Topics matching filters.php


PHP

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PHP

PHP is a general-purpose programming language originally designed for web development. It was originally created by Rasmus Lerdorf in 1994;[5] the PHP reference implementation is now produced by The PHP Group.[6] PHP originally stood for Personal Home Page,[5] but it now stands for the recursive initialism PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor.[7] PHP code may be executed with a command line interface (CLI), embedded into HTML code, or used in combination with various web template systems, web content management systems, and web frameworks. PHP code is usually processed by a PHP interpreter implemented as a module in a web server or as a Common Gateway Interface (CGI) executable. The web server outputs the results of the interpreted and executed PHP code, which may be any type of data, such as generated HTML code or binary image data. PHP can be used for many programming tasks outside of the web context, such as standalone graphical applications[8] and robotic drone control.[9] The standard PHP interpreter, powered b

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Crystal filter

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Crystal filter

A 9 MHz crystal ladder filter with four matched crystals. A crystal filter is an electronic filter that uses quartz crystals for resonators. Quartz crystals are piezoelectric, so their mechanical characteristics can affect electronic circuits (see mechanical filter). In particular, quartz crystals can exhibit mechanical resonances with a very high Q factor (from 10,000 to 100,000 and greater — far higher than conventional resonators built from inductors and capacitors). The crystal's stability and its high Q factor allow crystal filters to have precise center frequencies and steep band-pass characteristics. Typical crystal filter attenuation in the band-pass is approximately 2-3dB. Crystal filters are commonly used in communication devices such as radio receivers. A crystal filter is very often found in the intermediate frequency (IF) stages of high-quality radio receivers. Cheaper sets may use ceramic filters built from ceramic resonators (which also exploit the piezoelectric effect), or tuned LC circuits.

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Internet Server Application Programming Interface

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Internet Server Application Programming Interface

The Internet Server Application Programming Interface (ISAPI) is an N-tier API of Internet Information Services (IIS), Microsoft's collection of Windows-based web server services. The most prominent application of IIS and ISAPI is Microsoft's web server. The ISAPI has also been implemented by Apache's mod_isapi module so that server-side web applications written for Microsoft's IIS can be used with Apache, and other third-party web servers like Zeus Web Server offer ISAPI interfaces. Microsoft's web server application software is called Internet Information Services, which is made up of a number of "sub-applications" and is very configurable. ASP.NET is one such slice of IIS, allowing a programmer to write web applications in their choice of programming language (VB.NET, C#, F#) that's supported by the Microsoft .NET CLR. ISAPI is a much lower-level programming system, giving much better performance, at the expense of simplicity. ISAPI applications ISAPI consists of two components: Extensions and Filters.

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FuelPHP

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FuelPHP

FuelPHP is an open-source web application framework written in PHP which implements the HMVC pattern.[2][3] History The FuelPHP project started in October 2010.[4] The major contributors[5] to FuelPHP are Harro Verton, Jelmer Schreuder, Dan Horrigan, Philip Sturgeon and Frank de Jonge. In November 2013,[6] Steve West joined the development team. Philip Sturgeon and Dan Horrigan have contributed to the CodeIgniter framework.[7] The first version of FuelPHP (FuelPHP 1.0) was developed under the GitHub repository named Fuel. Another GitHub repository named FuelPHP was created for the development of the second version (FuelPHP 2.0). Major releases Version Release date 1.0 July 30, 2011[8] 1.0.1 August 23, 2011[9] 1.1 December 13, 2011[10] 1.2 May 6, 2012[11] 1.3 September 9, 2012[12] 1.4 November 11, 2012[13] 1.5 January 20, 2013[14] 1.6 May 3, 2013[15] 1.7 October 13, 2013[16] 1.8 April 9, 2016[17] 2.0 No date set,[18][19] Project guideline The

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Suhosin

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Suhosin

Suhosin (Korean 수호신, meaning "guardian angel", pronounced 'su-ho-shin') was an open source patch for PHP and also a PHP extension, written by the German company Sektion Eins. Patch and extension are two independent parts, that can be used separately or in combination. "The goal behind Suhosin is to be a safety net that protects servers from insecure PHP coding practices."[1] Suhosin also reduces the "attackable surface" that PHP adds to a Web Server through function whitelists, resource limits, transparent session and cookie encryption, binary content filter, logging and various other protections.[2] This reduces the risk of deploying previously deemed unsafe PHP programs and protects against known and unknown attacks. Features While the original patch included several low-level memory-related hardening, those feature aren't present in the modules, but most of them have been upstreamed into PHP. Cookies encryption: to mitigate XSS-based cookies stealing, the cookies are encrypted, so an attacker could no

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Twig (template engine)

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Twig (template engine)

Twig is a template engine for the PHP programming language. Its syntax originates from Jinja and Django templates.[3] It's an open source product[4] licensed under a BSD License and maintained by Fabien Potencier. The initial version was created by Armin Ronacher. Symfony PHP framework comes with a bundled support for Twig as its default template engine since version 2.[5] Features complex control flow automatic escaping template inheritance variable filters[6] i18n support (gettext) macros fully extendable[3][7] Twig is supported by the following integrated development environments:[8] Eclipse via the Twig plugin Komodo and Komodo Edit via the Twig highlight/syntax check mode NetBeans via the Twig syntax plugin (until 7.1, native as of 7.2) PhpStorm (native as of 2.1) And the text editors: Atom via the PHP-twig for atom emacs via web-mode.el Notepad++ via the Notepad++ Twig Highlighter Sublime Text via the Twig bundle TextMate via the Twig bundle vim via the Jinja s

