If you have ruby installed (how to install ruby):
sudo gem install gist
If you're using Bundler:
Blog post: Ryan Huber - Distributed Security Alerting | |
https://medium.com/several-people-are-coding | |
Video: Zane Lackey - Building a Modern Security Organization | |
https://duo.com/blog/duo-tech-talk-building-a-modern-security-engineering-organization | |
Krebs on Security Blog | |
https://www.krebsonsecurity.com | |
Sony Breach |
If you have ruby installed (how to install ruby):
sudo gem install gist
If you're using Bundler:
Update: I have heard that 10.8.3 has solved this problem for some people, so I rolled back my changes and installed the update. No change on my monitor. Nevertheless, it’d be a good idea to update OS X before trying this, since it may fix the issues with your particular hardware.
I recently bought a MacBook Pro (with ‘Retina’ screen), but when I hooked it up to my Dell U2410 monitor via HDMI cable I was shocked by the poor picture quality. The contrast was all wrong and text was misshapen. No amount of calibration in the monitor or software would fix it.
Short answer: OS X thinks my monitor is a TV, and is using the YCbCr colour space rather than RGB. I had to override an EDID setting to force the RGB colour space, and it is now working correctly.
Long answer: I haven’t owned a Mac for a while and h
The purpose of this document is to make recommendations on how to browse in a privacy and security conscious manner. This information is compiled from a number of sources, which are referenced throughout the document, as well as my own experiences with the described technologies.
I welcome contributions and comments on the information contained. Please see the How to Contribute section for information on contributing your own knowledge.
package main | |
import ( | |
"crypto/tls" | |
"crypto/x509" | |
"fmt" | |
"io" | |
"log" | |
) |