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@n1snt
n1snt / Oh my ZSH with zsh-autosuggestions zsh-syntax-highlighting zsh-fast-syntax-highlighting and zsh-autocomplete.md
Last active July 25, 2024 20:47
Oh my ZSH with zsh-autosuggestions zsh-syntax-highlighting zsh-fast-syntax-highlighting and zsh-autocomplete.md

Oh my zsh.

Oh My Zsh

Install ZSH.

sudo apt install zsh-autosuggestions zsh-syntax-highlighting zsh

Install Oh my ZSH.

(function() {
const copyToClipboard = str => {
const el = document.createElement('textarea');
el.value = str;
el.setAttribute('readonly', '');
el.style.position = 'absolute';
el.style.left = '-9999px';
document.body.appendChild(el);
el.select();
document.execCommand('copy');
@marcosvpj
marcosvpj / vscode-remove-duplicate-lines.md
Last active July 17, 2024 19:08
How to remove duplicate lines in Visual Studio Code?

If the order of lines is not important##

Sort lines alphabetically, if they aren't already, and perform these steps:
(based on this related question: https://stackoverflow.com/q/1573361/3258851)

  1. Control+F

  2. Toggle "Replace mode"

  3. Toggle "Use Regular Expression" (the icon with the .* symbol)

@johncantrell97
johncantrell97 / satoshistreasure.md
Last active April 15, 2023 15:09
How I Obtained Satoshi's Treasure Keys 1, 2, and 3 in Minutes

Today (April 16th 2019 at noon) the first major clues to discover key #1 was set to be released in a few cities. A QR code with the words 'orbital' were found at these locations and looked like this: (https://imgur.com/a/6rNmz7T). If you read the QR code with your phone you will be directed to this url: https://satoshistreasure.xyz/k1

At this URL you are prompted to input a passphrase to decrypt the first shard. An obvious first guess was to try the word 'orbital' from the QR code. Not suprisingly this worked! This reveals a congratulations page and presents the first key shard:

ST-0001-a36e904f9431ff6b18079881a20af2b3403b86b4a6bace5f3a6a47e945b95cce937c415bedaad6c86bb86b59f0b1d137442537a8.

Now, we were supposed to wait until April 17th to get clues from the other cities for keys #2 and #3 but that wouldn't stop me from digging around with all the new information we had. All that time "playing" notpron (http://notpron.org/notpron/) years ago was going to help me here.

The first thing I noticed was

@ehsahil
ehsahil / recon.rb
Last active December 28, 2022 06:02
#Tool based on a resolver.rb by @melvinsh
#Original Repository: https://github.com/melvinsh/subresolve
#Modified by @ehsahil for Personal Use.
require 'socket'
require 'colorize'
begin
file = File.open(ARGV[0], "r")
rescue
puts "Usage: ruby recon.rb wordlist"
#Tools based on a resolver.rb by @melvinsh
#Repository: https://github.com/melvinsh/subresolve
#Modified by @ehsahil for Personal Use.
require 'socket'
require 'colorize'
begin
domain = ARGV[0]
rescue
puts "Usage: ruby subdomain.rb domain"
exit
@mutin-sa
mutin-sa / Top_Public_Recursive_Name_Servers.md
Last active July 16, 2024 02:38
List of Top Public Recursive Name Servers

DNS:

IPv4 Addr IPv6 Addr ASn Political Region Loc Svc Org
8.8.8.8 2001:4860:4860::8888 AS15169 US Worldwide (Anycast) Google Public DNS Google
8.8.4.4 2001:4860:4860::8844 AS15169 US Worldwide (Anycast) Google Public DNS Google
1.1.1.1 2606:4700:4700::1111 AS13335 US Worldwide (Anycast) Cloudflare-DNS Cloudflare/APNIC
1.0.0.1 2606:4700:4700::1001 AS13335 US Worldwide (Anycast) Cloudflare-DNS Cloudflare/APNIC
208.67.222.222 2620:119:35::35 AS36692 US *W
import requests
import sys
import json
def waybackurls(host, with_subs):
if with_subs:
url = 'http://web.archive.org/cdx/search/cdx?url=*.%s/*&output=json&fl=original&collapse=urlkey' % host
else:
url = 'http://web.archive.org/cdx/search/cdx?url=%s/*&output=json&fl=original&collapse=urlkey' % host
@taylorhughes
taylorhughes / user-agents.txt
Last active April 6, 2024 16:07
A list of iOS embedded webview User-Agents
SAFARI 10.0.1
Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 10_0_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/602.1.50 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/10.0 Mobile/14A403 Safari/602.1
CHROME on 10.0.1
Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 10_0_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/601.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) CriOS/53.0.2785.86 Mobile/14A403 Safari/601.1.46
FACEBOOK MESSENGER
Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 10_0_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/602.1.50 (KHTML, like Gecko) Mobile/14A403 [FBAN/MessengerForiOS;FBAV/87.0.0.24.69;FBBV/38293694;FBRV/0;FBDV/iPhone8,4;FBMD/iPhone;FBSN/iPhone OS;FBSV/10.0.1;FBSS/2;FBCR/AT&T;FBID/phone;FBLC/en_US;FBOP/5]
TWITTER FOR IPHONE
@noelboss
noelboss / git-deployment.md
Last active July 16, 2024 09:50
Simple automated GIT Deployment using Hooks

Simple automated GIT Deployment using GIT Hooks

Here are the simple steps needed to create a deployment from your local GIT repository to a server based on this in-depth tutorial.

How it works

You are developing in a working-copy on your local machine, lets say on the master branch. Most of the time, people would push code to a remote server like github.com or gitlab.com and pull or export it to a production server. Or you use a service like deepl.io to act upon a Web-Hook that's triggered that service.