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#!/usr/bin/python
# Quick and dirty demonstration of CVE-2014-0160 by Jared Stafford ([email protected])
# The author disclaims copyright to this source code.
import sys
import struct
import socket
import time
import select
@sdgandhi
sdgandhi / generateAppIcon.sh
Created November 22, 2017 19:17 — forked from roblabs/generateAppIcon.sh
Generate app icons and xcassets file from a single image. To use this, place script in `appname` folder inside your project (i.e. the folder that Xcode generates for you containing your source code, it's named after whatever you called the app). Create folder there called `RawImages`. Source icon should 1024x1024 and be called appIcon.png. If th…
#!/bin/bash -e
# --------------------------------------------------------
# Generate app icons and xcassets file from a single image
# Ben Clayton, Calvium Ltd.
# https://gist.github.com/benvium/2be6d673aa9ac284bb8a
# --------------------------------------------------------
#
# Usage with an input of 1024x1024 PNG file
# generateAppIcon.sh AppIcon.png
@sdgandhi
sdgandhi / ffmpeg-watermark.md
Created July 22, 2019 22:45 — forked from bennylope/ffmpeg-watermark.md
FFmpeg add a watermark to video

How to Add a Watermark to Video

FFMPEG filters provide a powerful way to programmatically enhance or alter videos, and it’s fairly simple to add a watermark to a video using the overlay filter. The easiest way to install ffmpeg is to download a pre-built binary for your specific platform. Then you don’t have to worry about including and installing all the right dependencies and codecs you will be using.

Once you have ffmpeg installed, adding a watermark is as easy as passing your existing source through an overlay filter like so:

ffmpeg -i test.mp4 -i watermark.png -filter_complex "overlay=10:10" test1.mp4

Basically, we’re passing in the original video, and an overlay image as inputs, then passing it through the filter, and saving the output as test1.mp4.