Schools augments user's profiles with an associated school, along with interfaces for adding new schools at runtime. Administrators can manage schools and modify learner's schools.
This keeps track of allocations, but only onspecified intervals. Useful for profiling allocations in programs where there is a time limit on completion of the program.
Ruby profiling tool for MongoDB
A gem for getting profile pictures.
A simple gem to fetch provisioning profiles from a git repository and install them
You can read provision profile into Hash, get signed certificate and verify it with p12 files
Generates pprof profiles of ruby memory usage
ruby-prof is a fast code profiler for Ruby. It is a C extension and therefore is many times faster than the standard Ruby profiler. It supports both flat and graph profiles. For each method, graph profiles show how long the method ran, which methods called it and which methods it called. RubyProf generate both text and html and can output it to standard out or to a file.
Generate Apple iOS configuration profiles and payloads
Stickshift is a simple, manual-instrumenting call-tree profiler in as few lines of code as possible.
Toolkit for working with Memory, Profiling & Cleanup
Scrapes name, 1v1 league and 1v1 league points from a Battle.net StarCraft II profile.
ruby-prof is a fast code profiler for Ruby. It is a C extension and therefore is many times faster than the standard Ruby profiler. It supports both flat and graph profiles. For each method, graph profiles show how long the method ran, which methods called it and which methods it called. RubyProf generate both text and html and can output it to standard out or to a file.
Provides detailed profiling data for RSpec runs in a SQLite3 DB
Twitterpunch =============== Twitterpunch is designed to work with PhotoBooth and OS X Folder Actions. When this script is called with the name of an image file, it will post the image to Twitter, along with a message randomly chosen from a list and a specified hashtag. If you call the script with the `--stream` argument instead, it will listen for tweets to that hashtag and download them to a specified directory. If the tweet came from another user, Twitterpunch will speak it aloud. Typically, you'll run one copy on an OSX laptop with PhotoBooth, and a separate copy on another machine (either Windows or OSX) for the viewer. You can also use a mobile device as a remote control, if you like. This will allow the user to enter a custom message for each photo that gets tweeted out, if they'd like. Configuration =========== Configure the program via the `~/.twitterpunch/config.yaml` YAML file. This file should look similar to the example below. --- :twitter: # twitter configuration :consumer_key: <consumer key> :consumer_secret: <consumer secret> :access_token: <access token> :access_token_secret: <access secret> :messages: # list of messages to attach - Hello there # to outgoing tweets - I'm a posting fool - minimally viable product :hashtag: Twitterpunch # The hashtag to post and listen to :handle: Twitterpunch # The twitter username to post as :photodir: ~/Pictures/twitterpunch/ # Where to save downloaded images :logfile: ~/.twitterpunch/activity.log # Where to save logs :viewer: # Use the built-in slideshow viewer :count: 5 # How many images to have onscreen at once :remote: :timeout: 45 # How long the button should remain disabled for :apptitle: dslrBooth # The photo booth application title :hotkey: space # Which hotkey to send to trigger a photo 1. Generate a skeleton configuration file * `twitterpunch --configure` 1. Edit the configuration file as needed. You'll be prompted with the path. * If you have your own Twitter application credentials, you're welcome to use them. 1. Authorize the application with the Twitter API. * `twitterpunch --authorize` Usage ========== ### Using OS X PhotoBooth 1. Start PhotoBooth at least once to generate its library. 1. Install the Twitterpunch Folder Action * `twitterpunch --install` * It may claim that it could not be attached, fear not. 1. Profit! * _and by that, I mean take some shots with PhotoBooth!_ *Note*: if the folder action doesn't seem to work and photos aren't posted to Twitter, here are some troubleshooting steps to take: 1. Run Twitterpunch by hand with photos as arguments. This may help you isolate configuration or authorization issues. * `twitterpunch foo.jpg` 1. Correct the path in the workflow. * `which twitterpunch` * Edit the Twitterpunch folder action to include that path. #### Using the remote web app Configure the remote web app using the `:remote` hash in `config.yaml`. You can usually find the title of the app using `system_profiler -detailLevel full SPApplicationsDataType` and grepping for the name or path to the `.app`. In this example, the title is _dslrBooth_. [ben@ganymede] ~ $ system_profiler -detailLevel full SPApplicationsDataType | grep -B8 dslrBooth.app dslrBooth: Version: 2.9 Obtained from: Identified Developer Last Modified: 10/14/17, 9:50 PM Kind: Intel 64-Bit (Intel): Yes Signed by: Developer ID Application: Hope Pictures LLC (MZR5GHAQX4), Developer ID Certification Authority, Apple Root CA Location: /Applications/dslrBooth.app 1. Run the app with `twitterpunch --remote` 1. Browse to the app with http://{address}:8080 1. [optional] If on an iOS device, add to your homescreen * This will give you "app behaviour", such as full screen, and a nice icon #### Troubleshooting. 