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@atian25
atian25 / README.md
Created March 9, 2016 14:07 — forked from steve-jansen/README.md
Stop and start Symantec Endpoint Protection on OS X

This script enables you stop and start Symantec Endpoint Protection on OS X

Installation

sudo curl https://gist.githubusercontent.com/steve-jansen/61a189b6ab961a517f68/raw/sep -o /usr/local/bin/sep
sudo chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/sep
sudo chown root:staff /usr/local/bin/sep
@anvaka
anvaka / 00.Intro.md
Last active August 28, 2025 02:18
npm rank

npm rank

This gist is updated daily via cron job and lists stats for npm packages:

  1. Top 1,000 most depended-upon packages
  2. Top 1,000 packages with largest number of dependencies
  3. Top 1,000 packages with highest PageRank score
# the path where screenshots to save
SS_PATH="/tmp"
# if you want to save them to your desktop, SS_PATH should be "/Users/YOURNAME/Desktop"
# a variable of unix timestamp for screenshot file name
NOW=$(date +%s)
# execute screen capture command, screenshot$NOW.png is the name of file
screencapture -i -r $SS_PATH/[email protected]
@getify
getify / gist:7ae82fdc2e86bf66bcba
Last active March 27, 2022 19:50
List of ES6 books either out or in progress...
@siygle
siygle / gist:bed1aa3e7520fdbf2649
Last active August 29, 2015 14:07
JSDC.TW 2014

From Fabrice Bellard, with minor name change (umulh):

// return the high 32 bit part of the 64 bit addition of (hi0, lo0) and (hi1, lo1)
Math.iaddh(lo0, hi0, lo1, hi1)

// return the high 32 bit part of the 64 bit subtraction of (hi0, lo0) and (hi1, lo1)
Math.isubh(lo0, hi0, lo1, hi1)

// return the high 32 bit part of the signed 64 bit product of the 32 bit numbers a and b
@mikeal
mikeal / gist:9242748
Last active June 23, 2020 05:17
Response to Nodejitsu NPM Trademark

I've known people at nodejitsu for years, since before the company even existed. I still consider many of them friends. That said, somebody over there has lost their mind.

Trademarks are an important part of open source. They protect the integrity of the trust that is built by any project. A classic example of why this is the case is Firefox. Suppose that a malware producer takes the Firefox codebase, which is free and open source, packages up their malware with it and then releases it as "Firefox". Then they buy search advertising and suddenly their bad and malicious version of Firefox is the first result on search engines across the web. This is clearly a bad thing for Firefox and open source everywhere, but what can Mozilla do to protect their community of users?

They can't enforce a software license since the use is permitted under the Mozilla Public License. They can, however, enforce on these hypothetical bad actors using their trademark on the word "Fi

@magnetikonline
magnetikonline / README.md
Last active February 7, 2025 07:27
IE 7/8/9/10/11 Virtual machines from Microsoft - Linux w/VirtualBox installation notes.