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  • GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers

    Official integrations are maintained by companies building production ready MCP servers for their platforms. 21st.dev Magic - Create crafted UI components inspired by the best 21st.dev design engineers. 2slides - An MCP server that provides tools to convert content into slides/PPT/presentation or generate slides/PPT/presentation with user intention. ActionKit by Paragon - Connect to 130+ SaaS inte

      GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers
    • The Linux Kernel Module Programming Guide

      Peter Jay Salzman, Michael Burian, Ori Pomerantz, Bob Mottram, Jim Huang 1 Introduction 1.1 Authorship 1.2 Acknowledgements 1.3 What Is A Kernel Module? 1.4 Kernel module package 1.5 What Modules are in my Kernel? 1.6 Is there a need to download and compile the kernel? 1.7 Before We Begin 2 Headers 3 Examples 4 Hello World 4.1 The Simplest Module 4.2 Hello and Goodbye 4.3 The __init and __exit Mac

      • Weird Lexical Syntax

        I just learned 42 programming languages this month to build a new syntax highlighter for llamafile. I feel like I'm up to my eyeballs in programming languages right now. Now that it's halloween, I thought I'd share some of the spookiest most surprising syntax I've seen. The languages I decided to support are Ada, Assembly, BASIC, C, C#, C++, COBOL, CSS, D, FORTH, FORTRAN, Go, Haskell, HTML, Java,

          Weird Lexical Syntax
        • June 2023 (version 1.80)

          Update 1.80.1: The update addresses these issues. Update 1.80.2: The update addresses this security issue. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Accessibility improvements - Accessible V

            June 2023 (version 1.80)
          • The Top 100 Video Games of All Time - IGN

            The Top 100 Video Games of All TimeOur first refresh since 2019 features some big changes. IGN’s Top 100 games list encompasses the best of the best throughout history, spanning generations of consoles, PCs, handhelds, and more. Our list last saw a major update back in 2019, and since then, there have been several games released that deserved to be added. Just as importantly, we looked at the tota

              The Top 100 Video Games of All Time - IGN
            • World's First MIDI Shellcode

              World’s First MIDI Shellcode Jan 2025 · 45 min read I gained remote code execution via MIDI messages to trick my synth into playing Bad Apple on its LCD. This blog post is about my journey with this reverse engineering project. Final iteration of Bad Apple The beginning I’ve had this Yamaha PSR-E433 synth for a very long time, and a couple of years ago I decided to open it up — partly because it w

              • Solving common problems with Kubernetes

                I first learned Kubernetes ("k8s" for short) in 2018, when my manager sat me down and said "Cloudflare is migrating to Kubernetes, and you're handling our team's migration." This was slightly terrifying to me, because I was a good programmer and a mediocre engineer. I knew how to write code, but I didn't know how to deploy it, or monitor it in production. My computer science degree had taught me a

                  Solving common problems with Kubernetes
                • How a simple Linux kernel memory corruption bug can lead to complete system compromise

                  In this case, reallocating the object as one of those three types didn't seem to me like a nice way forward (although it should be possible to exploit this somehow with some effort, e.g. by using count.counter to corrupt the buf field of seq_file). Also, some systems might be using the slab_nomerge kernel command line flag, which disables this merging behavior. Another approach that I didn't look

                  • My thoughts on writing a Minecraft server from scratch (in Bash)

                    My thoughts on writing a Minecraft server from scratch (in Bash) For the past year or so, I've been thinking about writing a Minecraft server in Bash as a thought excercise. I once tried that before with the Classic protocol (the one from 2009), but I quickly realized there wasn't really a way to properly parse binary data in bash. Take the following code sample: function a() { read -n 2 uwu echo

                    • What’s New in POSIX 2024 – XCU

                      Table of Contents Highlights Handling of Filenames in Shell Modern C Limits & Cooperation Makefiles Logging Internationalization Minor Changes Changes Index In the 1950s, computers did not really interoperate. ARPANET has not yet happened (that would become a thing in the 60s), and every operating system was typically tied to the hardware that was meant to run on. Most communication actually happe

                        What’s New in POSIX 2024 – XCU
                      • Making a Chess Engine in Zig

                        I had the honor of speaking at Systems Distributed at the end of June. Since it was hosted by TigerBeetle who is one of the largest zig users, a lot of the zig community was there. After talking to some of them, Zig seemed more interesting for me to try out. Around the same time my youtube algorithm got me hooked on chess content. I’m not a good chess player by any means, but it started giving me

                        • Accelerate Next.js in Kubernetes

                          That's 93.6% faster median latency and near-perfect reliability compared to the standard approaches for scaling Node.js applications. These results come from production-grade benchmarks on real Next.js applications running on Kubernetes, comparing three common deployment strategies with identical total CPU resources (6 CPUs each). All configurations were tested under the same sustained load patter

                            Accelerate Next.js in Kubernetes
                          • What's New in Emacs 28.1?

