[citation needed] The returns continued showing up continuously for almost a week, with sailors observing something moving erratically in the distance through the ship's magnified binoculars.[7]
Encounter[edit]
On November 14, 2004, Fravor was a primary witness to the USS Nimitz UFO incident. His crew consisted of 4 members which was called to investigate an unidentified fly object flying off the coast of San Diego while they were on a training exercise. The incident was recorded by Chad Underwood who also coined the term 'Tic Tac' UFO to describe the UFO. The radio operator Princeton instructed the pilots to change their course and investigate the unidentified radar spot observed by Princeton's own radar.[6] An E-2C Hawkeye airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft in flight at the time was contacted to conduct the intercept but the signals could only be detected after Princeton sent them coordinates and were too faint to obtain a precise target track.[8][7] A radio operator on Princeton asked the pilots if they were carrying operational weapons, to which the pilots replied that they were not.[6] The weather conditions for that day showed excellent visibility with a blue sky, no cloud cover, and a calm sea.[9]
The Navy pilots reached the intercept location without any contact on their new APG-73 radars.[8] They looked down at the sea and also noticed a turbulent oval area of churning water with foam and frothy waves 'the size of a Boeing 737 airplane'[10] with a smoother area of lighter color at the center, as if the waves were breaking over something just under the surface.[10] A few seconds later, they noticed an unusual object hovering with erratic movements at a height they estimated to be about 50 feet (15 m) above the churning water. Both Fravor[11] and Slaight later described the object as a large bright white Tic Tac, 30 to 46 feet (9.1 to 14.0 m) long, with no windshield nor porthole, no wing nor empennage, and no visible engine nor exhaust plume.[12][11][13][14]
Fravor began a circular descent to approach the object.[10] As Fravor further descended, he reported that the object began ascending along a curved path, maintaining some distance from the F-18, mirroring its trajectory in opposite circles.[10][11] Fravor then made a more aggressive maneuver, plunging his fighter to aim below the object, but at this point the UFO apparently accelerated and disappeared in less than two seconds, leaving the pilots 'pretty weirded out'.[10][14]
Subsequently, the two fighter jets began a new course to the combat air patrol (CAP) rendezvous point. 'Within seconds' Princeton radioed the jets that a radar target had appeared 60 miles (97 km) away at the predetermined rendezvous point. According to Popular Mechanics, a physical object would have had to move greater than 2,400 miles per hour (3,900 km/h) to reach the CAP ahead of the Navy fighters. Their jets have a maximum speed of Mach 1.8 (1,190 miles per hour (1,920 km/h)). To actually get there 'within seconds' would have required an air speed of at least 42,000 miles per hour (68,000 km/h). Two other jets went to investigate the new radar location, but 'By the time the Super Hornets arrived [...] the object had already disappeared.' Both F-18s then returned to Nimitz.[6] Commander Fravor reflected on his sighting: 'I have no idea what I saw. It had no plumes, wings or rotors and outran our F-18s. But I want to fly one.'[5]
Aftermath[edit]
In a 2017 interview with the Washington Post he stated 'It was a real object, it exists and I saw it' and when asked what he believes it was he speculated it was 'something not from the Earth.'[15]
In May 2019, Fravor was a featured speaker at the 'UFOfest' in McMinnville, Oregon. Fravor and UFO conspiracy theorist Bob Lazar reportedly 'spent a lot of time comparing notes', and Fravor has speculated the UFO used 'gravity propulsion' claimed by Lazar to be part of a US government coverup of alien technology.[16] In October that same year, Fravor was featured on The Joe Rogan Experience.[17]
Fravor had been a long time skeptic of UFO being extraterrestrial in nature. His said his newfound fame was disturbing. Fravor told VICE News believes the technology 'was far beyond the technology that we have'.[18] In an interview he noted that he does not want to be associated with the aliens claims.[19]
Other skeptics consider that while unexplainable and interesting, these videos are not proof the object in question is extraterrestrial in nature. There are technical reasons for the Navy not to release more information to the public including classified specifications and limitations of military equipment. Possibilities include a plane filmed with camera movement artefacts giving the impression of sudden acceleration. Shermer reminds: 'Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence'.[20]
References[edit]
- ↑Fravor, David (2018-06-28). 'Ret Navy Com David Fravor'. Phenomenon Radio (Interview). Interviewed by Linda Moulton Howe. KGRA. Retrieved 20 December 2018 – via Spreaker.