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Content-control software

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Content-control software

Content-control software, commonly referred to as an Internet filter, is software that restricts or controls the content an Internet user is capable to access, especially when utilised to restrict material delivered over the Internet via the Web, e-mail, or other means. Content-control software determines what content will be available or be blocked. Such restrictions can be applied at various levels: a government can attempt to apply them nationwide (see Internet censorship), or they can, for example, be applied by an ISP to its clients, by an employer to its personnel, by a school to its students, by a library to its visitors, by a parent to a child's computer, or by an individual user to their own computer. The motive is often to prevent access to content which the computer's owner(s) or other authorities may consider objectionable. When imposed without the consent of the user, content control can be characterised as a form of internet censorship. Some content-control software includes time control funct

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Content-control software

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Chemex Coffeemaker

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Chemex Coffeemaker

Chemex Coffeemaker; designer: Peter Schlumbohm, 1941; Brooklyn Museum. The Chemex Coffeemaker is a manual pour-over style glass coffeemaker, invented by Peter Schlumbohm in 1941, manufactured by the Chemex Corporation in Chicopee, Massachusetts. In 1958, designers at the Illinois Institute of Technology said that the Chemex Coffeemaker is "one of the best-designed products of modern times" and it is included in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.[1][2][3][4] Design A Chemex coffeemaker containing brewed coffee. The Chemex coffeemaker consists of an hourglass-shaped glass flask with a conical funnel-like neck and proprietary filters, made of bonded paper, that are thicker than the standard paper filters used for a drip coffeemaker. The thicker paper of the Chemex filters removes most of the coffee oils and makes coffee that is much "cleaner" than coffee brewed in other coffee-making systems. The "cleaner" cup extracts caffeine and flavor while removing bitter notes.[5] The thick

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True (cigarette)

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True (cigarette)

True is an American brand of cigarettes, currently owned and manufactured by the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. History True was introduced in September 1966 by Lorillard in 10 major U.S. markets, with national distribution beginning on November 1, 1966.[4] The tagline for the new brand was "Shouldn't your brand be True?".[5] The cigarette, when first introduced, was full flavored. It was later available in a reduced tar and nicotine version during the 1970s and 1980s. True cigarettes, like Parliament cigarettes, have a recessed filter. However, whereas Parliaments have nothing in the recessed space, Trues have a plastic piece (round with a triangle in the middle and radials which extend to the outside) which prevents the top of the cigarette from being broken, torn, or crushed as any other cigarette can. In 2015, Reynolds American acquired the brand after they bought the Lorillard Tobacco Company. Advertising Lorillard made various poster adverts to promote the True brand as a "low tar, low nicotine" b

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Half-band filter

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Half-band filter

In digital signal processing, half-band filters are widely used for their efficiency in multi-rate applications. A half-band filter is a low-pass filter that reduces the maximum bandwidth of sampled data by a factor of 2 (one octave). When multiple octaves of reduction are needed, a cascade of half-band filters is common. And when the goal is downsampling, each half-band filter needs to compute only half as many output samples as input samples. It follows from the filter's definition that its transition region, or skirt, can be centered at frequency   f s / 4 , {\displaystyle f_{s}/4,}   where   f s {\displaystyle f_{s}}   is the input sample-rate. That makes it possible to design a FIR filter whose every other coefficient is zero, and whose non-zero coefficients are symmetrical about the center of the impulse response. (See Finite impulse response § Window design method)  Both of those properties can be used to improve efficiency of the implementation.[1][2] References Venosa, Elett

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Instagram

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Instagram

Instagram (also known informally as IG or Insta[11]) is an American photo and video-sharing social networking service owned by Facebook, Inc. It was created by Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, and launched in October 2010 exclusively on iOS. A version for Android devices was released a year and half later, in April 2012, followed by a feature-limited website interface in November 2012, a Fire OS app on June 15, 2014 and an app for Windows 10 tablets and computers in October 2016. The app allows users to upload photos and videos to the service, which can be edited with various filters, and organized with tags and location information. An account's posts can be shared publicly or with pre-approved followers. Users can browse other users' content by tags and locations, and view trending content. Users can like photos, and follow other users to add their content to a feed. The service was originally distinguished by only allowing content to be framed in a square (1:1) aspect ratio with 640 pixels to match the dis

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Started in 2010 in the United States

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Percutaneous hepatic perfusion

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Percutaneous hepatic perfusion

Percutaneous hepatic perfusion (PHP) is a regionalized, minimally-invasive approach to cancer treatment [1]currently undergoing Phase II and Phase III clinical testing. PHP treats a variety of hepatic tumors by isolating the liver and exposing the organ to high-dose chemotherapy. As demonstrated in clinical trials, patients treated by PHP can tolerate much higher doses of chemotherapeutic agents than those receiving traditional systemic chemotherapy without increased toxicities. Procedure Using a system of catheters and filters, PHP isolates the liver from the circulatory system and infuses a chemotherapeutic agent directly to the liver via the hepatic artery. The venous effluent from the liver is then filtered outside of the body and the filtered blood is returned into the jugular vein. PHP is a repeatable procedure and can be performed in an operating room or a radiology suite under local or general anesthesia. See also Delcath Systems References Morita, Shane Y.; Balch, Charles M.; Klimberg, V. Su

