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
endoflife.date is a community-maintained project to document end-of-life dates, and support lifecycles of various products.
Github: https://github.com/endoflife-date/endoflife.date
API documentation: https://endoflife.date/docs/api
Passhunt is a simple tool for searching of default credentials for network devices, web applications and more. Search through 523 vendors and their 2084 default passwords.
Hey! I'm @rstacruz and this is a modest collection of cheatsheets I've written.
An online textbook about designing applications at scale.
Useful resources for using IPFS and building things on top of it.
Current version: Version 1.X, 2018-12-21
This guide arose out of the need for system administrators to have an updated, solid, well researched and thought-through guide for configuring SSL, PGP, SSH and other cryptographic tools in the post-Snowden age. Triggered by the NSA leaks in the summer of 2013, many system administrators and IT security officers saw the need to strengthen their encryption settings. This guide is specifically written for these system administrators.
The focus of this guide is merely to give current best practices for configuring complex cipher suites and related parameters in a copy & paste-able manner. The guide tries to stay as concise as is possible for such a complex topic as cryptography. Naturally, it can not be complete. There are many excellent guides (II & SYM, 2012) and best practice documents available when it comes to cryptography. However none of them focuses specifically on what an average system administrator needs for hardening his or her systems' crypto settings.
A curated list of command line apps.
A list of awesome applications, software, tools and other materials for Linux.
A collection of awesome web crawl, scraping, and spidering projects in different languages.
A curated list of delightful XMPP related resources.
A directory of Linux applications packaged as AppImages, to make them easy to install and run. Just one executable file, with all dependencies included.
One of those nifty system monitoring packages, with all the buzzwords you'd expect. Watches systems as well as applications. Has a dashboard, which I think you can disable. Realtime, too. Supports third party extensions and applications. Tries to use as little RAM as possible, tries to carry out as little storage I/O as possible. Claims to have a web API. Zero dependent packages.
Can notify through multiple means, including IRC, email, Pushover, and custom endpoints.
There is an OpenWRT package called 'netdata' which can be installed normally.
A curated list of the most popular libraries and applications for many different languages and fields.