SavageEd2 is a new project that expands on the features of the famous SavageEd.
SavageEd2 is a very small and fast Windows notepad replacement written in x86 assembly language (HLA).
It can edit files of any size, limited only by memory.
It can encrypt text files using AES encryptionwith 256 bit key (max 32 character password) in .enc format.
It has advanced Pattern searching features.
Unlike the famous SavageEd it has no option to write to the registry and is portable by default.
SavageEd2 V0.02.00 is a BETA though it has been available since 11/27/2010
Vote Your Preference: http://www.portablefreeware.com/index.php?id=2186
SavageEd2
Re: SavageEd2
Links are dead for this now.
Re: SavageEd
Last (and only) SavageEd version I had is v1.4.5 v1.4.6 (dated originally from 2010-11-27).
Mirrors at https://mir.cr/QUV3RQAZ.
ZIP MD5: 83ce2c37af19e48955aeaf76bdc96275
ZIP SHA256: e7856b88a460e074ee2b7fbab9de7b994ce57c99ecb6139cc61c92536bbf8821
Included 'SavageEd.exe' scan at Virustotal:
https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/0d4 ... /detection


ZIP MD5: 83ce2c37af19e48955aeaf76bdc96275
ZIP SHA256: e7856b88a460e074ee2b7fbab9de7b994ce57c99ecb6139cc61c92536bbf8821

https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/0d4 ... /detection

Re: SavageEd
SavageEd v.1.4.6: https://files02.tchspt.com/storage2/temp/SavageEd.zip
Re: SavageEd
EDIT: while testing juverax version, as both executables were the same, I realized that the version I posted earlier is in fact v1.4.6; I was misled by 'SavageEd_doc.txt' but after I ran it, the "About" box clearly states it.
That link didn't work in SeaMonkey for me (it did with Wget, though)...
But I found that version's page at https://www.techspot.com/downloads/4254-savageed.html.
Better yet, source is included just in case some savvy assembly dev wants to fork it -- because If only SavageEd had URL auto-activation, it would be the perfect light & fast Notepad replacement.
juverax wrote:SavageEd v.1.4.6: https://files02.tchspt.com/storage2/temp/SavageEd.zip
That link didn't work in SeaMonkey for me (it did with Wget, though)...
But I found that version's page at https://www.techspot.com/downloads/4254-savageed.html.
What's New:
- replace with empty string now works
Better yet, source is included just in case some savvy assembly dev wants to fork it -- because If only SavageEd had URL auto-activation, it would be the perfect light & fast Notepad replacement.
Re: SavageEd2
It seems that savageEd is still developed, possibly by a different developer (the original developer is Sevag Krikorian, who is also the author of HIDE, an IDE for programming in HLA, see https://www.softpedia.com/get/Programmi ... HIDE.shtml .
SavageEd has a page on github: https://github.com/Androthi/SavageEd with the source code only.
In the right pane, click https://sites.google.com/view/androth/h ... l-assembly to download a compiled version for Windows (version: 0.5.4), this will take you to: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZNGVtv ... u_-I8/view
Virustotal analysis: 6/67 ( https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/61c ... /detection )
Possibly, this version is a fork of the original SavageEd, and that would explain the different versioning system.
Given the difficulty to locate some applications, and this is the case with SavageEd, could TPFC host local copies of these "difficult-to-find apps", that are worth archiving?
I tried to save on https://web.archive.org/ the two pages:
https://sites.google.com/view/androth/h ... l-assembly
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZNGVtv ... u_-I8/view
. . . Apparently everything went well, and the challenge is now to retrieve the pages from the archive.org!
SavageEd has a page on github: https://github.com/Androthi/SavageEd with the source code only.
In the right pane, click https://sites.google.com/view/androth/h ... l-assembly to download a compiled version for Windows (version: 0.5.4), this will take you to: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZNGVtv ... u_-I8/view
Virustotal analysis: 6/67 ( https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/61c ... /detection )
Possibly, this version is a fork of the original SavageEd, and that would explain the different versioning system.
Given the difficulty to locate some applications, and this is the case with SavageEd, could TPFC host local copies of these "difficult-to-find apps", that are worth archiving?
I tried to save on https://web.archive.org/ the two pages:
https://sites.google.com/view/androth/h ... l-assembly
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZNGVtv ... u_-I8/view
. . . Apparently everything went well, and the challenge is now to retrieve the pages from the archive.org!