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Iterator

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Iterator

In computer programming, an iterator is an object that enables a programmer to traverse a container, particularly lists.[1][2][3] Various types of iterators are often provided via a container's interface. Though the interface and semantics of a given iterator are fixed, iterators are often implemented in terms of the structures underlying a container implementation and are often tightly coupled to the container to enable the operational semantics of the iterator. An iterator performs traversal and also gives access to data elements in a container, but does not itself perform iteration (i.e., not without some significant liberty taken with that concept or with trivial use of the terminology). An iterator is behaviorally similar to a database cursor. Iterators date to the CLU programming language in 1974. Description Internal Iterators Internal iterators are higher order functions (often taking anonymous functions) such as map, reduce etc., implementing the traversal across a container, applying the given fu

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Proxy server

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Proxy server

Communication between two computers (shown in grey) connected through a third computer (shown in red) which acts as a proxy server. Bob does not know to whom the information is going, which is the reason that proxies can be used to protect privacy. In computer networking, a proxy server is a server application or appliance that acts as an intermediary for requests from clients seeking resources from servers that provide those resources.[1] A proxy server thus functions on behalf of the client when requesting service, potentially masking the true origin of the request to the resource server. Instead of connecting directly to a server that can fulfill a requested resource, such as a file or web page for example, the client directs the request to the proxy server, which evaluates the request and performs the required network transactions. This serves as a method to simplify or control the complexity of the request,[2] or provide additional benefits such as load balancing, privacy, or security. Proxies were dev

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Markdown

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Markdown

Markdown is a lightweight markup language with plain text formatting syntax. Its design allows it to be converted to many output formats, but the original tool by the same name only supports HTML.[9] Markdown is often used to format readme files, for writing messages in online discussion forums, and to create rich text using a plain text editor. Since the initial description of Markdown contained ambiguities and unanswered questions, the implementations that appeared over the years have subtle differences and many come with syntax extensions. History John Gruber created the Markdown language in 2004 in collaboration with Aaron Swartz on the syntax,[2][3] with the goal of enabling people "to write using an easy-to-read and easy-to-write plain text format, optionally convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML)".[4] Its key design goal is readability – that the language be readable as-is, without looking like it has been marked up with tags or formatting instructions,[10] unlike text formatted with a ma

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Wordfilter

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Wordfilter

A wordfilter (sometimes referred to as just "filter" or "censor") is a script typically used on Internet forums or chat rooms that automatically scans users' posts or comments as they are submitted and automatically changes or censors particular words or phrases. The most basic wordfilters search only for specific strings of letters, and remove or overwrite them regardless of their context. More advanced wordfilters make some exceptions for context (such as filtering "butt" but not "butter"), and the most advanced wordfilters may use regular expressions. Functions Wordfilters can serve any of a number of functions. Removal of vulgar language A swear filter, also known as a profanity filter or language filter is a software subsystem which modifies text to remove words deemed offensive by the administrator or community of an online forum. Swear filters are common in custom-programmed chat rooms and online video games, primarily MMORPGs. This is not to be confused with content filtering, which is usually bu

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Highlands Coffee

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Highlands Coffee

Highlands Coffee is a Vietnamese coffee shop chain and producer and distributor of coffee products, established in Hanoi by Vietnamese American David Thai in 1998. The founding of the Highlands Coffee company marked the first time an Overseas Vietnamese was able to register a private company within Vietnam.[2] As of 2009, the company operated 80 coffee shops in six cities and provinces across Vietnam.[3] In 2011, Highlands Coffee purchased the pho chain Phở 24 from Lý Quí Trung for an estimated 20 million USD. The next year, Highlands sold 50% of its shares to the Philippine multinational chain Jollibee for 25 million USD.[4][5] In March 2012, under a partnership with Philippine Internet café company Digital Paradise, the first hybrid Highlands/Netopia internet café and coffee shop was opened in the Philippines. History In the late 1980s and early 1990s, David Thai, the company's founder, witnessed the rise of the Starbucks coffee chain from a small company in his hometown of Seattle to a multinational cor

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Form (HTML)

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Form (HTML)

A webform, web form or HTML form on a web page allows a user to enter data that is sent to a server for processing. Forms can resemble paper or database forms because web users fill out the forms using checkboxes, radio buttons, or text fields. For example, forms can be used to enter shipping or credit card data to order a product, or can be used to retrieve search results from a search engine. Description Sample form. The form is enclosed in an HTML table for visual layout. Forms are enclosed in the HTML element. This element specifies the communication endpoint the data entered into the form should be submitted to, and the method of submitting the data, GET or POST. Elements Forms can be made up of standard graphical user interface elements: — a simple text box that allows input of a single line of text. - a type of that requires a partially validated email address - a type of that requires a number — similar to , it is used for security purposes, in which the characters typed in are

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Yii

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Yii

Yii is an open source, object-oriented, component-based MVC PHP web application framework. Yii is pronounced as "Yee" or [ji:] and in Chinese it means "simple and evolutionary" and it can be an acronym for "Yes It Is!".[2] History Yii started as an attempt to fix perceived drawbacks of the PRADO framework: Slow handling of complex pages, steep learning curve and difficulty to customize many controls. In October 2006, after ten months of development, the first alpha version of Yii was released, followed by the formal 1.00 release in December 2008. Yii 1.1 was released in January 2010 adding a form builder, relational Active record queries, a unit testing framework and more. The Yii community continues to follow the 1.1 branch with PHP7 support and security fixes. The last release was version 1.1.21 in April 2019. In May 2011 the developers decided to use new PHP versions and fix architectural shortcomings, resulting in version 2.0. In May 2013 the Yii 2.0 code went public, followed by the first stable rele

