This contract for general design sevices is a hybrid of this one on Docracy and the AIGA one also found on Docracy. I wanted something that was simple yet covered the important bits such as payment schedule, kill fee, liability, rights etc. Change the parts in square brackets to suit. I've had this checked by a lawyer but I recommend if you decide to use it you also get it looked at by a lawyer too. Never do work without a contract in place. The majority of clients are good, decent and want to create great work with you — having a solid contract in place will strengthen that relationship and provide you with protection should things go awry.
Exporting password + one-time code data from iCloud Keychain is now officially supported in macOS Monterey and Safari 15 (for Monterey, Big Sur, and Catalina). You can access it in the Password Manager’s “gear” icon (System Preferences > Passwords on Monterey, and Safari > Passwords everywhere else), or via the File > Export > Passwords... menu item). You shouldn't need to hack up your own exporter anymore.
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.
- Clone this Gist.
- For card sizes other than A5, edit the
size
value in@page
, and theheight
andwidth
properties ofbody
. - Add contents to each face. The simplest approach is to add an image called
front.png
of the same dimensions as the card. - Generate a PDF from the HTML + CSS. If using Prince, it's as simple as
prince index.html card.pdf
. - Take the PDF to a printer, and ask them to print as many copies as you need.
Ideas are cheap. Make a prototype, sketch a CLI session, draw a wireframe. Discuss around concrete examples, not hand-waving abstractions. Don't say you did something, provide a URL that proves it.
Nothing is real until it's being used by a real user. This doesn't mean you make a prototype in the morning and blog about it in the evening. It means you find one person you believe your product will help and try to get them to use it.
#!/usr/bin/python | |
""" | |
Produces a Linux Netfilter u32 rule to match DNS requests for a given | |
domain name and/or a given query type. | |
Typical usage: | |
% python generate-netfilter-u32-rule.py --qname ripe.net --qtype ANY | |
Can be embedded in iptables' invocations for instance: | |
rule=$(python generate-rule.py args...) |
""":mod:`hstore` --- Using PostgreSQL hstore with SQLAlchemy | |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
.. note:: | |
I released it under Public Domain. Feel free to use! | |
It provides :class:`Hstore` type which makes you to store Python | |
dictionaries into hstore columns in PostgreSQL. For example:: |