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@dphase
dphase / hack-your-own-slack-theme.md
Created September 21, 2021 13:47 — forked from focus97/hack-your-own-slack-theme.md
How to theme Slack (Dark, Solarized, White, Rosé, whatever)

How to theme Slack v4.12.0+

Update as of 8.08.2021:

  • Hid the bookmarks bar and fine-tuned some header styles.

If you want to add your own style to Slack, here's how.

My quazi-Tron Theme'ish?

I dunno what happened. I just wanted to try something sporty/future-y, I guess. Code for this is directly below.

@sbilly
sbilly / zerotier - client isolation.md
Created December 22, 2018 09:56 — forked from laduke/zerotier - client isolation.md
ZeroTier Rules Engine - Hub and Spoke - Client Isolation

Common ZeroTier Rules Engine question

  • Non-servers can talk to servers, but not each other
  • Kind of like Client Isolation on some WiFi controllers

Rules

# Allow only IPv4, IPv4 ARP, and IPv6 Ethernet frames. Typical default
drop
not ethertype ipv4
and not ethertype arp
@fnky
fnky / ANSI.md
Last active June 26, 2024 17:09
ANSI Escape Codes

ANSI Escape Sequences

Standard escape codes are prefixed with Escape:

  • Ctrl-Key: ^[
  • Octal: \033
  • Unicode: \u001b
  • Hexadecimal: \x1B
  • Decimal: 27
@focus97
focus97 / hack-your-own-slack-theme.md
Last active April 13, 2023 17:07
How to theme Slack (Dark, Solarized, White, Rosé, whatever)

How to theme Slack v4.12.0+

Update as of 8.08.2021:

  • Hid the bookmarks bar and fine-tuned some header styles.

If you want to add your own style to Slack, here's how.

My quazi-Tron Theme'ish?

I dunno what happened. I just wanted to try something sporty/future-y, I guess. Code for this is directly below.

@possen
possen / sierra-hackintosh-z270-ar.md
Last active May 11, 2019 18:35 — forked from unsalted/sierra-hackintosh-z170-a.md
Sierra 10.12.6 Hackintosh | Asus z270-AR, Intel i5 7600, MSI 1080 Gaming X 8GB, EVGA 1080 8GB Kaby Lake

Sierra 10.12.6 Hackintosh

Based upon this GIST which was great!

This is my build documentation for an ASUS PRIME Z270-AR setup with an MSI 1080 Gaming X 8GB, EVGA 1080 8GB and the Intel i5 7600, most of this came from the person I forked this guide from. This build also doesn't have NVRAM. Nearest I can tell everything is running as expected, including all USB and audio ports. Make sure you get MacOS 10.12.6 as it has native support for Kaby Lake processors, and you won't need to fake the CPUID.

Build

  • Asus Z270-AR
  • Intel Core i5-7600 (Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-7600 CPU @ 3.50GHz)*
@unsalted
unsalted / sierra-hackintosh-z170-a.md
Last active June 4, 2021 14:03
Sierra 10.12.3 Hackintosh | Asus z170-A, Intel i5 6500, MSI GTX 960 OC, GTX1070(Dormant)

Sierra 10.12.3 Hackintosh

This is my build documentation for an ASUS Z170-A setup with an NVIDIA GTX960 and the Intel i5 6500, most of this came from Storks asus rog maximus build, his audio instructions didn't work for me so it differs substantially there. This build also doesn't have NVRAM. Nearest I can tell everything is running as expected, including all USB and audio ports.

Build

  • Asus Z170-A
  • Intel Core i5-6500
  • Crucial Ballistix Sport LT 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4-2400 Memory
  • MSI GeForce GTX 960 4GB Installed in slot 1!
@phiresky
phiresky / motioninterpolation.vpy
Last active June 4, 2024 05:19
Realtime motion interpolating 60fps playback in mpv
# vim: set ft=python:
# see the README at https://gist.github.com/phiresky/4bfcfbbd05b3c2ed8645
# source: https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/2149
# source: https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/566
# source: https://github.com/haasn/gentoo-conf/blob/nanodesu/home/nand/.mpv/filters/mvtools.vpy
import vapoursynth
core = vapoursynth.get_core()
@danawoodman
danawoodman / 1-react-websockets-reflux.md
Last active September 15, 2021 14:48
Using WebSockets with Reflux and React

WebSockets + Reflux + React

Using WebSockets, React and Reflux together can be a beautiful thing, but the intial setup can be a bit of a pain. The below examples attempt to offer one (arguably enjoyable) way to use these tools together.

Overview

This trifect works well if you think of things like so:

  1. Reflux Store: The store fetches, updates and persists data. A store can be a list of items or a single item. Most of the times you reach for this.state in react should instead live within stores. Stores can listen to other stores as well as to events being fired.
  2. Reflux Actions: Actions are triggered by components when the component wants to change the state of the store. A store listens to actions and can listen to more than one set of actions.
@raggi
raggi / rack_sse.ru
Last active March 23, 2024 11:10
Rack SSE Example
# rack_sse.ru
#
# An example of basic real-time, single-room broadcast chat using Server Sent
# Events in plain old Rack. This example does NOT use hijack, or the async
# hacks, it just relies on a well implemented threaded Rack server (at time of
# writing this will therefore only work with puma!). Other servers should be
# fixed to support this, as it is pretty critical to how Rack *should* work on
# most servers. The only spec-acceptable failure in this case is not flushing
# the content stream on each yield (for which the rack spec has no workaround
# today).
@jboner
jboner / latency.txt
Last active June 25, 2024 12:58
Latency Numbers Every Programmer Should Know
Latency Comparison Numbers (~2012)
----------------------------------
L1 cache reference 0.5 ns
Branch mispredict 5 ns
L2 cache reference 7 ns 14x L1 cache
Mutex lock/unlock 25 ns
Main memory reference 100 ns 20x L2 cache, 200x L1 cache
Compress 1K bytes with Zippy 3,000 ns 3 us
Send 1K bytes over 1 Gbps network 10,000 ns 10 us
Read 4K randomly from SSD* 150,000 ns 150 us ~1GB/sec SSD