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Damage, Inc. Tour

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Damage, Inc. Tour

The Damage, Inc. Tour was a concert tour by American thrash metal band Metallica in support of the band's third studio album, Master of Puppets. The name of the tour is taken from the last song on the album. It began on March 27, 1986 and ended on February 13, 1987. Metallica supported Ozzy Osbourne from March to August, headlined a string of U.S. dates between May 23 and June 7 with Armored Saint, and were the main act throughout the fall and winter with support from Anthrax and Metal Church. Roadie John Marshall, who later played guitar in Metal Church, filled in for James Hetfield on rhythm guitar between July 27 and September 25 following a mid-tour skateboarding accident resulting in a broken arm. Hetfield, Cliff Burton and Kirk Hammett had discussed firing Lars Ulrich upon completion of the tour,[1] but plans were set aside upon the death of Burton on September 27, 1986 in a tour bus accident near Ljungby, Sweden while en route from Stockholm to Copenhagen, Denmark. Performances that were scheduled for

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Cigarette

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Cigarette

An unlit, filtered cigarette A cigarette is a narrow cylinder containing psychoactive material, usually tobacco, that is rolled into thin paper for smoking. Most cigarettes contain a "reconstituted tobacco" product known as "sheet", which consists of "recycled [tobacco] stems, stalks, scraps, collected dust, and floor sweepings", to which are added glue, chemicals and fillers; the product is then sprayed with nicotine that was extracted from the tobacco scraps, and shaped into curls.[1] The cigarette is ignited at one end, causing it to smolder; the resulting smoke is orally inhaled via the opposite end. Most modern cigarettes are filtered, although this does not make them safer. Cigarette manufacturers have described cigarettes as a drug administration system for the delivery of nicotine in acceptable and attractive form.[2][3][4][5] Cigarettes are addictive (because of nicotine) and cause cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart disease, and other health problems. The term cigarette, as common

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Hengst Automotive

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Hengst Automotive

Hengst Automotive, based in Münster, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, is a company that specializes in fluid management, crankcase ventilation systems as well as filter systems for oil, fuel, air and cabin air filtration. The company is a development partner and series supplier for the automotive and engine industry, as well as operating in the industrial and consumer goods markets. In the industrial and environmental technology sectors, Hengst Automotive also develops customized solutions for almost all filtration applications, employing 3,000 people worldwide in eleven locations in Germany, Brazil, China, India, Poland, Singapore and the USA. Founded in 1958 by engineer Walter Hengst, the company is to this day an independent third-generation family enterprise with its headquarters in Münster. History/milestones In 1958, Walter Hengst founded the company Ing. Walter Hengst KG in Münster. In 1977, Günter Röttgering, the son-in-law of Walter Hengst, joined the company, later becoming his successor, as a re

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SQL injection

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SQL injection

A classification of SQL injection attacking vector as of 2010. SQL injection is a code injection technique, used to attack data-driven applications, in which malicious SQL statements are inserted into an entry field for execution (e.g. to dump the database contents to the attacker).[1] SQL injection must exploit a security vulnerability in an application's software, for example, when user input is either incorrectly filtered for string literal escape characters embedded in SQL statements or user input is not strongly typed and unexpectedly executed. SQL injection is mostly known as an attack vector for websites but can be used to attack any type of SQL database. SQL injection attacks allow attackers to spoof identity, tamper with existing data, cause repudiation issues such as voiding transactions or changing balances, allow the complete disclosure of all data on the system, destroy the data or make it otherwise unavailable, and become administrators of the database server. In a 2012 study, it was observe

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Scriptcase

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Scriptcase

PHP Charts HTML5 Scriptcase RAD is a development platform for PHP applications, is web oriented and can be installed in a server in the internet. It acts as a platform for developers and allows them the use of a graphical interface directly through a web browser to automatically generate the codes. It was developed by NetMake in the year 2000. Can be used on Mac, Windows, and Linux operating system. Using Scriptcase, PHP developers can generate complete online applications. Scriptcase is a rapid web development tool that aims to reduce development time and increase productivity. Developers need an environment (web server like Apache + PHP and a database like MySQL) on their desktop (or accessible via network or internet) to develop applications, for hosting the applications the server needs a webserver (incl. PHP) + a database. After programs are finally developed and deployed, Scriptcase is no longer necessary to run the application. Features Scriptcase can be used to create CRUD (Create, Read, Update a

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List of Farscape episodes

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List of Farscape episodes

Farscape is a science fiction television show. Four regular seasons were produced, from 1999 to 2003. Each season consists of 22 episodes. Each episode is intended to air in a one-hour television timeslot (with commercials), and runs for 44 to 50 minutes. The regular seasons were followed by Farscape: The Peacekeeper Wars in 2004, a 2 part miniseries with an air time of 3 hours. Several of the early episodes of Season One were aired out of the intended order. As the official Farscape website[1] lists them in the production order as opposed to airing order, the list below reflects that. Series overview Season Episodes Originally aired[2] First aired Last aired 1 22 March 19, 1999 January 28, 2000 2 22 March 17, 2000 December 19, 2000 3 22 March 16, 2001 January 31, 2002 4 22 June 7, 2002 March 10, 2003 Miniseries 2 October 17, 2004 October 18, 2004 Episodes Season 1 (1999–2000) No.overall No. inseason Title Directed by Written by Original air date

