These national, departmental, and municipal boundaries for Guatemala are extracted from a single, topology-encoded GeoJSON file using D3 and TopoJSON. Original shapefiles were sourced from the GADM database of Global Administrative Areas.
FILE SPACING: | |
# double space a file | |
sed G | |
# double space a file which already has blank lines in it. Output file | |
# should contain no more than one blank line between lines of text. | |
sed '/^$/d;G' |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Usage: | |
# | |
# cat file.yml | load-yaml-dump-json | |
# ./load-yaml-dump-json # enter data and ctl-d when finished | |
yaml=`cat` | |
echo == Perl |
I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!
\
resource "digitalocean_droplet" "haproxy-www" { | |
image = "ubuntu-14-04-x64" | |
name = "haproxy-www" | |
region = "nyc2" | |
size = "512mb" | |
private_networking = true | |
ssh_keys = [ | |
"${var.ssh_fingerprint}" | |
] | |
connection { |
This tutorial will teach you how to set up a Telegram MTProxy on an Ubuntu 22.04 sever using AWS Lightsail, although you can use any other Linux distribution and cloud provider.
Using a Telegram proxy is a safe, easy and effective way of overcoming Telegram bans. It's useful, for example, to keep using Telegram under tyrannical regimes, or to circumvent judges' decisions to block Telegram.
Telegram proxies are a built-in feature in all Telegram apps (both mobile and desktop). It allows Telegram users to connect to a proxy in just one or two clicks / taps.
Telegram proxies are safe: Telegram sends messages using their own MTProto secure protocol, and the proxy can only see encrypted traffic – there's no way for a proxy to decrypt the traffic and read the messages. The proxy does not even know which Telegram users are using the proxy, all the proxy sees is just a list of IPs.