#Techniques for Anti-Aliasing @font-face on Windows
It all started with an email from a client: Do these fonts look funky to you? The title is prickly.
The font in question was Port Lligat Sans from Google Web Fonts.
alias server='open http://localhost:8000 && python -m SimpleHTTPServer' |
#Techniques for Anti-Aliasing @font-face on Windows
It all started with an email from a client: Do these fonts look funky to you? The title is prickly.
The font in question was Port Lligat Sans from Google Web Fonts.
Locate the section for your github remote in the .git/config
file. It looks like this:
[remote "origin"]
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
url = [email protected]:joyent/node.git
Now add the line fetch = +refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*
to this section. Obviously, change the github url to match your project's URL. It ends up looking like this:
To setup your computer to work with *.test domains, e.g. project.test, awesome.test and so on, without having to add to your hosts file each time.
//the code below will embed replace [gist id=x] tags with an embedded gist similar to the way the Wordpress Gist | |
//plugin works. I wrote this in order to import posts from Wordpress. See //GB: for the changes. | |
// **takes:** filter / pagination parameters | |
browse: function browse(options) { | |
options = options || {}; | |
// **returns:** a promise for a page of posts in a json object | |
//return dataProvider.Post.findPage(options); | |
return dataProvider.Post.findPage(options).then(function (result) { |
{ | |
"name": "my-app", | |
"version": "1.0.0", | |
"description": "My test app", | |
"main": "src/js/index.js", | |
"scripts": { | |
"jshint:dist": "jshint src/js/*.js", | |
"jshint": "npm run jshint:dist", | |
"jscs": "jscs src/*.js", | |
"browserify": "browserify -s Validating -o ./dist/js/build.js ./lib/index.js", |
To remove a submodule you need to:
Note: This is an older post that I did back when I thought I might have time to be a blogger. Oh I was oh so wrong. However, it has proven useful for some folks on stackoverflow. Thus I'm keeping it alive here on Gist.
One of my past projects dealt heavily with an open source Apple technology called HTTP Live Streaming. It’s an HTTP based streaming protocol that at its most fundamental level provides a way to stream video and audio from just about any server with nothing but a few free software tools provided by Apple**. However, it has a few additional features that I think make it a really exciting tool. Yet, I haven’t seen HTTP Live Streaming used very much. This is probably mainly due to the combination of a lack of good/clear documentation, and Apple’s Live Streaming Developer Tools being command line based also make the barrier to entry higher than many developers want to deal with.
The hope is to share my understanding of how to use this technology to:
# For example, run "npm install" | |
docker run -v "$PWD":/usr/src/app -w /usr/src/app node:4 npm install | |
# This command creates a container (downloading one first if you don't have it locally), runs the command in a current directory and quits the container | |
# Great Success! |