- ↑'CARRIER - The Crew'. pbs.org. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑Henry, Tom (2018-04-01). 'Close encounters of the Toledo kind: Fravor pursued UFO in 2004'. The Blade. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑Rosenberg, Eli (2017-12-18). 'Former Navy pilot describes UFO encounter studied by secret Pentagon program'. Washington Post. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑ 5.05.1Cooper, Helene; Kean, Leslie; Blumenthal, Ralph (December 16, 2017). '2 Navy Airmen and an Object That 'Accelerated Like Nothing I've Ever Seen''. The New York Times. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
- ↑ 6.06.16.26.3Mizokami, Kyle (December 18, 2017). 'That Time the U.S. Navy Had a Close Encounter With a UFO'. Popular Mechanics. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
- ↑ 7.07.17.27.37.4McMillan, Tim (November 12, 2019). 'The Witnesses'. Popular Mechanics. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
- ↑ 8.08.1Chierici, Paco (March 14, 2015). 'There I Was: The X-Files Edition'. FighterSweep.com. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ↑Phelan, Matthew (2019-12-19). 'Navy Pilot Who Filmed a UFO Speaks: 'It Wasn't Behaving by the Laws of Physics''. Intelligencer. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑ 10.010.110.210.310.4Finucane, Martin (January 16, 2018). 'This former Navy pilot, who once chased a UFO, says we should take them seriously'. Boston Globe. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
- ↑ 11.011.111.2'Secretive program tracked UFOs for 5 years'. CNN. December 18, 2017. Event occurs at 0:33. Retrieved 2019-09-23 – via YouTube.
It looks like a 40-foot-long Tic Tac, with no wings.
- ↑McCarthy, Kelly (December 18, 2017). 'Navy pilot recalls encounter with UFO: 'I think it was not from this world''. ABC News. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ↑Fravor, David (December 19, 2017). 'Navy Pilot on Encounter with UFO: 'Not from This World''. Erin Burnett OutFront (Interview). Interviewed by Jim Sciutto. CNN. Retrieved 2019-09-25 – via YouTube.
- ↑ 14.014.1Fravor, David (December 20, 2017). 'Navy pilot recalls 'out of this world' encounter' (Interview). Interviewed by Tucker Carlson. Fox News. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ↑Rosenberg, Eli (18 December 2017). 'Former Navy pilot describes UFO encounter studied by secret Pentagon program'. The Washington Post. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- ↑Knapp, George. 'I-Team: UFO Fest means close encounters of a different kind'. 8newsnow.com. KLAS-TV Las Vegas. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
- ↑St. Clair, Josh (2019-10-07). 'Joe Rogan Interviewed a Former Navy Pilot About His UFO Encounter'. Men's Health. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑Brownstein, Billie (2019-06-05). 'Meet the Top Gun Pilot Who Chased a UFO in an F/A-18F Super Hornet'. vice.com. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑Bendix, Aria (28 April 2020). 'The Pentagon just released a video of a Tic-Tac-shaped UFO. The Navy pilot who recorded it says he doesn't want to be associated with aliens'. Business Insider. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ↑Gault, Matthew (2020-05-06). 'The Skeptic's Guide to the Pentagon's UFO Videos'. vice.com. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
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Working with loads of files requires a lot of time and effort. To keep you from getting dizzy from all the moving and copying and organizing a reliable file manager is a must. When you start your search on the web, you'll find plenty of options, but are they any good? How do you know which one will suit your needs and is a reliable professional solution with dedicated tech support and regular updates? The right file manager will support all connections you are going to work with, will be easily adjustable to your working style, and of course will be totally worth the price you are paying for the license.
Compare Commander One with another dual-panel file manager DCommander
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DCommander promises smooth FTP and SCP connections, sorting of the files and folders by various parameters, offers tabs and show/hide hidden files option. DCommander doesn't offer support for many popular connections like FTPS, FTPES, FXP Copy, Dropbox, Google Drive, Amazon S3, WebDAV servers, Microsoft OneDrive, MTP, iOS. Commander One supports all of the above mentioned except for FXP Copy and SCP at this time.
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Commander One PRO has the Process Viewer where you can see and, if needed, quit the running processes on your machine. DCommander does not offer a Process Viewer. Same situation with Terminal emulation. Commander One features its own Terminal emulator for faster file operations without having to leave the app, while DCommander doesn't have one. Currently Commander One doesn't offer file and folder comparison, neither does DCommander. The latter app however features folder synchronization, while Commander One can't do it but promises to add this option in the future releases. Commander One can sort by 5 parameters, while DCommander offers sorting by 6 different parameters. Neither app offers hex editor at this time.
Personalization is important for comfortable work process. In Commander One you can create custom hotkeys for any action and customize context menu. DCommander doesn't offer these personalization features. Both apps offer themes.
Working with compressed folders is important we think. Commander One offers complete support for ZIP, 7zip, TAR (bz/gz/z/xz) archives and RAR in read-only mode. Additionally it works with IPA, APK, JAR, CAB, ISO types. Only ZIP files are fully supported by DCommander, while 7zip, TAR (bz/gz/z/xz) and RAR are not supported at all. DCommander also works with JAR files, but that's it. Commander One can work with compressed folders just as if they were regular ones.
Commander One is a free file manager for Mac OS X. You can also opt for purchasing a PRO version for more advanced possibilities. DCommander offers free 30-day trial version and then you'll have to buy a license.
Commander OneVersion 3.0(3368) (8 Feb, 2021) Release notes
Category: System Utilities