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Zend Framework

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Zend Framework

Zend Framework (ZF) is an open source, object-oriented web application framework implemented in PHP 7 and licensed under the New BSD License.[3] The framework is basically a collection of professional PHP[4]-based packages.[5] The framework uses various packages by the use of Composer as part of its package dependency managers; some of them are PHPUnit for testing all packages, Travis CI for continuous Integration Services. Zend Framework provides to users a support of the Model View Controller (MVC) in combination with Front Controller solution.[6] MVC implementation in Zend Framework has five main areas. The router and dispatcher functions to decide which controller to run based on data from URL, and controller functions in combination with the model and view to develop and create the final web page.[5] On 17 April 2019 it was announced[7] that the framework is transitioning into an open source project hosted by the Linux Foundation to be known as Laminas. License Zend Framework is licensed under the Ope

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Fox Racing Shox

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Fox Racing Shox

Fox Racing Shox is a brand used by Fox Factory (NASDAQ: FOXF) to sell off-road racing suspension components.[4] History In 1974, Bob Fox ran a small business distributing suspension components for motocross bikes with his brother Geoff. In 1977,[1] the company split into what became Fox Racing and Fox Head, Inc. under Geoff Fox, and Bob Fox's Fox Racing Shox parts production company, Fox Factory. A holding company, Fox Factory Holding, was established in 1978.[3] Fox Factory produces suspension components for motorcycles, automobiles, all-terrain vehicles, snowmobiles, and mountain bikes.[1] Fox Factory was acquired by Compass Diversified Holdings, a private equity firm, in 2008.[5] It went public in 2013.[6] In March 2014, Fox acquired Sport Truck USA for about $44 million to further build its off-road vehicle product line. Sport Truck USA primarily designs, markets and distributes high-quality, aftermarket suspension equipment for truck vehicles.[7] In December 2014, Fox acquired the cycling brand and

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Manufacturing companies started in 1977

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Started in 1977 in California

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Nftables

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Nftables

tc relates to the Linux kernel packet scheduler as iptables to netfilter and nft to nftables. All are user-space CLI-programs that are used to configure their respective Linux kernel subsystem. nftables is a subsystem of the Linux kernel providing filtering and classification of network packets/datagrams/frames. It has been available since Linux kernel 3.13 released on 19 January 2014.[2] nftables is supposed to replace certain parts of netfilter, while keeping and reusing most of it. Among the advantages of nftables over netfilter is less code duplication and more throughput. nftables is configured via the user-space utility nft while netfilter is configured via the utilities iptables, ip6tables, arptables and ebtables frameworks. nftables utilizes the building blocks of the Netfilter infrastructure, such as the existing hooks into the networking stack, connection tracking system, userspace queueing component, and logging subsystem. nft command line syntax A command to drop any packets with the destinat

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Ride the Lightning Tour

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Ride the Lightning Tour

The Ride the Lightning Tour was the second tour by American thrash metal band Metallica, supporting their second album Ride the Lightning. Tank supported in Europe, as did WASP and Armored Saint in North America. "Half [the audience] was theirs, half was ours," recalled WASP frontman Blackie Lawless. "It didn't matter what we were doing onstage. It looked like two opposing armies. Sometimes we just stopped what we were doing and watched. It was a war."[1] Metallica performed for the first time at Monsters of Rock in front of 70,000 people.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8] It was Metallica's last full tour to feature bassist Cliff Burton, as he was killed in a bus accident in Stockholm, Sweden during the Damage, Inc. Tour. Personnel James Hetfield – lead vocals and rhythm guitar Kirk Hammett – lead guitar and background vocals Cliff Burton – bass and background vocals Lars Ulrich – drums Setlist "The Ecstasy of Gold" ("Ennio Morricone" cover)[Audio Introduction] "Fight Fire with Fire" "Ride the Lig

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1985 concert tours

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Ali Khamenei

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Ali Khamenei

Sayyid Ali Hosseini Khamenei[6] (Persian: سید علی حسینی خامنه‌ای‎, pronounced  (listen); born 19 April 1939)[13][14] is a Twelver Shia Marja' and the second and current supreme leader of Iran, in office since 1989.[15][16] He was previously the president of Iran from 1981 to 1989. Khamenei is the longest serving head of state in the Middle East, as well as the second-longest serving Iranian leader of the last century, after Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.[17] According to his official website, Khamenei was arrested six times before being sent into exile for three years during Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's reign.[18] He was the target of an attempted assassination in June 1981 that paralysed his right arm.[19][20] Khamenei was one of Iran's leaders during the Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s, and developed close ties with the now powerful Revolutionary Guards which he controls, and whose commanders are elected and dismissed by him. The Revolutionary Guards have been used to suppress opposition to him.[21][22] Khamenei serve

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File inclusion vulnerability

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File inclusion vulnerability

A file inclusion vulnerability is a type of web vulnerability that is most commonly found to affect web applications that rely on a scripting run time. This issue is caused when an application builds a path to executable code using an attacker-controlled variable in a way that allows the attacker to control which file is executed at run time. A file include vulnerability is distinct from a generic directory traversal attack, in that directory traversal is a way of gaining unauthorized file system access, and a file inclusion vulnerability subverts how an application loads code for execution. Successful exploitation of a file inclusion vulnerability will result in remote code execution on the web server that runs the affected web application. An attacker can use remote code execution to create a web shell on the web server, which can be used for website defacement. Types of inclusion Remote file inclusion Remote file inclusion (RFI) occurs when the web application downloads and executes a remote file. These

