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3 votes
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Head cases - Field notes on a beautiful friendship
5 votes -
Indian Space Research Organization says that Vikram lander has been located on lunar surface, wasn't a soft landing
15 votes -
The Florida Activist Is 78. The Legal Judgment Against Her Is $4 Million.
7 votes -
How scrolling textures gave Super Mario Galaxy 2 its charm
12 votes -
string length is complicated
13 votes -
How Viktor Orban hollowed out Hungary’s democracy
6 votes -
Will governments lose monetary control to Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency?
7 votes -
Why Zlatan Ibrahimovic is the most overrated player of the modern era
6 votes -
The stakes are too high for Apple to spin the iPhone exploits
6 votes -
Danish government announced that it plans to boost military contributions to a number of missions around the world
6 votes -
Here's why adult cartoons are a huge mood right now
7 votes -
Don't Do This - PostgreSQL Wiki
16 votes -
On Restaurant Day in Helsinki anyone can open an eatery anywhere
5 votes -
noclip.website - A website that lets you view famous levels from all kinds of games in 3D
33 votes -
Mystery disease kills dozens of dogs across Norway as officials scramble to find cause
7 votes -
Simple games for Android
I've never really been into gaming on my phone, but in the last couple of weeks I've found it's particularly good for entertainment while getting the baby off to sleep. He tends to need holding...
I've never really been into gaming on my phone, but in the last couple of weeks I've found it's particularly good for entertainment while getting the baby off to sleep. He tends to need holding for 5-20 minutes, during which time no interaction is needed and something to stave off the boredom is good.
I've been playing Tiny Bubbles which is good because the levels are relatively short and discrete, it's challenging without being too hard (at 4am I don't want that much of a challenge), it's mostly not timing-based, I can play one-handed and drop it at a moment's notice without particularly being penalised.
Any suggestions for other suitable games would be appreciated.
12 votes -
xv6: A Reimplementation Of Unix Version 6 (PDF)
5 votes -
How reliable is IP ownership information?
I have interactive firewalls like OpenSnitch running on most of my desktop OS's. I like to see what is going on with my machines' network connections to learn about networking, infosec, and to...
I have interactive firewalls like OpenSnitch running on most of my desktop OS's. I like to see what is going on with my machines' network connections to learn about networking, infosec, and to have have some peace of mind.
Example workflow:
- Get a firewall notification of a new incoming connection to some process running on my machine
- If no DNS entry exists and only the IP address is provided, then I google the IP
- I find something like https://ipinfo.io/74.125.20.189
- I make a decision as to whether allow/deny based on the ownership info which I found in step 3.
Aside from trusting the particular site presenting the ownership info, how reliable is this information regarding IP ownership?
For example, if an IP came back as "Google" could it really be a GCP instance running a command and control server?
Another example, I know that large corps own big blocks of IPv4, but they must lease these IP's out to whomever, right? I imagine there is some wild-west market for these with little accountability?
Are either of these scenarios realistic? If so, is my entire workflow for "do I trust this IP" pointless?
edit: btw, I used to catch and deny incoming connections from *.ru to the Windows legacy Skype client all the time. I cannot think of any non-evil reason why that should have been happening. That particular series of events is what really validated me doing this. If you can think of a non-evil reason for any incoming connections to skype from *.ru, please let me know.5 votes -
Iceland's WOW Air to resume flights with new owners in October
5 votes -
“Free time” has been corrupted into “recovery time”: spells of lethargy between periods of work that merely prepare us for the resumption of labor
40 votes -
A Nobel-winning economist goes to Burning Man
9 votes -
'A human need': Australian disability groups say people on NDIS should have access to sex workers
11 votes -
Is binge watching bad for us?
