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46 Following
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tech tasks are cool and hacking is great

Principal OffSec Engineer @BishopFox

blaghttps://noperator.dev
@joxean this is one of the primary reasons I use a 10" ereader
@wtfismyip and @tomnomnom rejoices
@buherator @tekwizz123 cool—what do you like about raindrop?
@buherator not sure what you're using to curate RSS, but here's what I'm doing: https://infosec.exchange/@noperator/109983095917092252
noperator (@[email protected])

A brief summary of how I (try to) stay informed, featuring @[email protected] ❤️ https://noperator.dev/posts/how-i-keep-up-with-new-content/

Infosec Exchange

A brief summary of how I (try to) stay informed, featuring @Inoreader ❤️

https://noperator.dev/posts/how-i-keep-up-with-new-content/

How I keep up with new content

Or, using a content aggregator like it’s 1999. Daniel Miessler writes a lot—and a lot of that lot is about RSS. Daniel inspired me to curate my media intake with RSS (and also more generally to start writing learning in public). Here are a few RSS-related tools and principles I’ve picked up over the past 6 months. It essentially boils down to discovering new content sources via Twitter, etc., and using a content aggregator (and supporting tools) to bring those many sources into a single view.

think I'm experienced enough to call myself a Junior AppleScript Developer at this point
@jianmin I had issues with login.gov, but id.me works well with YubiKey and seems to be widely supported.
faup/cli.md at master · stricaud/faup

Fast URL decoder library. Contribute to stricaud/faup development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub

I recently learned about the “public suffix list” (CORS wouldn’t work without it!) and now I’m wondering … how many other lesser-known hacks are out there that keep the internet from imploding?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Suffix_List

Public Suffix List - Wikipedia

Hamming, "You and Your Research" (June 6, 1995)

YouTube