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Jamroom

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Jamroom

Jamroom is a community focused open source software web content management system (CMS) and Framework based on PHP and MySQL, which runs on a web hosting service.[2] Features include a module based extension system and skins using the Smarty templating engine.[3] Jamroom is distributed under the open source Mozilla Public License (MPL)[4] Features Jamroom URL routing Jamroom has a web template system using a template processor. Skins Jamroom users may install and switch between skins. Skins allow users to change the look and functionality of a Jamroom website. Skins may be installed using the Jamroom "Marketplace" administration tool or skin folders may be uploaded via FTP.[5] The PHP, HTML & CSS code found in themes can be added or edited for providing advanced features. Many Jamroom skins exist, some free, and some premium (paid for) templates. Modules One very popular feature of Jamroom is its module architecture which allows users and developers to extend its abilities beyond the core instal

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Filter (higher-order function)

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Filter (higher-order function)

In functional programming, filter is a higher-order function that processes a data structure (usually a list) in some order to produce a new data structure containing exactly those elements of the original data structure for which a given predicate returns the boolean value true. Example In Haskell, the code example filter even [1..10] evaluates to the list 2, 4,…10 by applying the predicate even to every element of the list of integers 1, 2,… 10 in that order and creating a new list of those elements for which the predicate returns the boolean value true, thereby giving a list containing only the even members of that list. Conversely, the code example filter (not . even) [1..10] evaluates to the list 1, 3,…9 by collecting those elements of the list of integers 1, 2… 10 for which the predicate even returns the boolean value false (with . being the function composition operator). Visual example Below, you can see a view of each step of the filter process for a list of integers X = [0, 5, 8, 3, 2, 1]

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Web hosting control panel

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Web hosting control panel

Screenshot of a web hosting control panel, Ajenti A web hosting control panel is a web-based interface provided by a web hosting service that allows users to manage their servers and hosted services. Web hosting control panels usually include the following modules: Web server (e.g. Apache HTTP Server, NGINX, Internet Information Services) Domain Name System server Mail server and spam filter File Transfer Protocol server Database File manager System monitor Web log analysis software Firewall phpMyAdmin Software Some web hosting control panels are: cPanel DirectAdmin hpanel ISPManager ISPConfig Plesk Webmin Web Hosting Services Below is a list of some popular web hosting companies: GoDaddy HostGator Hostinger MilesWeb Softica Total Web Solutions References See also Comparison of web hosting control panels

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Internet Messaging Program

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Internet Messaging Program

The Internet Messaging Program or IMP is a webmail client. It can be used to access e-mail stored on an IMAP server. IMP is written in PHP and a component of the collaborative software suite Horde. It is included with cPanel and Plesk installations as a webmail client. It often integrates email, calendar, address book, notes, tasks, filters and a newsreader with cPanel. Internet Messaging Program is free and open-source software subject to the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). Current features Dynamic (AJAX) view Mobile smartphone view Minimal (text-only) view HTML message composition with a cross-browser WYSIWYG editor Drag/drop attachment support into WYSIWYG editor HTML signatures High performance Robust IMAP support, utilizing advanced server features Flexible message search Address autocompletion Spell checking Sending of attachments via download link, instead of embedding in message Thread view Message previews in mailbox view Desktop like user interface and navigation (a

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Free email software

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Anonymous function

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Anonymous function

In computer programming, an anonymous function (function literal, lambda abstraction, or lambda expression) is a function definition that is not bound to an identifier. Anonymous functions are often arguments being passed to higher-order functions, or used for constructing the result of a higher-order function that needs to return a function.[1] If the function is only used once, or a limited number of times, an anonymous function may be syntactically lighter than using a named function. Anonymous functions are ubiquitous in functional programming languages and other languages with first-class functions, where they fulfill the same role for the function type as literals do for other data types. Anonymous functions originate in the work of Alonzo Church in his invention of the lambda calculus, in which all functions are anonymous, in 1936, before electronic computers.[2] In several programming languages, anonymous functions are introduced using the keyword lambda, and anonymous functions are often referred to

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Comparison of audio player software

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Comparison of audio player software

The following comparison of audio players compares general and technical information for a number of software media player programs. For the purpose of this comparison, "audio players" are defined as any media player explicitly designed to play audio files, with limited or no support for video playback. Multi-media players designed for video playback, which can also play music, are included under comparison of video player software. General Name Author First public release Stable version Cost Software license Based framework Written in AIMP AIMP DevTeam August 8, 2006 Windows: v4.60, build 2161 (November 28, 2019[1]) [±]Android: v3.00, build 939 (December 10, 2019[2]) [±] Free Proprietary BASS audio library (decoder) Delphi Amarok Mark Kretschmann June 1, 2003 2.9 (March 7, 2018) [±] Free GPLv2 via Phonon: GStreamer, xine, MPlayer, VLC, DirectShow, QuickTime C++ Aqualung Tom Szilagyi et al. January 1, 2006 0.9beta11 January 30, 2013 Free GPLv2 or later

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Tree box filter

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Tree box filter

A tree box filter is a best management practice (BMP) or stormwater treatment system widely implemented along sidewalks, street curbs, and car parks. They are used to control the volume and amount of pollutants entering into local waters, by providing areas where water can collect and naturally infiltrate or seep into the ground. Such systems usually consist of a tree planted in a soil media, contained in a small, square, concrete box. Tree box filters are popular bioretention and infiltration practices, as they collect, retain, and filter runoff as it passes through vegetation and microorganisms in the soil. The water is then either consumed by the tree or transferred into the storm drain system.[1] [2][3] Construction Design Considerations Before construction of the tree box filter, several factors must be considered to maximize the effectiveness and impact of the system. Such factors include area available area of coverage types of contaminants level of rainfall aesthetic appeal maintenance budge

