IDEA is a series of nonverbal algorithm assembly instructions by Sándor P. Fekete, Sebastian Morr, and Sebastian Stiller. They were originally created for Sándor's algorithms and datastructures lecture at TU Braunschweig, but we hope they will be useful in all sorts of context. We publish them here so that they can be used by teachers, students, and curious people alike. Visit the about page to learn more.
BeardedSpice is a menubar application for Mac OSX that allows you to control web based media players and some native apps with the media keys found on Mac keyboards. It is an extensible application that works with Chrome (Canary, Yandex, Chromium) and Safari, and can control any tab with an applicable media player.
A Windows quick look tool.
Acts just like the one in macOS, but Seer is more powerful, customizable and faster.
Bridgy pulls comments, likes, and reshares on social networks back to your web site. You can also use it to post to social networks - or comment, like, reshare, or even RSVP - from your own web site.
A picture is worth a thousand words, so here's a screenshot of comments, likes, etc. that Bridgy sent to a post on my own site:
ProcrastriTracker is an open source time tracking tool that automatically tracks what applications and documents you use, and allows you to view statistics on your usage in great detail. It is written to be small and non-intrusive. It is useful for:
Increasing your productivity: seeing long term stats on what really is costing you the most time can help shift priorities to work more optimally.
Tracking and billing time: when working on multiple projects / for multiple clients, nearly automatically!
Fun! Seeing such detailed statistics is plain interesting, especially over longer time, even if you don't intend to do anything with it.
If you're using a web font, you're bound to see a flash of unstyled text (or FOUC), between the initial render of your websafe font and the webfont that you've chosen. This usually results in a jarring shift in layout, due to sizing discrepancies between the two fonts. To minimize this discrepancy, you can try to match the fallback font and the intended webfont’s x-heights and widths [1]. This tool helps you do exactly that.
Differences from normalize.css
Smaller
Includes only normalizations for the latest Chrome, Firefox, and Safari
Sets box-sizing: border-box
All credit should go to normalize.css. I just removed some cruft and added some improvements. If you have questions about the source, check out the original source and this for details.
Modern, native, and friendly tool for relational databases