⚠️ Note 2023-01-21
Some things have changed since I originally wrote this in 2016. I have updated a few minor details, and the advice is still broadly the same, but there are some new Cloudflare features you can (and should) take advantage of. In particular, pay attention to Trevor Stevens' comment here from 22 January 2022, and Matt Stenson's useful caching advice. In addition, Backblaze, with whom Cloudflare are a Bandwidth Alliance partner, have published their own guide detailing how to use Cloudflare's Web Workers to cache content from B2 private buckets. That is worth reading,
Just run this from your CLI and it'll drop you in a container with full permissions on the Moby VM. Only works for Moby Linux VM (doesn't work for Windows Containers). Note this also works on Docker for Mac.
docker run -it --rm --privileged --pid=host justincormack/nsenter1
Exhaustive list of SPDX (Software Package Data Exchange) licenses: https://spdx.org/licenses/
Result: 1 | |
Items { | |
TemplateId: "BADGE_BATTLE_ATTACK_WON" | |
Badge { | |
BadgeType: BADGE_BATTLE_ATTACK_WON | |
BadgeRanks: 4 | |
Targets: "\nd\350\007" | |
} | |
} | |
Items { |
Following the tradition from last year, here's my complete list of all interesting features and updates I could find in Apple's OSes, SDKs and developer tools that were announced at this year's WWDC. This is based on the keynotes, the "What's New In ..." presentations and some others, Apple's release notes, and blog posts and tweets that I came across in the last few weeks.
If for some reason you haven't watched the talks yet, I really recommend watching at least the "State of the Union" and the "What's New In" intros for the platforms you're interested in. The unofficial WWDC Mac app is great way to download the videos and keep track of what you've already watched.
If you're interested, here are my WWDC 2015 notes (might be useful if you're planning to drop support for iOS 8 now and start using some iOS 9 APIs).
CloudFlare is an awesome reverse cache proxy and CDN that provides DNS, free HTTPS (TLS) support, best-in-class performance settings (gzip, SDCH, HTTP/2, sane Cache-Control
and E-Tag
headers, etc.), minification, etc.
- Make sure you have registered a domain name.
- Sign up for CloudFlare and create an account for your domain.
- In your domain registrar's admin panel, point the nameservers to CloudFlare's (refer to this awesome list of links for instructions for various registrars).
- From the CloudFlare settings for that domain, enable HTTPS/SSL and set up a Page Rule to force HTTPS redirects. (If you want to get fancy, you can also enable automatic minification for text-based assets [HTML/CSS/JS/SVG/etc.], which is a pretty cool feature if you don't want already have a build step for minification.)
- If you
Collection of License badges for your Project's README file.
This list includes the most common open source and open data licenses.
Easily copy and paste the code under the badges into your Markdown files.
- The badges do not fully replace the license informations for your projects, they are only emblems for the README, that the user can see the License at first glance.
Translations: (No guarantee that the translations are up-to-date)
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# Himawari-8 Downloader | |
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# This script will scrape the latest image from the Himawari-8 satellite, recombining the tiled image, | |
# converting it to a JPG which is saved in My Pictures\Himawari\ and then set as the desktop background. | |
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# http://himawari8.nict.go.jp/himawari8-image.htm | |
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