VICE is the best by such a commanding margin that you really needn't look elsewhere. Open source and has the largest community.
However, other options are:
VICE is the best by such a commanding margin that you really needn't look elsewhere. Open source and has the largest community.
However, other options are:
#!/bin/bash | |
# Give the usual warning. | |
clear; | |
echo "[INFO] Automated Android root script started.\n\n[WARN] Exploit requires sdk module \"NDK\".\nFor more information, visit the installation guide @ https://goo.gl/E2nmLF\n[INFO] Press Ctrl+C to stop the script if you need to install the NDK module. Waiting 10 seconds..."; | |
sleep 10; | |
clear; | |
# Download and extract exploit files. | |
echo "[INFO] Downloading exploit files from GitHub..."; |
android.permission.ACCESS_ALL_DOWNLOADS | |
android.permission.ACCESS_BLUETOOTH_SHARE | |
android.permission.ACCESS_CACHE_FILESYSTEM | |
android.permission.ACCESS_CHECKIN_PROPERTIES | |
android.permission.ACCESS_CONTENT_PROVIDERS_EXTERNALLY | |
android.permission.ACCESS_DOWNLOAD_MANAGER | |
android.permission.ACCESS_DOWNLOAD_MANAGER_ADVANCED | |
android.permission.ACCESS_DRM_CERTIFICATES | |
android.permission.ACCESS_EPHEMERAL_APPS | |
android.permission.ACCESS_FM_RADIO |
Recently CSS has got a lot of negativity. But I would like to defend it and show, that with good naming convention CSS works pretty well.
My 3 developers team has just developed React.js application with 7668
lines of CSS (and just 2 !important
).
During one year of development we had 0 issues with CSS. No refactoring typos, no style leaks, no performance problems, possibly, it is the most stable part of our application.
Here are main principles we use to write CSS for modern (IE11+) browsers:
@echo off | |
setlocal EnableDelayedExpansion | |
ver | find "10." > nul | |
if errorlevel 1 ( | |
echo Your Windows version is not Windows 10... yet. Brace yourself, Windows 10 is coming^^! | |
pause | |
exit | |
) |
by Bjørn Friese
Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit.
I frequently deal with collections of things in the programs I write. Collections of droids, jedis, planets, lightsabers, starfighters, etc. When programming in Python, these collections of things are usually represented as lists, sets and dictionaries. Oftentimes, what I want to do with collections is to transform them in various ways. Comprehensions is a powerful syntax for doing just that. I use them extensively, and it's one of the things that keep me coming back to Python. Let me show you a few examples of the incredible usefulness of comprehensions.
Since Twitter doesn't have an edit button, it's a suitable host for JavaScript modules.
Source tweet: https://twitter.com/rauchg/status/712799807073419264
const leftPad = await requireFromTwitter('712799807073419264');
Just a quickie test in Python 3 (using Requests) to see if Google Cloud Vision can be used to effectively OCR a scanned data table and preserve its structure, in the way that products such as ABBYY FineReader can OCR an image and provide Excel-ready output.
The short answer: No. While Cloud Vision provides bounding polygon coordinates in its output, it doesn't provide it at the word or region level, which would be needed to then calculate the data delimiters.
On the other hand, the OCR quality is pretty good, if you just need to identify text anywhere in an image, without regards to its physical coordinates. I've included two examples:
####### 1. A low-resolution photo of road signs
### | |
### | |
### UPDATE: For Win 11, I recommend using this tool in place of this script: | |
### https://christitus.com/windows-tool/ | |
### https://github.com/ChrisTitusTech/winutil | |
### https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UQZ5oQg8XA | |
### iwr -useb https://christitus.com/win | iex | |
### | |
### OR take a look at | |
### https://github.com/HotCakeX/Harden-Windows-Security |
I was trying to understand JavaScript Promises by using various libraries (bluebird, when, Q) and other async approaches.
I read the spec, some blog posts, and looked through some code. I learned how to