It's great for beginners. Then it turns into a mess.
#!/bin/zsh | |
# WARNING! The script is meant to show how and what can be disabled. Don’t use it as it is, adapt it to your needs. | |
# Credit: Original idea and script disable.sh by pwnsdx https://gist.github.com/pwnsdx/d87b034c4c0210b988040ad2f85a68d3 | |
# Disabling unwanted services on macOS Big Sur (11), macOS Monterey (12), macOS Ventura (13), macOS Sonoma (14) and macOS Sequoia (15) | |
# Disabling SIP is required ("csrutil disable" from Terminal in Recovery) | |
# Modifications are written in /private/var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/ disabled.plist, disabled.501.plist | |
# To revert, delete /private/var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/ disabled.plist and disabled.501.plist and reboot; sudo rm -r /private/var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/* | |
# user |
#!/bin/zsh | |
# WARNING! The script is meant to show how and what can be disabled. Don’t use it as it is, adapt it to your needs. | |
# Credit: Original idea and script disable.sh by pwnsdx https://gist.github.com/pwnsdx/d87b034c4c0210b988040ad2f85a68d3 | |
# Disabling unwanted services on macOS Big Sur (11), macOS Monterey (12), macOS Ventura (13) and macOS Sonoma (14) | |
# Disabling SIP is required ("csrutil disable" from Terminal in Recovery) | |
# Modifications are written in /private/var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/ disabled.plist, disabled.501.plist | |
# To revert, delete /private/var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/ disabled.plist and disabled.501.plist and reboot; sudo rm -r /private/var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/* | |
# user |
These are my notes, not a generic solution. They are not meant to work anywhere outside my machines. Update version numbers to whatever are the current ones while you do this.
asdf
lives in https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf
Follow its installation instructions, which at the moment of writing were:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS requests; | |
CREATE TABLE requests ( | |
request_date Date, | |
request_time DateTime, | |
response_time Int, | |
request_uri String) | |
ENGINE = MergeTree(request_date, (request_time, request_uri), 8192); | |
Encoder h264_qsv [H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10 (Intel Quick Sync Video acceleration)]: | |
General capabilities: delay hybrid | |
Threading capabilities: none | |
Supported hardware devices: qsv qsv qsv | |
Supported pixel formats: nv12 qsv | |
h264_qsv encoder AVOptions: | |
-async_depth <int> E..V....... Maximum processing parallelism (from 1 to INT_MAX) (default 4) | |
-preset <int> E..V....... (from 0 to 7) (default 0) | |
veryfast 7 E..V....... | |
faster 6 E..V....... |
Past August 2024, Authy stopped supported the desktop version of their apps:
See Authy is shutting down its desktop app | The 2FA app Authy will only be available on Android and iOS starting in August for details.
And indeed, after a while, Authy changed something in their backend which now prevents the old desktop app from logging in. If you are already logged in, then you are in luck, and you can follow the instructions below to export your tokens.
If you are not logged in anymore, but can find a backup of the necessary files, then restore those files, and re-install Authy 2.2.3 following the instructions below, and it should work as expected.