                            Try Mastering Emacs for free! Are you struggling with the basics? Have you mastered movement and editing yet? When you have read Mastering Emacs you will understand Emacs. It’s that time again: there’s a new major version of Emacs and, with it, a treasure trove of new features and changes. Notable features include the formal inclusion of native compilation, a technique that will greatly speed up y

                            • Create a Dev Container

                              The Visual Studio Code Dev Containers extension lets you use a Docker container as a full-featured development environment. It allows you to open any folder or repository inside a container and take advantage of Visual Studio Code's full feature set. A devcontainer.json file in your project tells VS Code how to access (or create) a development container with a well-defined tool and runtime stack.

                                Create a Dev Container
                              • I'm Building a Browser for Reverse Engineers

                                Preamble In the expanding world of AI my heart still lies in AST transforms, browser fingerprinting, and anti-bot circumvention. In fact, that's the majority of this blog's content. But my workflow always felt... primitive. I was still manually sifting through page scripts, pasting suspicious snippets into an editor, and writing bespoke deobfuscators by hand. Tools like Webcrack and deobfuscate.io

                                • make.ts

                                  Up Enter Up Up Enter Up Up Up Enter Sounds familiar? This is how I historically have been running benchmarks and other experiments requiring a repeated sequence of commands — type them manually once, then rely on shell history (and maybe some terminal splits) for reproduction. These past few years I’ve arrived at a much better workflow pattern — make.ts. I was forced to adapt it once I started wor

                                  • Expert used ChatGPT-4o to create a replica of his passport in just 5 minutes bypassing KYC

                                    SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 41 | Security Affairs newsletter Round 519 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION | China admitted its role in Volt Typhoon cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure | Symbolic Link trick lets attackers bypass FortiGate patches, Fortinet warns | Attackers are exploiting recently disclosed OttoKit WordPress plugin flaw | Laboratory Services Cooperative dat

                                      Expert used ChatGPT-4o to create a replica of his passport in just 5 minutes bypassing KYC
                                    • Flipping Pages: An analysis of a new Linux vulnerability in nf_tables and hardened exploitation techniques

                                      This blogpost is the next instalment of my series of hands-on no-boilerplate vulnerability research blogposts, intended for time-travellers in the future who want to do Linux kernel vulnerability research. Specifically, I hope beginners will learn from my VR workflow and the seasoned researchers will learn from my techniques. In this blogpost, I'm discussing a bug I found in nf_tables in the Linux

                                      • How to Write Shell Scripts in Node with Google's zx Library — SitePoint

                                        In this article, we’ll learn what Google’s zx library provides, and how we can use it to write shell scripts with Node.js. We’ll then learn how to use the features of zx by building a command-line tool that helps us bootstrap configuration for new Node.js projects. Writing Shell Scripts: the Problem Creating a shell script — a script that’s executed by a shell such as Bash or zsh — can be a great

                                          How to Write Shell Scripts in Node with Google's zx Library — SitePoint
                                        • James Shore: Testing Without Mocks: A Pattern Language

                                          Automated tests are important. Without them, programmers waste a huge amount of time manually checking and fixing their code. Unfortunately, many automated tests also waste a huge amount of time. The easy, obvious way to write tests is to make broad tests that are automated versions of manual tests. But they’re flaky and slow. Folks in the know use mocks and spies (I say “mocks” for short in this

                                          • GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI

                                            ComfyUI-Gemini_Flash_2.0_Exp (⭐+172): A ComfyUI custom node that integrates Google's Gemini Flash 2.0 Experimental model, enabling multimodal analysis of text, images, video frames, and audio directly within ComfyUI workflows. ComfyUI-ACE_Plus (⭐+115): Custom nodes for various visual generation and editing tasks using ACE_Plus FFT Model. ComfyUI-Manager (⭐+113): ComfyUI-Manager itself is also a cu

                                              GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI
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