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BWT AG

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BWT AG

BWT's headquarters in Mondsee BWT AG is an Austrian company with its headquarters in Mondsee. The company's name is an initialism derived from Best Water Technology. BWT is a manufacturer of water treatment systems and, based on its own data, the leading water technology group in Europe. Production sites and subsidiaries The company has four main production sites at Mondsee (Austria), Schriesheim (Germany), Paris (France), Aesch (Switzerland) numerous subsidiaries and affiliated companies and a global distribution network.[2] History The story of BWT AG began in 1823, when it was founded as Benckiser Wassertechnik by Johann Adam Benckiser in Germany. Following several acquisitions and mergers the company was purchased in 1990 by Andreas Weißenbacher in a management-buyout. The company was floated on the Vienna Stock Exchange in 1992. The WAB Group is the principal shareholder of BWT AG, with around 20% of the shares owned by diverse shareholders (and roughly 6% owned by the company (as at February 2014).

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Watch (Unix)

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Watch (Unix)

watch is a command-line tool, part of the Linux procps and procps-ng packages, that runs the specified command repeatedly and displays the results on standard output so you can watch it change over time. By default, the command is run every two seconds, although this is adjustable with the -n secs argument. Since the command is passed to sh -c, it may be necessary to encase it in quotes for it to run correctly. Syntax watch [options] command [command options] Example watch "ps -e | grep php" This will generate a list of processes every two seconds, filter for all lines that contain the word "php", and display the results on the screen. The output might look something like this: Every 2s: ps -e | grep php Tue Jan 30 14:56:33 2007 reconst 30028 0.0 0.0 7044 2596 ? S Jan23 0:00 vim -r core/html_api.php cinonet 28009 0.0 0.2 20708 11064 ? SN Jan25 0:30 php5.cgi donoiz 23810 0.0 0.2 22740 10996 ? SN Jan27 0:30 php.cgi 43/pdf The watch command is useful for viewing changes over time, like repeatedly running

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Unix process and task management-related software

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HTTP 404

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HTTP 404

The HTTP 404, 404 Not Found, 404, Page Not Found, or Server Not Found error message is a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) standard response code, in computer network communications, to indicate that the browser was able to communicate with a given server, but the server could not find what was requested. Further, when the requested information is found but access is not granted, the server may return a 404 error if it wishes to not disclose this information, as well.[1] The website hosting server will typically generate a "404 Not Found" web page when a user attempts to follow a broken or dead link; hence the 404 error is one of the most recognizable errors encountered on the World Wide Web. Overview When communicating via HTTP, a server is required to respond to a request, such as a web browser request for a web page, with a numeric response code and an optional, mandatory, or disallowed (based upon the status code) message. In the code 404, the first digit indicates a client error, such as a mistyped U

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Bus snooping

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Bus snooping

Bus snooping or bus sniffing is a scheme by which a coherency controller (snooper) in a cache monitors or snoops the bus transactions, and its goal is to maintain a cache coherency in distributed shared memory systems. A cache containing a coherency controller (snooper) is called a snoopy cache. This scheme was introduced by Ravishankar and Goodman in 1983.[1] How it works When specific data is shared by several caches and a processor modifies the value of the shared data, the change must be propagated to all the other caches which have a copy of the data. This change propagation prevents the system from violating cache coherency. The notification of data change can be done by bus snooping. All the snoopers monitor every transaction on a bus. If a transaction modifying a shared cache block appears on a bus, all the snoopers check whether their caches have the same copy of the shared block. If a cache has a copy of the shared block, the corresponding snooper performs an action to ensure cache coherency. The

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Comparison of web frameworks

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Comparison of web frameworks

This is a comparison of notable web frameworks, software used to build and deploy web applications. General Basic information about each framework. Systems listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development. ASP.NET Project Current stable version Release date License ASP.NET Dynamic Data Base One Foundation Component Library (BFC) 7.51 2018-06-01 Proprietary Component-based Scalable Logical Architecture (CSLA) 4.11.2 2019-07-31[1] MIT MonoRail 2.1 2011-03-17[2] Apache OpenRasta 2.5.2001 2017-12-21 MIT C++ Project Current stable version Release date License CppCMS 1.2.1 2018-05-18[3] MIT Poco 1.9.0 2018-03-08[4] Boost Software License Tntnet 2.2.1 2014-01-17[5] LGPL Wt 4.0.5 2018-12-14[6] GPL, Proprietary ColdFusion Markup Language (CFML) Project Current stable version Release date License CFWheels 2.0.1 2018-01-31 Apache v2 ColdBox Platform 5.6.1[7] 2019-08-19[±] Apache v

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Contagium vivum fluidum

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Contagium vivum fluidum

Martinus Beijerinck Contagium vivum fluidum (Latin: "contagious living fluid") was a phrase first used to describe a virus, and underlined its ability to slip through the finest-mesh filters then available, giving it almost liquid properties. Martinus Beijerinck (1851-1931), a Dutch microbiologist and botanist, first used the term when studying the tobacco mosaic virus, becoming convinced that the virus had a liquid nature.[1] In 1892, Dmitri Ivanovsky had discovered that the cause of tobacco mosaic disease could pass through Chamberland's porcelain filter. He noted these findings but felt that they could only have resulted from a cracked filter. It was left to Beijerinck, in 1898, to put forward the idea that the pathogen was small enough to pass through the filter routinely used to trap bacteria.[2] Ivanovsky, irked that Beijerinck had not cited him, recreated Beijerinck's experimental set-up and demonstrated that particles of ink were small enough to pass through the filter, thus leaving the particulate