8 votes -
ThinkProgress, a Top Progressive News Site, Has Shut Down
25 votes -
The perfect TED talk that never happened
5 votes -
Antonio Brown signs with the New England Patriots for one year and $9 millon after meltdowns in Pittsburgh and Oakland the past year
6 votes -
The dying art of the manager meltdown
4 votes -
UkDrillas announce intention to DDOS WoW Classic Servers
12 votes -
Best Buy is discontinuing Insignia smart home line
8 votes -
Swans - It's Coming It's Real (2019)
6 votes -
Lawyer who represented A$AP Rocky shot in Sweden
9 votes -
India rising: Can a giant democracy become an economic colossus?
9 votes -
Helsinki citizens give positive feedback to robot buses – majority said they felt safe and secure
10 votes -
A top US financier of Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell is a driving force behind Amazon deforestation
9 votes -
Norway issues rightwing terror warning for year ahead
10 votes -
Baby Trump balloon flies over Copenhagen despite canceled visit
4 votes -
Houses are assets not goods: What the difference between bulbs and flowers tells us about the housing market
4 votes -
What are some of the most emotionally affecting or resonant games you've played?
Doesn't necessarily have to be that you cried, though it certainly can be. It can also be that you connected with the characters or plot, or maybe you clicked with the game's sense of humor. Maybe...
Doesn't necessarily have to be that you cried, though it certainly can be. It can also be that you connected with the characters or plot, or maybe you clicked with the game's sense of humor. Maybe it creeped you out something fierce, or maybe it forced you into difficult ethical decisions. Any strong personal response counts.
- Why was the game so meaningful for you?
- How did the game use the medium to enhance its resonance?
Please give adequate spoiler warnings!
(You can use a<details>block to make a convenient collapsible section.)21 votes -
42 can be written as the sum of three cubes, which was the last remaining unsolved case under 100
17 votes -
Cube World to be released on Steam near the end of the month!
@wol_lay: Cube World will be released on Steam! https://t.co/Lap10eQVKX Hopefully around the end of September/October 2019. #cubeworld
19 votes -
India loses contact with Chandrayaan-2 mission during moon landing attempt
20 votes -
DMVs Are Selling Your Data to Private Investigators
11 votes -
Winners of the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, Fundamental Physics and Mathematics announced, awarding a collective $21.6 million
5 votes -
Battles - Inchworm (2018)
4 votes -
The Atlantic launches new subscription plans and introduces a metered model
13 votes -
Bahamas death toll from Hurricane Dorian reaches thirty, with thousands still missing; 70,000 people in need of food, water or shelter; and estimated $7 billion in damage
7 votes -
Unearthed Arcana: `edbrowse`
I recently happened to mention edbrowse in a throwaway comment, and @ainar-g expressed some interest in it. I took my sweet time, but I finally managed to assemble a short(ish) write-up on it, and...
I recently happened to mention
edbrowsein a throwaway comment, and @ainar-g expressed some interest in it. I took my sweet time, but I finally managed to assemble a short(ish) write-up on it, and my sleep-addled mind is thinking that this topic - niche, weird tools - could just become recurrent.
Terminal brosers, such as
lynx,w3mandelinks, while still used and under more-or-less active development, are very niche tools.edbrowsefills a niche within that niche, as it's meant for use by non-sighted people, and thus provides an interface even more bare-bones and arcane than the usual TUI/curses apps that share its space.As per the name,
edbrowse's interface is heavily inspired byed's, the standard text editor:edbrowse, in fact, is not just a web browser, but it combines together a browser, a text editor, a mail client, and - for some reason - a database client. All of these functions are mostly controlled via one-letter commands and, as is tradition, only displaying a single?on error*.edbrowseis also unique amongst the terminal browsers because of its support for JavaScript and the DOM. The text it spits out is meant for Braille displays and screen readers, so it lacks niceties like color or aligned tables, but if you were to browse toreddit.comwith it, you would see a perhaps ASCII-art Snoo fill the screen†."Browsing reddit? How‽," you might ask. "How am I supposed to get this thing to stop questioning me? All those
?are filling me with existential dread, I have no idea what to do!"While it's all there in the manual (but not in the manpages, for some reason), reading through 30k words of text can be a bit of a slog. They do provide a cheatsheet, though, even if it's a bit messy.
