- $0.015 per GB/m (at least 680 GB), $0.01 per GB/m for more than 100 TB, $0.006 per GB/m for more than 1 PB.
- git-annex discount: at least 100GB, paid annually)
- attic/borg discount: at least 100 GB, paid annually)
- Remote SSH commands (checksum, mv, cp, rm, tree, dd, etc.) supported
- git
<script> | |
function view_books() | |
{ | |
$.getJSON('https://www.googleapis.com/books/v1/volumes?q=food+allergies&maxResults=5', function(data) { | |
var items = []; | |
$.each(data, function(key, val) { | |
items.push('<li id="' + key + '">' + val + '</li>'); | |
}); |
the new github notifications (https://github.com/blog/1204-notifications-stars) leaves me wanting more!
- when someone comments on a gist that I either own or have also commented on
- when someone comments on a commit (in a project that I'm not part of) that I have commented on
- when someone makes a commit to a fork of one of my repos
notifications settings should let you choose whether or not to receive emails for the above things. there should also be a web UI that shows you a list of all comments/messages for the above scenarios. at the moment https://github.com/notifications only shows you github issue names which is less useful than showing the actual message (the old notifications page showed actual messages)
<html> | |
<head> | |
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.3/jquery.min.js"></script> | |
<script src="/socket.io/socket.io.js"></script> | |
<script> | |
$(document).ready(function() { | |
var socket = io.connect('http://localhost'); | |
$('#button').click(function(e){ | |
socket.emit('click'); | |
e.preventDefault(); |
The question: how can we use ES6 modules in Node.js, where modules-as-functions is very common? That is, given a future in which V8 supports ES6 modules:
- How can authors of function-modules convert to ES6
export
syntax, without breaking consumers that dorequire("function-module")()
? - How can consumers of function-modules use ES6
import
syntax, while not demanding that the module author rewrites his code to ES6export
?
@wycats showed me a solution. It involves hooking into the loader API to do some rewriting, and using a distinguished name for the single export.
This is me eating crow for lots of false statements I've made all over Twitter today. Here it goes.
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html lang="en"> | |
<head> | |
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> | |
<title>imgur oauth</title> | |
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery.min.js"></script> | |
<script> | |
$(function () { | |
var extractToken = function(hash) { |
#!/usr/bin/env node | |
var http = require('http'); | |
var argv = process.argv.splice(2), | |
truecount = argv.length, | |
pages = []; | |
function printUrls() { | |
if (--truecount > 0) | |
return; |
Note: this was written in April/May 2014 and the API may has definitely changed since. I have nothing to do with Tinder, nor its API, and I do not offer any support for anything you may build on top of this. Proceed with caution
I've sniffed most of the Tinder API to see how it works. You can use this to create bots (etc) very trivially. Some example python bot code is here -> https://gist.github.com/rtt/5a2e0cfa638c938cca59 (horribly quick and dirty, you've been warned!)
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<title>MemeMaker-Simple</title> | |
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, maximum-scale=1.0"> | |
<meta name="mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes"> | |
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes"> | |
<style> |