by Ossi Hanhinen, @ohanhi
with the support of Futurice 💚.
Licensed under CC BY 4.0.
// Usage: | |
// Copy and paste all of this into a debug console window of the "Who is Hiring?" comment thread | |
// then use as follows: | |
// | |
// query(term | [term, term, ...], term | [term, term, ...], ...) | |
// | |
// When arguments are in an array then that means an "or" and when they are seperate that means "and" | |
// | |
// Term is of the format: | |
// ((-)text/RegExp) ( '-' means negation ) |
Write a program that does what it’s supposed to do | |
Write idiomatic code | |
Debug a program that you wrote | |
Debug a program someone else wrote | |
Debug the interaction between a system you wrote and one you didn’t | |
File a good bug report | |
Modify a program you didn’t write | |
Test a program you wrote | |
Test a program you didn’t write | |
Learn a new programming language |
// ==UserScript== | |
// @name Translate Amazon | |
// @namespace http://your.homepage/ | |
// @version 0.1 | |
// @description Translate the Amazon service names into plain English. See https://www.expeditedssl.com/aws-in-plain-english | |
// @author @ideasasylum | |
// @match https://*.console.aws.amazon.com/console/home?* | |
// @grant none | |
// ==/UserScript== |
function mapValues(obj, fn) { | |
return Object.keys(obj).reduce((result, key) => { | |
result[key] = fn(obj[key], key); | |
return result; | |
}, {}); | |
} | |
function pick(obj, fn) { | |
return Object.keys(obj).reduce((result, key) => { | |
if (fn(obj[key])) { |
This is a quick-and-dirty guide to setting up a Raspberry Pi as a "router on a stick" to PrivateInternetAccess VPN.
Install Raspbian Jessie (2016-05-27-raspbian-jessie.img
) to your Pi's sdcard.
Use the Raspberry Pi Configuration tool or sudo raspi-config
to:
Around 2006-2007, it was a bit of a fashion to hook lava lamps up to the build server. Normally, the green lava lamp would be on, but if the build failed, it would turn off and the red lava lamp would turn on.
By coincidence, I've actually met, about that time, (probably) the first person to hook up a lava lamp to a build server. It was Alberto Savoia, who'd founded a testing tools company (that did some very interesting things around generative testing that have basically never been noticed). Alberto had noticed that people did not react with any urgency when the build broke. They'd check in broken code and go off to something else, only reacting to the breakage they'd caused when some other programmer pulled the change and had problems.
Slack doesn't provide an easy way to extract custom emoji from a team. (Especially teams with thousands of custom emoji) This Gist walks you through a relatively simple approach to get your emoji out.
If you're an admin of your own team, you can get the list of emoji directly using this API: https://api.slack.com/methods/emoji.list. Once you have it, skip to Step 3
HOWEVER! This gist is intended for people who don't have admin access, nor access tokens for using that list.
Follow along...
{ | |
"AWSEBDockerrunVersion": "1", | |
"Image": { | |
"Name": "<AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/<NAME>:<TAG>", | |
"Update": "true" | |
}, | |
"Ports": [ | |
{ | |
"ContainerPort": "443" | |
} |