While browsing Reddit this morning, I stumbled upon this cool website that provide a huge collection of cheatsheets for almost anything - programming languages and operating systems. I think this might come in handy for some people like me, or not me. Well, I don't know but f**k it, I'm going to share it anyway.
You can visit the website HERE. Some of the cheat sheets are written there and some others that needs more explanations are linked to some selected websites such as tutorialspoint.com and a few other websites. Just see it for yourself cause I don't plan on writing too long about this.
There a more list of languages available at the bottom sorted alphabetically. You'll have to visit the website for more content.
You can visit the website HERE. Some of the cheat sheets are written there and some others that needs more explanations are linked to some selected websites such as tutorialspoint.com and a few other websites. Just see it for yourself cause I don't plan on writing too long about this.
There a more list of languages available at the bottom sorted alphabetically. You'll have to visit the website for more content.
Quoted from the About page of the website:
This website simplify the terms and let you know the whole point of the terms and service in simple way. This image might tell you more:
“Terms of Service; Didn't Read” (short: ToS;DR) is a young project started in June 2012 to help fix the “biggest lie on the web”: almost no one really reads the terms of service we agree to all the time.Background. The rough idea behind ToS;DR emerged during the 2011 Chaos Communication Camp near Berlin, with people from Unhosted a movement to create web apps that give users control over their valuable user data and privacy. Since June 2012, Hugo Roy (@hugoroyd) has taken the lead for the project, and started the legal analysis. Ultimately, all the work is transparent and the discussions happen in public. Our work is funded by non-profits organisations and individual donations and gets released as free software and open data.Please bear in mind that the project is still in the early phase and that most data is subject to important changes. More information about our classification.What does “ToS;DR” mean? the name is inspired by internet acronym TL;DR which stands for "Too Long; Didn't Read" and is often used on blogs and emails when a block of text is just really long and that people are too lazy to read the whole stuff. It was intended more as a code name than as a real name. But it seems that people like it (do you?)
This website simplify the terms and let you know the whole point of the terms and service in simple way. This image might tell you more:
It has been a long time again since I wrote the last post. Well, time is not a friend of mine. Too many things happens and I don't really have the heart and enough time to post here. And I don't have time for a long cliche introduction either. So, this is it. This is a script i found on the Internet. I believe it belongs to Samy. His site has some interesting stuff. Be sure to take a peek.
It's a Perl script. be sure you have all that it takes to run the script. Google is your friend.
P/S: Source: samy.pl
It's a Perl script. be sure you have all that it takes to run the script. Google is your friend.
P/S: Source: samy.pl