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The Next Open Source Security Race: Triage at Machine Speed
Claude Opus 4.6 has uncovered more than 500 open source vulnerabilities, raising new considerations for disclosure, triage, and patching at scale.
Find relevant emoji from text on the command-line
Uses a local emoji database.
Ensure you have Node.js version 10 or higher installed. Then run the following:
$ npm install --global emoj
Works best on macOS and Linux. Older Linux distributions don't support color emoji in the terminal, but newer ones (like Ubuntu 18.04 and Fedora 28) do. On Linux, I would recommend installing Emoji One for full emoji coverage. Doesn't really work on Windows.
$ emoj --help
Usage
$ emoj [text]
Example
$ emoj 'i love unicorns'
🦄 🎠 🐴 🐎 ❤ ✨ 🌈
Options
--copy -c Copy the first emoji to the clipboard
--skin-tone -s Set and persist the default emoji skin tone (0 to 5)
Run it without arguments to enter the live search
Use the up/down keys during live search to change the skin tone
FAQs
Find relevant emoji from text on the command-line
We found that emoj demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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