A library for evaluating tabletop dice roll expressions. Supports rolling multiple dice (3d6), dice arithmetic (adding die rolls together), dice with arbitrary numbers of sides (5d13), keeping or dropping the highest or lowest rolls, exploding dice (roll a maximum value, roll and add an extra die), and more.
Spooky Connections is an independent international open source investigation to probe transnational organized crime. We operate using open source information from established news outlets and primary sourced documents to graph, map, and document a clear understanding of organised criminal networks and activities.
Some people have had a hell of a time installing Composer on a shared DH account, well here's how I did it. I'm going to assume you know what a shell user is and how to use basic terminal.
Minimal snippets for modern CSS layouts and components. With visible, tweakable examples.
Tracking all tech startup layoffs since COVID-19. Data is compiled from public reports. It's basically Wordpress embedding an Airtable object.
A collection of handy Bash One-Liners, hotkeys, and terminal tricks for data processing and Linux system maintenance.
Cases and replacement parts for Amiga computers. The cases even have mountpoints for popular aftermarket hardware upgrades, and even a RasPi 3 or 4 if you just want the shell!
Scapy is a powerful interactive packet manipulation program. It is able to forge or decode packets of a wide number of protocols, send them on the wire, capture them, match requests and replies, and much more. It can easily handle most classical tasks like scanning, tracerouting, probing, unit tests, attacks or network discovery (it can replace hping, 85% of nmap, arpspoof, arp-sk, arping, tcpdump, tshark, p0f, etc.). It also performs very well at a lot of other specific tasks that most other tools can’t handle, like sending invalid frames, injecting your own 802.11 frames, combining technics (VLAN hopping+ARP cache poisoning, VOIP decoding on WEP encrypted channel, …), etc.
Scapy runs natively on Linux, Windows, OSX and on most Unixes with libpcap (see scapy’s installation page). The same code base now runs natively on both Python 2 and Python 3.
Want to build a RasPi cluster shaped like an old-school Cray supercomputer? 'course you do! You can find the greyprints and see how to assemble it here.
keygen generates working, high-quality 3D-printable models of keys based on given parameters. To generate a key, select your key type and shapes. Then, follow the instructions on how to properly enter the bitting. Click 'Download STL' to save your key in a format suitable for 3D printing. This site is simply a web interface to keygen, a light wrapper around OpenSCAD. You can download and use this tool offline if you so desire.
A list of useful payloads and bypasses for Web Application Security.
doggo is a modern command-line DNS client (like dig) written in Golang. It outputs information in a neat concise manner and supports protocols like DoH, DoT and DNSCrypt as well. It's totally inspired from dog which is written in Rust. I wanted to add some features to it but since I don't know Rust, I found it as a nice opportunity to experiment with writing a DNS Client from scratch. Human-readable output, optional JSON output. Multiple transport protocols. Supports multiple resolvers at once, IPv4 and IPv6 simultaneously.
In the AUR.
Polybar aims to help users build beautiful and highly customizable status bars for their desktop environment, without the need of having a black belt in shell scripting. It has built-in functionality to display information about the most commonly used services. Has a large number of built-in widgets for many different facets of system status.
In the AUR.
Sometimes called pregnancy resource centers or crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs), fake clinics do NOT provide comprehensive reproductive health care—or much of any "health care" at all! Instead, they use phony ads to trick pregnant people into making an appointment, promising “free ultrasounds” or “pregnancy support.” Once inside, people are lied to, shamed, and pressured about their reproductive health decisions, often delaying their procedure or pushing them past the deadline for a legal abortion altogether.
Fake clinics are often made to look like medical facilities, yet they don't practice medicine (outside of an occasional ultrasound or STI test), nor do they use medical facts or standardized ethics. More and more, these predatory places are funded by taxpayer dollars, impacting poor women and people of color the hardest.
The Membership Card is a complete computer that fits in an Altoids tin. Inspired by classic 8-bit computers like the Altair 8800 and Heathkit H8, it is thoroughly documented and easy to build, with big parts, big pads, and big traces and spaces. It uses only generic parts common in the 1980s (and still available today) -- no custom parts, and no surface mount. It's fully self-contained: You don't need PCs, Windows, megabyte compilers, or secret software to use it. Now you can learn about computers right from the ground up, and really understand how they work!
It comes as a two-board set. The Z80 Membership Card itself is a stand-alone single-board computer that can "power up" your projects, like the Parallax BASIC Stamps or Arduino microcomputers. But you need a way to program it, and of course some kind of input and output "shield" to put it to work.
Links to buy the kits are near the end of the page.
I got to wondering... Could we have built an 8080 microcomputer, like the famous Altair 8800, but in a pocket-sized package? No "wizard behind the curtain" modern chips to make it work. It had to be built with vintage parts and through-hole techniques; just as it would have been back then. It must be user programmable; not simply running a fixed program like the HP-35. And, it's got to have a real front panel, like the Altair with its classic switches and blinkie-lights!
The kits are linked near the end of the page.
Python 3 tooling to retrieve data from Axon Body Cams. This code should work for first and second generation non-online models.
gcprand is a Python library for gathering Global Consciousness Project Dot data and generating psychorandom numbers seeded by nooetic activity. It is a thoroughly unconventional entropy generator in the tradition of Cloudflare's LavaRand.
Reading through the code could provide insights into how to pull and analyze the data myself.