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Facebook Stories

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Facebook Stories

Facebook Stories are short user-generated photo or video collections that can be uploaded to the user's Facebook. Facebook Stories were created on March 28, 2017. They are considered to be a second news feed for the social media website.[1] It is focused around Facebook's in-app camera which allows users to use fun filters and Snapchat-like lenses to their content as well as add visual geolocation tags to their photos and videos. The content is able to be posted publicly on the Facebook app for only 24 hours or can be sent as a direct message to a Facebook friend.[1] "As people mostly post photos and videos, Stories is the way they’re going to want to do it," says Facebook Camera product manager Connor Hayes, noting Facebook's shift away from text status updates after 10 years as its primary sharing option. "Obviously we’ve seen this doing very well in other apps. Snapchat has really pioneered this," explained Hayes.[2] Facebook has seen a lot of success through other applications like Snapchat and Instagram

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2017 introductions

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PRADO (framework)

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PRADO (framework)

PRADO is an open source, object-oriented, event-driven, component-based PHP web framework. PRADO's name is an acronym derived from "PHP Rapid Application Development Object-oriented".[3] History The PRADO project was started by Qiang Xue, and was inspired by Apache Tapestry.[3] The framework also borrowed ideas from Borland Delphi and Microsoft's ASP.NET framework. The first public release of PRADO came out in June 2004, but was written using the very limited and now outdated PHP 4 object model, which caused many problems. Qiang then re-wrote the framework for the new PHP 5 object model, and won the Zend PHP 5 coding contest with it. PRADO is a rapid application development (RAD) framework, and in its infancy has been criticized to not be ready for high-performance, high-traffic scenarios. Implementations of template and configuration caching in later PRADO revisions eliminated most performance bottlenecks in its architecture, making it suited for the creation of medium- to high-traffic websites, while sti

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Web search engine

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Web search engine

The results of a search for the term "lunar eclipse" in a web-based image search engine A web search engine or Internet search engine is a software system that is designed to carry out web search (Internet search), which means to search the World Wide Web in a systematic way for particular information specified in a textual web search query. The search results are generally presented in a line of results, often referred to as search engine results pages (SERPs). The information may be a mix of links to web pages, images, videos, infographics, articles, research papers, and other types of files. Some search engines also mine data available in databases or open directories. Unlike web directories, which are maintained only by human editors, search engines also maintain real-time information by running an algorithm on a web crawler. Internet content that is not capable of being searched by a web search engine is generally described as the deep web. History Timeline (full list) Year Engine Current status

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All redirects for discussion

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Lists of superlatives

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Lists of websites

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PhotoScape

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PhotoScape

PhotoScape is a graphics editing program, developed by MOOII Tech, Korea. The basic concept of PhotoScape is 'easy and fun', allowing users to easily edit photographs taken from their digital cameras or even mobile phones. PhotoScape provides a simple user interface to perform common photo enhancements including color adjustment, cutting, resizing, printing and GIF animation.[1][2] Photoscape operates on Microsoft Windows systems and Mac. It is not available on Linux systems. The default languages are English and Korean, with additional language packages available for download. Version 3.7 is the current stable release for Windows XP, 7, Vista, or 8. The current version Photoscape X is for Windows 10 with a pro version available for a fee. Older versions are still available for Windows 98 or ME users. It is distributed free of charge for all users, including commercial bodies. Features PhotoScape can perform tasks of:[3] Photo Viewer: Browse and organize photos. Photo Editor: Enhance and balance color

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Photo software

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Krita

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Krita

Krita is a free and open-source raster graphics editor designed primarily for digital painting and animation purposes. It features OpenGL-accelerated canvas, colour management support, an advanced brush engine, non-destructive layers and masks (similar to Adobe Photoshop), group-based layer management, vector artwork support and switchable customisation profiles. It is written in Qt and runs on Windows and Unix-like OSes (including Linux and macOS). Name The project's current name "Krita" has multi-cultural references. In Swedish, krita means "crayon" and rita means "to draw". In the ancient Indian epic Mahabharata, the name "krita" is used in a context where it can be translated into "perfect".[4] History The Krita team in 2014 Early development of the project can be tracked back to 1998 when Matthias Ettrich, founder of KDE showcased a Qt GUI hack for GIMP at Linux Kongress. The idea of building a Qt-based image editor was later passed to KImage, maintained by Michael Koch, as a part of KOffice suite

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Raster graphics editors for Linux

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Calligra Suite

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AdGuard

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AdGuard

AdGuard is a line of ad blocking[1] and privacy protection[2][3] software which comprises open-source and shareware products that protect Microsoft Windows, Linux, OS X, Android and iOS users from unwanted ads, pop-ups, banners, as well as from tracking, obscene content, malware and phishing. A cross-platform utility, AdGuard is also available as an extension for the most widely used browsers, Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera, Safari, Yandex.Browser, and Microsoft Edge.[4] Over 5 million people are reported to be using the software in 2018.[5] AdGuard Software Limited was founded in 2009.[6] As of 2017 the headquarter was moved to Cyprus while most developers are still located in Moscow.[7] Products While the company's products have earned positive feedback in several industry publications,[8][9][10] a series of policies by Google and Apple app stores occurred in 2014 - 2018, which impeded user access to AdGuard's mobile applications. AdGuard's products include browser extensions and server-side soft

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Free and open-source software

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Ad blocking software

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2009 software

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