So, how do you use
edbrowse? If you already know howedworks, most commands (especially "movement", search and listing commands) will work as expected - it is also an editor, after all - butedbrowseadds another handful of them.The most important of them is, perhaps,
browse. It will makeedbrowseput in an HTTP request, grab the response (if any), and then render it. It will print out the length, in bytes, of the response and of the rendered text, and stop there.$ edbrowse edbrowse ready b https://tildes.net 119201 20083To actually peruse the page you can use any of the
edlisting commands (print,list, andnumber), or thezcommand.zworks much likep, but it prints a number of lines (normally 24) while "remembering" your position within the page.0z10 {Tildes} {Log in} <>Sidebar * {Activity} * {Votes} * {Comments} * {New} * {All activity}Links are indicated by curly brackets, while form elements (both input elements and buttons) are wrapped in angle brackets. You can follow a link by jumping to the line containing it and issuing a
go command (usingg2to follow the second link on that line,g3for the third,g$for the last), but, in normal use, you should probably just search for the link text./{Log in}/g 5886 923 0z10 {Tildes} <>Sidebar Log in Username <> Password <> <-> Keep me logged in <Go>Log inThe same thing goes for form elements, but the command to use, here, is
i(forinteract).ihas actually four different subcommands:i[N]=, to set the value of a text field,ipass[N]to prompt for the value of a password field,i[N]*to press a button‡, andi[N]?to askedbrowsewhat that damned element is supposed to be./Username/ i=mftrhu /Password/ ipass hunter12 /<Go>/i* submitting form 124579 20049You can jump back to the previous page with
^, and refresh the current page withrf.Of course,
edbrowsecan do much more - can be configured to do much more, via.ebrc, as it possessed (very) rudimentary programming facilities. It can edit its own configuration file, and reload it withconfig, so - rejoice. You won't ever need to leave it.And, after seeing just how aesthetically pleasing its configuration language can be, I'm confident that you won't ever want to leave it.
# Switch to a new editing session e2 no file e ~/.ebrc # Show the last lines of the configuration file $100,113n 100 function+google { 101 b http://www.google.com 102 /<>/ i=~0 103 /</ i1* 104 /^About/+2 105 } 106 function+ddg { 107 b https://duckduckgo.com 108 /<>/ i=~0 109 i2* 110 /<Go secure>/+1 111 /<Go secure>/+2 112 z24 113 }As I said earlier, while
edbrowsedoes possess some programming facilities, they are very rudimentary. Functions are nothing more than sequences ofedbrowsecommands with some flow control constructs: they can do everything an user could do, which means that they are often convoluted and overly terse.The
ddgfunction, for example (which is invoked via<ddg [PARAMS]), firstbrowses to duckduckgo.com. The DuckDuckGo home page, as rendered byedbrowse, only contains a link followed by the search form:{About DuckDuckGo Duck it!} <> <S secure> <X>So the function looks for the (first) empty text field (
/<>/), fills it in with the parameters passed to it (i~=0), activates the second form element on that line (i2*) and, once the results page has loaded, skips the initial boilerplate (/<Go secure>/+1,+2) and prints the first 24 lines of results (z24).Sure. It could be replaced by a single line, replacing all the form interaction with a simple
b https://duckduckgo.com/?q=~0, but where would be the !!FUN!! in that?
* This is not completely true, as
edbrowsewill show more long-form error messages, but it's pretty inconsistent with them.
† Iff you have JS enabled in your current session. It can be toggled on and off with thejscommand.
‡ I had no luck with the Tildes buttons (e.g., sidebar toggle, upvote button), though, at least not with the version ofedbrowsethat Debian bundles up.10 votes -
We Re-Launched The New York Times Paywall and No One Noticed
9 votes -
How tax policy gave us White Claw hard seltzer
7 votes