-Use @-s@ to print file sizes rounded up to the nearest kilobyte:
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">arv keep ls -s c1bad4b39ca5a924e481008009d94e32+210</span>
-221887 var-GS000016015-ASM.tsv.bz2
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>
-
-Use @arv keep get@ to download the contents of a collection and place it in the directory specified in the second argument (in this example, @.@ for the current directory):
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">arv keep get c1bad4b39ca5a924e481008009d94e32+210/ .</span>
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>
-
-You can also download indvidual files:
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">arv keep get 887cd41e9c613463eab2f0d885c6dd96+83/alice.txt .</span>
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>
-
-With a local copy of the file, we can do some computation, for example computing the md5 hash of the complete file:
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">md5sum var-GS000016015-ASM.tsv.bz2</span>
-44b8ae3fde7a8a88d2f7ebd237625b4f var-GS000016015-ASM.tsv.bz2
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>
-
-h2. Using arv-mount
-
-Use @arv-mount@ to take advantage of the "File System in User Space / FUSE":http://fuse.sourceforge.net/ feature of the Linux kernel to mount a Keep collection as if it were a regular directory tree.
-
-<notextile>
-<pre><code>/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">mkdir mnt</span>
-/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">arv-mount --collection c1bad4b39ca5a924e481008009d94e32+210 mnt &</span>
-/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">cd mnt</span>
-/scratch/<b>you</b>/mnt$ <span class="userinput">ls</span>
-var-GS000016015-ASM.tsv.bz2
-/scratch/<b>you</b>/mnt$ <span class="userinput">md5sum var-GS000016015-ASM.tsv.bz2</span>
-44b8ae3fde7a8a88d2f7ebd237625b4f var-GS000016015-ASM.tsv.bz2
-/scratch/<b>you</b>/mnt$ <span class="userinput">cd ..</span>
-/scratch/<b>you</b>$ <span class="userinput">fusermount -u mnt</span>
-</code></pre>
-</notextile>