Every vintage Apple Mac enthusiast knows the importance of having a stockpile of key software to call upon when refurbishing or maintaining their collection. Well, here’s an off-the-shelf solution that’ll answer the prayers of many of us. This is a treasure trove of essential utilities that every Classic Mac OS user absolutely needs to have.
Everything is packed into a single three hundred meg .sit archive to make it easy to grab. Download it, unpack it, and there you have it.
A collection of the best CLI/Ncurses software covering a wide range of categories from messaging, music, text editing and more.
A professional's article about picking and using the right cable for RF use in the right circumstances. Discusses the use cases (aerospace, defense, transportation, telecom, broadcast, medicine), frequency ranges, connectors, assemblies, and specifics.
If you integrate anything with Slack and you need to reconfigure it, you have to go here.
Offloads rendering to the GPU for lower system load. Uses threaded rendering for absolutely minimal latency. Performance tradeoffs can be tuned. Graphics support in-window, with images and animations. Ligatures and emoji, with per glyph font substitution supported. Hyperlink support, with configurable actions. Control from scripts or the shell. Extend with Python ("kittens"). Programmable tabs, splits and multiple layouts to manage windows. Browse the entire history or the output from the last command comfortably in pagers and editors. Edit or download remote files in an existing SSH session.
PyHam is a collection of applications and software libraries for ham radio enthusiasts, written in Python.
The applications are intended to address real-world use cases for the ham while keeping complexity to a minimum and focusing on ease of use. By avoiding the lure of trying to be all things to all people, PyHam applications target the majority of users at the possible expense of those few who may desire additional capabilities.
The libraries are written in pure Python, and each focus on a particular technology with the goal of making that technology easier to work with than it otherwise would be. PyHam applications are themselves built upon these libraries.
PyHam software has been developed with a primary focus on Direwolf as a platform, since it is the dominant software TNC in use today. However, where appropriate, the software has also been tested against other platforms such as ldsped and AGWPE.
Radicle is an open source, peer-to-peer code collaboration stack built on Git. Unlike centralized code hosting platforms, there is no single entity controlling the network. Repositories are replicated across peers in a decentralized manner, and users are in full control of their data and workflow.
The Radicle protocol leverages cryptographic identities for code and social artifacts, utilizes Git for efficient data transfer between peers, and employs a custom gossip protocol for exchanging repository metadata. All social artifacts are stored in Git, and signed using public-key cryptography. Radicle verifies the authenticity and authorship of all data for you. Radicle is local-first, providing always-available functionality even without internet access. Users own their data, making migration, backup, and access easy both online and offline. The Radicle Stack comes with a CLI, web interface and TUI, that are backed by the Radicle Node and HTTP Daemon. It’s modular, so any part can be swapped out and other clients can be developed.
Repo: https://app.radicle.xyz/nodes/seed.radicle.xyz/rad:z3gqcJUoA1n9HaHKufZs5FCSGazv5
In the AUR.
XFiles is a file manager for X11. It can navigate through directories, show icons for files, select files, call a command to open files, generate thumbnails, and call a command to run on right mouse button click. Supports running scripts when the user selects a file.
This is an old-school X11-style X application. No toolkit, no desktop environment, no skinning, just a file manager.
Flow was developed in response to both GPUs and multicore processors becoming commonplace in consumer electronics products and embedded systems. Its performance automatically scales as the number of CPU & GPU cores increases. Flow uses multithreading for page layout – multiple page elements are positioned concurrently. Flow draws HTML elements directly on the GPU – this dramatically improves rendering performance and helps keep the CPU free for faster JavaScript execution. All the CPU cores are used for page layout. Flexbox, CSS custom properties, CSS calc(), WebGL and GPU accelerated canvas are supported. SDKs are available for various operating systems, including Android, Linux, iOS, macOS and Windows.
Downloads https://support.ekioh.com/download/
As AWS security professionals we are often asked by customers to validate their use of AWS security services and to give tips and tricks on how to use these services and how others use AWS security services. With this guide we have the goal of more broadly sharing this knowledge with the user community and at the same time give the ability for others outside of AWS to contribute.
Simply, we will be covering best practices for configuring AWS security services. This is NOT overall AWS security best practices. This documentation is not simply a numbered list of best practices. Instead this documentation is meant to walk you through what you need to know before deploying an AWS security service to what you should be doing after enablement and through fully operationalizing the service. Often this is done through discussing different use cases and different factors associated with specific use cases that can help in making design decisions. Following this guide you should feel confident that you have the ability configure and use an AWS security service effectively.
Over 100 forks of deliberately vulnerable web applications and APIs to practice on.
A site keeping track of desktop environments and applications that will need to be rewritten to support Wayland, so that they can be gotten away from X.
A curated list of delightful Bash scripts and resources.
In addition to this list, you should read the list awesome-shell. It is a curated list of awesome command-line frameworks, toolkits, guides and gizmos. You may also want to check awesome-zsh or awesome-fish. If you are looking for more lists, check sindresorhus/awesome.
Hummusec's port of Samy's magspoof software to the Flipper Zero firmware platform.
A multi-system chiptune tracker compatible with DefleMask modules. Emulates a large number of audio synthesis chips, from Yamaha's OP* chips to the SID.
In the AUR.
A desktop application which makes it easy to draw circuit diagrams in ASCII characters. No requirements.txt file, requires the following modules from Pypi:
This section of the "FujiNetWiFi" Git project contains applications, demos, and sample programs for the #FujiNet device. Some applications are generic terminals, for connecting to servers (e.g., netcat and PLATO). Others are clients for talking to standard online services (like twitter and iss-tracker), or #FujiNet-specific services (like apod and news; code for some of those live at https://github.com/FujiNetWIFI/servers). Finally, others are apps or demos that exercise other parts of the #FujiNet device (e.g., appkey-sample and LiteSAM).
Generally, compiled executable programs are likely to work best if you disable built-in BASIC while booting your Atari (hold [OPTION] on XL and XE models).
A collection of Awesome resources for the Flipper Zero device.
A collection of keyboard shortcuts for Mac apps, Windows programs, and websites.
Free Competitors is a server software to make websites that help users find Free Software replacements to proprietary software. And search Free Software alternatives to other Free Software.
The things you might want to replace and what you could replace them with are all in here as JSON files: https://notabug.org/jyamihud/FreeCompetitors/src/master/apps