This gist shows how to create a GIF screencast using only free OS X tools: QuickTime, ffmpeg, and gifsicle.
To capture the video (filesize: 19MB), using the free "QuickTime Player" application:
<!doctype html> | |
<title>Site Maintenance</title> | |
<style> | |
body { text-align: center; padding: 150px; } | |
h1 { font-size: 50px; } | |
body { font: 20px Helvetica, sans-serif; color: #333; } | |
article { display: block; text-align: left; width: 650px; margin: 0 auto; } | |
a { color: #dc8100; text-decoration: none; } | |
a:hover { color: #333; text-decoration: none; } | |
</style> |
0-mail.com | |
0815.ru | |
0clickemail.com | |
0wnd.net | |
0wnd.org | |
10minutemail.com | |
20minutemail.com | |
2prong.com | |
30minutemail.com | |
3d-painting.com |
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BBEdit / BBEdit-Lite / TextWrangler Regular Expression Guide Modified: 2018/08/10 01:19 | |
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NOTES: | |
The PCRE engine (Perl Compatible Regular Expressions) is what BBEdit and TextWrangler use. | |
Items I'm unsure of are marked '# PCRE?'. The list while fairly comprehensive is not complete. |
##Create an alias to MAMP's PHP installation
To do this, we can simply create an alias for our bash profile. We'll be doing this is nano, though you can do it in vim or a number of other editors as well.
Within the terminal, run:
nano ~/.bash_profile
This will open nano with the contents, at the top in a blank line add the following line:
#Heading 1 ##Heading 2 ###Heading 3 ####Heading 4 #####Heading 5 ######Heading 6
Paragraph
<config> | |
<!-- See sample config: /usr/share/doc/fahclient/sample-config.xml --> | |
<!-- Client Control | |
Don't fold anonymously, provide user info. --> | |
<fold-anon v='false'/> | |
<!-- Folding Slot Configuration --> | |
<gpu v='true'/> <!-- If true, attempt to autoconfigure GPUs --> |
Note: this is a work-in-progress and will be updated with more information over the next few days.
This guide will walk you through deploying your own instance of the open-source Parse Server. This would be a good starting point for testing your existing application to see if the functionality provided by the server is enough for your application, and to potentially plan your migration off the Parse Platform.
This guide will walk you through using Elastic Beanstalk (EB), which is an AWS service similar to Heroku. Why use EB rather than Heroku? Elastic Beanstalk does not lock you into Heroku-specific ways of doing things, is likely cheaper to run your backend on than Heroku, and it integrates with other services that AWS offer (and they offer almost everything one needs to run an application these days).
#This is just a listing of the commands for generating your SSL certificates | |
#Run these commands one at a time from inside your ~/ssl folder | |
#Make sure you create your server.csr.cnf and your v3.ext files first inside the same folder | |
#private key generation | |
#This will ask you for a passphrase(password) do NOT lose this file or the password | |
openssl genrsa -des3 -out ~/ssl/rootCA.key 2048 | |
#create root certificate | |
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key ~/ssl/rootCA.key -sha256 -days 1024 -out ~/ssl/rootCA.pem |