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/**
* Usage:
* Go to https://objectedge.slack.com/files/{username}
* and run this code in the browser console
*
* To remove only files older than a given date, configure "older_than" with appropriate value
* Ex: "2016-12-14", "2015-12-31 17:35:14"
*
* To delete only images, configure types as "image"
* To delete all kind of files, configure types as "all"
@aviskase
aviskase / Postman.desktop
Last active January 22, 2025 01:08
Install Postman
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=Postman
Exec=postman
Icon=/home/USERNAME/Postman/app/resources/app/assets/icon.png
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=Development;

So the basic thing you need to start working with org-mode is to install org-mode. Emacs > 24.??? already have it bundled and if you're not going to use some cool features like org-drill and stuff, that should be enough.

Basically, org-mode operates with org files. Create one (work.org for example). Org files' markup is simple -- there are headers with info. Header format is '*'{1..} TODO-kw Description. To create entry just write it. Also C-c RET does something similar (I never use it tho). So, stars are indentation -- more indented

@tdd
tdd / angular-just-say-no.md
Last active August 7, 2025 12:47
Angular: Just Say No

Angular: Just say no

A collection of articles by AngularJS veterans, sometimes even core committers, that explain in detail what's wrong with Angular 1.x, how Angular 2 isn't the future, and why you should avoid the entire thing at all costs unless you want to spend the next few years in hell.

Reason for this: I'm getting tired of having to explain to everyone, chief of which all the indiscriminate Google Kool-Aid™ drinkers, why I have never believed in Angular, why I think it'll publicly fail pretty soon now (a couple years), and why it's a dead end IMO. This gist serves as a quick target I can point people to in order not to have to parrot / compile the core of the articles below everytime. Their compounded reading pretty much captures 99% of my view on the topic.

This page is accessible through http://bit.ly/angular-just-say-no and http://bit.ly/angularjustsayno, btw.

@xpepper
xpepper / user story template.md
Last active September 7, 2022 05:00
User Story templates
@JedWatson
JedWatson / API-Auth-With-KeystoneJS.md
Last active April 16, 2023 02:11
API Auth with KeystoneJS

To implement API authentication in KeystoneJS, you need the following:

For key based authentication

  • Middleware that validates the key in the request body or a header

For session based authentication

  • An endpoint that handles signin
  • An endpoint that handles signout
@chriszarate
chriszarate / thumbnail.png
Last active March 17, 2021 00:57
Identify your tmux windows with food emoji
thumbnail.png
@znseaman
znseaman / 1001albums.md
Last active December 12, 2016 15:29
Pitchfork's 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die
50s
  • Sinatra, Frank – In the Wee Small Hours
  • Presley, Elvis – Elvis Presley (1956)
  • Louvin Brothers – Tragic Songs of Life
  • Prima, Louis – Wildest
  • Domino, Fats – This is Fats
  • Ellington, Duke – At Newport (1956)
  • Sinatra, Frank – Songs for Swingin’ Lovers!
  • Crickets – Chirping…
@anotheruiguy
anotheruiguy / web-fonts-asset-pipeline.md
Last active June 6, 2025 08:03
Custom Web Fonts and the Rails Asset Pipeline

Web fonts are pretty much all the rage. Using a CDN for font libraries, like TypeKit or Google Fonts, will be a great solution for many projects. For others, this is not an option. Especially when you are creating a custom icon library for your project.

Rails and the asset pipeline are great tools, but Rails has yet to get caught up in the custom web font craze.

As with all things Rails, there is more then one way to skin this cat. There is the recommended way, and then there are the other ways.

The recommended way

Here I will show how to update your Rails project so that you can use the asset pipeline appropriately and resource your files using the common Rails convention.