Text to Decimal — Cryptii Alphabet TextThe quick brown fox jumps over 13 lazy dogs. Flipped.sgod yzal 31 revo spmuj xof nworb kciuq ehT HTML EntitiesThe quick brown fox jumps over 13 lazy dogs. Morsecode- .... . / --.- ..- .. -.-. -.- / -... .-. --- .-- -. / ..-. --- -..- / .--- ..- -- .--. ... / --- ...- . .-. / .---- ...-- / .-.. .- --.. -.-- / -.. --- --. ... LeetspeakT/-/e 0,[_]i(|{ b|?
ebde50 click to copy colllor about share Free graph / lined / dot paper generator Copied Working Noto Fonts When text is rendered by a computer, sometimes characters are displayed as “tofu”. They are little boxes to indicate your device doesn’t have a font to display the text. Google has been developing a font family called Noto, which aims to support all languages with a harmonious look and feel. Noto is Google’s answer to tofu.
Docker in Production: An History of Failure – The HFT Guy My first encounter with docker goes back to early 2015. Docker was experimented with to find out whether it could benefit us. At the time it wasn’t possible to run a container [in the background] and there wasn’t any command to see what was running, debug or ssh into the container. The experiment was quick, Docker was useless and closer to an alpha prototype than a release. Fast forward to 2016. New job, new company and docker hype is growing like mad.
How I reverse-engineered Google Docs to play back any document's keystrokes « James Somers (jsomers.net) If you’ve ever typed anything into a Google Doc, you can now play it back as if it were a movie — like traveling through time to look over your own shoulder as you write. This is possible because every document written in Google Docs since about May 2010 has a revision history that tracks every change, by every user, with timestamps accurate to the microsecond; these histories are available to anyone with “Edit” permissions; and I have written a piece of software that can find, decode, and rebuild the history for any given document. See that little gizmo above? Tacotron 2: Generating Human-like Speech from Text Posted by Jonathan Shen and Ruoming Pang, Software Engineers, on behalf of the Google Brain and Machine Perception Teams Generating very natural sounding speech from text (text-to-speech, TTS) has been a research goal for decades. There has been great progress in TTS research over the last few years and many individual pieces of a complete TTS system have greatly improved. Incorporating ideas from past work such as Tacotron and WaveNet, we added more improvements to end up with our new system, Tacotron 2. Our approach does not use complex linguistic and acoustic features as input.
Emoji unicode characters for use on the web apps.timwhitlock.info Emoji Unicode Tables The following tables show commonly-supported Emoji that map to standardized Unicode characters. The additional sections refer to symbols that have no mapping to Japanese mobile carriers in Unicode's EmojiSources.txt Back to top 1. Emoticons ( 1F601 - 1F64F ) How to fix limited or no connectivity Wi-Fi issues in Windows 8 What happens when Windows 8 or 8.1 shows the following arcane message whenever you try to connect to your wireless network: This connection has limited or no connectivity. No internet access Or maybe you’ve seen this laconic message: The connection is limited So brief.
Test your server for Heartbleed (CVE-2014-0160) If there are problems, head to the FAQ Results are now cached globally for up to 6 hours. Enter a URL or a hostname to test the server for CVE-2014-0160. All good, seems fixed or unaffected! Critical crypto bug in OpenSSL opens two-thirds of the Web to eavesdropping For a more detailed analysis of this catastrophic bug, see this update, which went live about 18 hours after Ars published this initial post. Researchers have discovered an extremely critical defect in the cryptographic software library an estimated two-thirds of Web servers use to identify themselves to end users and prevent the eavesdropping of passwords, banking credentials, and other sensitive data. The warning about the bug in OpenSSL coincided with the release of version 1.0.1g of the open-source program, which is the default cryptographic library used in the Apache and nginx Web server applications, as well as a wide variety of operating systems and e-mail and instant-messaging clients. The bug, which has resided in production versions of OpenSSL for more than two years, could make it possible for people to recover the private encryption key at the heart of the digital certificates used to authenticate Internet servers and to encrypt data traveling between them and end users.
svn cleanup failed–previous operation has not finished; run cleanup if it was interrupted August 1, 2013 Anuj Varma svn cleanup failed–previous operation has not finished; run cleanup if it was interrupted All content on this site is original and owned by anujvarma.com. Specializing in high volume web applications, Anuj Varma has helped architect, re-architect and troubleshoot some of the largest web applications out there. His customer base includes Fortune 100 companies ( British Petroleum, dell.com, Schlumberger) as well as smaller to mid size firms within the United States. How the Bible and YouTube are fueling the next frontier of password cracking Early last year, password security researcher Kevin Young was hitting a brick wall. Over the previous few weeks, he made steady progress decoding cryptographically protected password data leaked from the then-recent hack of intelligence firm Stratfor. But with about 60 percent of the more than 860,000 password hashes cracked, his attempts to decipher the remaining 40 percent were failing.
Minecrafting with OS OpenData We have created GB Minecraft 2, a Minecraft® world made with digital map products – freely available as OS OpenData™. The world consists of more than 83 billion blocks representing over 220,000 square kilometres of mainland Great Britain and surrounding islands. We don't include Northern Ireland, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man because they are mapped by other organisations. Take a look at our Developer Centre for lots more information on the data, tools and other resources we offer. Gaupol Subtitle Editor Gaupol is an editor for text-based subtitle files. It supports multiple subtitle file formats and provides means of creating subtitles, editing texts and timing subtitles to match video. The user interface is designed with attention to batch processing of multiple documents and convenience of translating. Gaupol should run on all Unix-like (GNU/Linux, *BSD, Solaris, etc.) operating systems and on Windows.