OpenStreetMap and Internet Archive because they are operating with a small budget (as opposed to Wikipedia).
OpenStreetMap and Internet Archive because they are operating with a small budget (as opposed to Wikipedia).
#!/bin/sh
# Select a file with fzf from a database sorted by frecency and open it using
# xdg-open. frece can be found at https://github.com/YodaEmbedding/frece
DB_FILE=${FRECE_FILES_DB:-$HOME/.cache/frecent-files.csv}
item=$(frece print "$DB_FILE" | fzf --tiebreak=index --scheme=path)
[ -z "$item" ] && exit 1
frece increment "$DB_FILE" "$item"
xdg-open "$item"
#!/bin/sh
# Update frece database
DB_FILE=${FRECE_FILES_DB:-$HOME/.cache/frecent-files.csv}
tmp_file=$(mktemp)
fd -H . ~ > "$tmp_file" # use ~/.fdignore file to exclude certain dirs
frece update "$DB_FILE" "$tmp_file" --purge-old
rm "$tmp_file"
The mojo, cpan and pip bash scripts don’t fail my test of “skimming over the source and looking for dangerous external commands like curl or rm
” (good syntax highlighting is helpful here). They look like typical completion scripts. However, if your Linux distribution has a pip completion script in their repos, prefer that one.
Wired has removed the story because it “does not meet [their] editorial standards”.
Wired has removed the story because it “does not meet [their] editorial standards”.
You guys are overreacting. DDG said they would only down-rank sites associated with Russian disinformation. It’s normal for search engines to downrank low-quality sites such as SEO spam.
Don’t blindly run untrusted software, use Bubblewrap at the very least. Keep https://xkcd.com/538/ in mind.