Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View zoidyzoidzoid's full-sized avatar
🌈
Be the change you wanna see in the world!

Zoid zoidyzoidzoid

🌈
Be the change you wanna see in the world!
View GitHub Profile
@lizthegrey
lizthegrey / _roles.txt
Last active August 11, 2022 13:22
Lizzes' hardware
lily: main amd64 workstation used primarily for gaming, secondarily for work
daisy: main arm64 workstation used primarily for work
foxglove: secondary amd64 workstation used for recording videos, streams, podcasts, etc. in a soundproof booth -- or for quiet focus time
@sbinlondon
sbinlondon / synthwaveglow.md
Last active February 22, 2024 22:40
Get the synth wave glow theme working for VS Code on Mac

Get the synth wave glow working for VS Code on Mac

These notes are pretty much the same steps as the two extensions list, it's just that I had to collate them together because neither seems to list it fully in the proper order.

  1. Install Synthwave ’84/Synthwave + Fluoromachine theme on VS Code (I used the Fluoromachine one)

  2. Install Custom CSS and JS Loader

  3. Command + Shift + P to open command palette > "Preferences: Open settings (JSON)"

@IanColdwater
IanColdwater / twittermute.txt
Last active July 29, 2024 08:50
Here are some terms to mute on Twitter to clean your timeline up a bit.
Mute these words in your settings here: https://twitter.com/settings/muted_keywords
ActivityTweet
generic_activity_highlights
generic_activity_momentsbreaking
RankedOrganicTweet
suggest_activity
suggest_activity_feed
suggest_activity_highlights
suggest_activity_tweet
@mikhailov-work
mikhailov-work / turbo_colormap.py
Created August 8, 2019 23:31
Turbo Colormap Look-up Table
# Copyright 2019 Google LLC.
# SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
# Author: Anton Mikhailov
turbo_colormap_data = [[0.18995,0.07176,0.23217],[0.19483,0.08339,0.26149],[0.19956,0.09498,0.29024],[0.20415,0.10652,0.31844],[0.20860,0.11802,0.34607],[0.21291,0.12947,0.37314],[0.21708,0.14087,0.39964],[0.22111,0.15223,0.42558],[0.22500,0.16354,0.45096],[0.22875,0.17481,0.47578],[0.23236,0.18603,0.50004],[0.23582,0.19720,0.52373],[0.23915,0.20833,0.54686],[0.24234,0.21941,0.56942],[0.24539,0.23044,0.59142],[0.24830,0.24143,0.61286],[0.25107,0.25237,0.63374],[0.25369,0.26327,0.65406],[0.25618,0.27412,0.67381],[0.25853,0.28492,0.69300],[0.26074,0.29568,0.71162],[0.26280,0.30639,0.72968],[0.26473,0.31706,0.74718],[0.26652,0.32768,0.76412],[0.26816,0.33825,0.78050],[0.26967,0.34878,0.79631],[0.27103,0.35926,0.81156],[0.27226,0.36970,0.82624],[0.27334,0.38008,0.84037],[0.27429,0.39043,0.85393],[0.27509,0.40072,0.86692],[0.27576,0.41097,0.87936],[0.27628,0.42118,0.89123],[0.27667,0.43134,0.90254],[0.27691,0.44145,0.913
@dominictarr
dominictarr / readme.md
Created November 26, 2018 22:39
statement on event-stream compromise

Hey everyone - this is not just a one off thing, there are likely to be many other modules in your dependency trees that are now a burden to their authors. I didn't create this code for altruistic motivations, I created it for fun. I was learning, and learning is fun. I gave it away because it was easy to do so, and because sharing helps learning too. I think most of the small modules on npm were created for reasons like this. However, that was a long time ago. I've since moved on from this module and moved on from that thing too and in the process of moving on from that as well. I've written way better modules than this, the internet just hasn't fully caught up.

@broros

otherwise why would he hand over a popular package to a stranger?

If it's not fun anymore, you get literally nothing from maintaining a popular package.

One time, I was working as a dishwasher in a restu

@keegancsmith
keegancsmith / go.mod
Created October 8, 2018 14:08
Example of how k8s sends protobuf responses for GET and GET watches
module k8sgetexample
require (
github.com/ericchiang/k8s v1.2.0
github.com/golang/protobuf v1.2.0
golang.org/x/net v0.0.0-20181005035420-146acd28ed58 // indirect
golang.org/x/sync v0.0.0-20180314180146-1d60e4601c6f // indirect
golang.org/x/text v0.3.0 // indirect
)
@jhertz
jhertz / papers.md
Created July 30, 2018 03:16
Security Papers I Like

In absolutely no order

@terabyte
terabyte / amazon.md
Created December 6, 2017 02:27
Amazon's Build System

Prologue

I wrote this answer on stackexchange, here: https://stackoverflow.com/posts/12597919/

It was wrongly deleted for containing "proprietary information" years later. I think that's bullshit so I am posting it here. Come at me.

The Question

Amazon is a SOA system with 100s of services (or so says Amazon Chief Technology Officer Werner Vogels). How do they handle build and release?

@acolyer
acolyer / jessfraz.md
Created November 19, 2017 13:39
Containers, operating systems and other fun things from The Morning Paper
@nealey
nealey / slack-emoji-bulk-delete.js
Last active May 25, 2023 23:09
Bulk delete every custom emoji in Slack
//
// I just found out that we have a bunch of NSFW emoji in our bulk-imported set of >4000 emoji.
// Rather than weed them out, I want to start with a blank slate. This code does that.
//
// Navigate to your "Custom Emoji" page, the one with all the delete buttons.
// Delete one of them and acknowledge that it's going away forever.
// Then open the JavaScript console and paste this in.
//
// At some point your JavaScript console will start spewing errors.
// Reload the Emoji page, delete one emoji by hand again, and paste this in again to resume.