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#!/usr/bin/env python
import requests
MORSE_MAP = {
'A': '.-', 'B': '-...', 'C': '-.-.',
'D': '-..', 'E': '.', 'F': '..-.',
'G': '--.', 'H': '....', 'I': '..',
'J': '.---', 'K': '-.-', 'L': '.-..',
'M': '--', 'N': '-.', 'O': '---',
#!/usr/bin/env python
import math
import sys
from moviepy.editor import AudioClip, VideoFileClip, concatenate_videoclips
# Get average RGB of part of a frame. Frame is H * W * 3 (rgb)
# Assumes x1 < x2, y1 < y2
Rank Type Prefix/Suffix Length
1 Prefix my+ 2
2 Suffix +online 6
3 Prefix the+ 3
4 Suffix +web 3
5 Suffix +media 5
6 Prefix web+ 3
7 Suffix +world 5
8 Suffix +net 3
9 Prefix go+ 2
@nileshtrivedi
nileshtrivedi / home-server.md
Last active June 1, 2024 00:11
Home Server setup: Raspberry PI on Internet via reverse SSH tunnel

Raspberry Pi on Internet via reverse SSH tunnel

HackerNews discussed this with many alternative solutions: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24893615

I already have my own domain name: mydomain.com. I wanted to be able to run some webapps on my Raspberry Pi 4B running perpetually at home in headless mode (just needs 5W power and wireless internet). I wanted to be able to access these apps from public Internet. Dynamic DNS wasn't an option because my ISP blocks all incoming traffic. ngrok would work but the free plan is too restrictive.

I bought a cheap 2GB RAM, 20GB disk VM + a 25GB volume on Hetzner for about 4 EUR/month. Hetzner gave me a static IP for it. I haven't purchased a floating IP yet.

@tomhicks
tomhicks / plink-plonk.js
Last active July 26, 2024 01:10
Listen to your web pages
@IanColdwater
IanColdwater / twittermute.txt
Last active July 2, 2024 02:25
Here are some terms to mute on Twitter to clean your timeline up a bit.
Mute these words in your settings here: https://twitter.com/settings/muted_keywords
ActivityTweet
generic_activity_highlights
generic_activity_momentsbreaking
RankedOrganicTweet
suggest_activity
suggest_activity_feed
suggest_activity_highlights
suggest_activity_tweet

'Users hate change'

This week NN Group released a video by Jakob Nielsen in which he attempts to help designers deal with the problem of customers being resistant to their new site/product redesign. The argument goes thusly:

  1. Humans naturally resist change
  2. Your change is for the better
  3. Customers should just get used to it and stop complaining

There's slightly more to it than that, he caveats his argument with requiring you to have of course followed their best practices on product design, and allows for a period of customers being able to elect to continue to use the old site, although he says this is obviously only a temporary solution as you don't want to support both.

@giannitedesco
giannitedesco / gash.py
Created August 30, 2018 08:13
Send secret messages to someone using their public ssh key
#!/usr/bin/python3
__copyright__ = "Copyright (c) 2018 Gianni Tedesco"
__licence__ = "GPLv3"
__doc__ = "Tool for sending secret messages using ssh keys"
from argparse import ArgumentParser
try:
import nacl.utils
from nacl.signing import SigningKey,VerifyKey
@gboudreau
gboudreau / AuthyToOtherAuthenticator.md
Last active July 26, 2024 17:24 — forked from Ingramz/AuthyToOtherAuthenticator.md
Export TOTP tokens from Authy
@atoponce
atoponce / gist:07d8d4c833873be2f68c34f9afc5a78a
Last active July 26, 2024 09:10 — forked from tqbf/gist:be58d2d39690c3b366ad
Cryptographic Best Practices

Cryptographic Best Practices

Putting cryptographic primitives together is a lot like putting a jigsaw puzzle together, where all the pieces are cut exactly the same way, but there is only one correct solution. Thankfully, there are some projects out there that are working hard to make sure developers are getting it right.

The following advice comes from years of research from leading security researchers, developers, and cryptographers. This Gist was [forked from Thomas Ptacek's Gist][1] to be more readable. Additions have been added from