Forwarded from Hacker News
Forwarded from Mart H
I guess the third option is docker.... I am still trying to learn docker... https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/docker-vs-vm-key-differences-you-should-know/
freeCodeCamp.org
Docker vs Virtual Machine (VM) β Key Differences You Should Know
In this guide, you'll learn the differences between a virtual machine and a Docker container. Both virtual machines and containers help replicate the development environment, and manage dependencies and configurations better. But there are certain di...
Forwarded from risingOS - News
Good day everyone!
version 6.0 Beta 3 is now live for the community!
To check what's new, please visit:
https://github.com/RisingTechOSS/risingOS_changelogs
Thank you so much for reporting bugs during the beta 2 stage, we really appreciate it. Bless you all!
#rising
version 6.0 Beta 3 is now live for the community!
To check what's new, please visit:
https://github.com/RisingTechOSS/risingOS_changelogs
Thank you so much for reporting bugs during the beta 2 stage, we really appreciate it. Bless you all!
#rising
Forwarded from risingOS - News
Visual references for 6.0 beta 3
PS:
The QS widgets/layout is optional/configurable
PS:
The QS widgets/layout is optional/configurable
Forwarded from Treble GSI's | Privacy + Secure
Music Sleep Timer Plus
Music Sleep Timer Plus is an Android app that allows you to set a timer to stop your music or podcasts after you fall asleep. You can extend, reduce or cancel the timer from the notification actions to stop the playback. The app works with any media player and gradually lowers the volume before pausing the audio.
π Links:
- Downloads: GitHub, Google Play
- Screenshots
- Features
- Source code
Developer: D4rK7355608
π· Tags: #Android #Tools
Music Sleep Timer Plus is an Android app that allows you to set a timer to stop your music or podcasts after you fall asleep. You can extend, reduce or cancel the timer from the notification actions to stop the playback. The app works with any media player and gradually lowers the volume before pausing the audio.
π Links:
- Downloads: GitHub, Google Play
- Screenshots
- Features
- Source code
Developer: D4rK7355608
π· Tags: #Android #Tools
Forwarded from Treble GSI's | Privacy + Secure
SSTV Encoder and Decoder
Send/receive images via SSTV (basically audio signals).
π Links:
- Downloads: Encoder, Decoder
- Screenshots
- Source codes
π· Tags: #Android #Tools
Send/receive images via SSTV (basically audio signals).
π Links:
- Downloads: Encoder, Decoder
- Screenshots
- Source codes
π· Tags: #Android #Tools
Forwarded from Treble GSI's | Privacy + Secure
Seanime
Seanime is a free, open-source and self-hosted media server built around APIs to provide a seamless experience for anime and manga enthusiasts. It combines a lightweight server and a user-friendly web interface to manage and consume your local anime library, download new episodes, find new shows, read and download manga chapters, and more.
π Links:
- Download
- Screenshots
- Features (many features)
- Source code
Developer: 5rahim
π· Tags: #Windows #Tools
Seanime is a free, open-source and self-hosted media server built around APIs to provide a seamless experience for anime and manga enthusiasts. It combines a lightweight server and a user-friendly web interface to manage and consume your local anime library, download new episodes, find new shows, read and download manga chapters, and more.
π Links:
- Download
- Screenshots
- Features (many features)
- Source code
Developer: 5rahim
π· Tags: #Windows #Tools
Forwarded from ATT β’ Tech News (Agam)
The US government wants developers to stop using C and C++
The CISA and the FBI are urging developers to stop using memory-unsafe languages like C and C++ for critical infrastructure due to security risks, and switch to memory-safe languages such as Rust, Java, C#, Go, Python, and Swift.
However, migrating large codebases is not easy and can lead to performance slowdowns
CISAβs report found over 55% of critical open-source projects use memory-unsafe code, causing 70% of security vulnerabilities. CISA wants companies to plan transitions by 2026.
π The Register
π§βπ» @agamtechtricks
The CISA and the FBI are urging developers to stop using memory-unsafe languages like C and C++ for critical infrastructure due to security risks, and switch to memory-safe languages such as Rust, Java, C#, Go, Python, and Swift.
However, migrating large codebases is not easy and can lead to performance slowdowns
CISAβs report found over 55% of critical open-source projects use memory-unsafe code, causing 70% of security vulnerabilities. CISA wants companies to plan transitions by 2026.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM