This is the code you need to align images to the left:
000000 Officially Xerox | |
000001 SuperLAN-2U | |
000002 BBN (was internal usage only, no longer used) | |
000003 XEROX CORPORATION | |
000004 XEROX CORPORATION | |
000005 XEROX CORPORATION | |
000006 XEROX CORPORATION | |
000007 XEROX CORPORATION | |
000008 XEROX CORPORATION | |
000009 powerpipes? |
Step 1: Generate first ssh key Type the following command to generate your first public and private key on a local workstation. Next provide the required input or accept the defaults. Please do not change the filename and directory location.
workstation 1 $ ssh-keygen -t rsa
Finally, copy your public key to your remote server using scp
var mongoose = require('mongoose'); | |
mongoose.connect('mongodb://localhost/test'); | |
var db = mongoose.connection; | |
db.on('error', function() { | |
return console.error.bind(console, 'connection error: '); | |
}); | |
After my dad died, I wanted to be able to have access any of his online accounts going forward. My dad was a Safari user and used iCloud Keychain to sync his credentials across his devices. I don’t want to have to keep an OS X user account around just to access his accounts, so I wanted to export his credentials to a portable file.
This is the process I used to create a CSV file of his credentials in the format “example.com,user,pass”. This portable format would be pretty easy to import into 1Password or Safari in the future.
The way I went about this isn’t great; it opens up more opportunities for apps to control one’s Mac through Accessibility APIs, it writes plaintext passwords to disk, and it could use some cleaning up. A better approach might leverage the security
command line tool that ships with OS X. That said, I found this method to be a fun illustration of what’s possible us