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i386net / mac-vendor.txt
Created May 9, 2021 14:01 — forked from aallan/mac-vendor.txt
List of MAC addresses with vendors identities
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?

Aligning images

left alignment

This is the code you need to align images to the left:

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i386net / multiple-ssh-authkeys.md
Created August 10, 2020 06:38 — forked from otkrsk/multiple-ssh-authkeys.md
Add multiple SSH keys to the authorized_keys file to enable SSH authentication when connecting to a server.

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

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i386net / app.js
Created July 6, 2020 12:23 — forked from stongo/app.js
Joi validation in a Mongoose model
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
mongoose.connect('mongodb://localhost/test');
var db = mongoose.connection;
db.on('error', function() {
return console.error.bind(console, 'connection error: ');
});
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i386net / gist:b40bb4df842e4c593540b1bbe44d81f0
Created July 3, 2020 14:16 — forked from rmondello/gist:b933231b1fcc83a7db0b
Exporting (iCloud) Keychain and Safari credentials to a CSV file

Exporting (iCloud) Keychain and Safari credentials to a CSV file

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