1. Make sure the folder action is installed properly 1. Use the Finder to navigate to `~/Pictures/` 1. Right click on the `Photo Booth Library` icon and choose _Show Package Contents_. 1. Right click on the `Pictures` folder and choose `Services > Folder Actions Setup` 1. Make sure that the `Twitterpunch` action is attached. 1. Install the folder action 1. Open the `resources` folder of this gem. * Likely to be found in `/Library/Ruby/Gems/{version}/gems/twitterpunch-#{version}/resources/`. 1. Double click on the `Twitterpunch` folder action and install it. * It may claim that it could not be attached, fear not. ### Using something besides PhotoBooth Configure the program you are using for your photo shoot to call Twitterpunch each time it snaps a photo. Pass the name of the new photo as a command line argument. Alternatively, you could batch them, as Twitterpunch can accept multiple files at once. [ben@ganymede] ~ $ twitterpunch photo.jpg [photo2.jpg photo3.jpg photo4.jpg] You can manually install the Folder Action, or you can follow the automated install process after tweaking the workflow slightly. 1. Identify where the app stores the resulting image files. 1. Edit the Twitterpunch folder action to include that path. 1. Follow the steps above to install the Folder Action. ### Viewing the Twitter stream Twitterpunch will run on OS X or Windows equally well. Simply configure it on the computer that will act as the Twitter display and then run in streaming mode. [ben@ganymede] ~ $ twitterpunch --stream There are two modes that Twitterpunch can operate in. 1. If a `:hashtag` is defined then all images tweeted to the configured hashtag will be displayed in the slideshow. 1. Otherwise, Twitterpunch will stream the `:handle` Twitter user's stream and display all images either posted by that user or addressed to that user. With protected tweets, you can have rudimentary access control. In either mode, tweets that come from any other user will also be spoken aloud. If you don't want to use the built-in slideshow viewer, you can disable it by removing the `:viewer` key from your `~/.twitterpunch/config.yaml` config file. Twitterpunch will then simply download the tweeted images and save them into the `:photodir` directory. You can then use anything you like to view them. There are currently two decent viewing options I am aware of. * Windows background image: * Configure the Windows background to randomly cycle through photos in a directory. * Hide desktop icons. * Hide the taskbar. * Disable screensaver and power savings. * Drawbacks: You're using Windows and you have to install Ruby & RubyGems manually. * OS X screensaver: * Choose one of the sexy screensavers and configure it to show photos from the `:photodir` * Set screensaver to a super short timeout. * Disable power savings. * Drawbacks: The screensaver doesn't reload dynamically, so I have to kick it and you'll see it reloading each time a new tweet comes in. Limitations =========== * It currently requires manual setup for Folder Actions. * Rubygame is kind of a pain to set up. Contact ======= * Author: Ben Ford * Email: binford2k@gmail.com * Twitter: @binford2k * IRC (Freenode): binford2k
People Data Labs builds people data. Use our dataset of 1.5 Billion unique person profiles to build products, enrich person profiles, power predictive modeling/ai, analysis, and more.
A decent web scraping gem.Scrapes website's title, description,social profiles such as linkedin, facebook, twitter, instgram, vimeo,pinterest, youtube channel and contact details such as emails, phone numbers.
factbook-fields - world factbook country profile meta data - categories, fields, subfields, and more
Get Mojang profile information coming from a username or a UUID. Will also read in whitelist data and output whitelists in pre-1.7 and 1.7+ formats.
This Gem allows you to manage Windows roving profiles stored on your servers
profilepic - profile pic(ture) as a service
Wor-prof (Wprof) is a gem for Ruby On Rails which its only purpose is to measure a RoR app's performance through a profile with different times of response. Catch all request and save them into a database, csv file or send to external service, it's easy to configure and use. Wprof can take measure of HTTParty requests and your own methods.
Create profiles you can use to post messages to slack
CLI tool for downloading iOS and Mac provisioning profiles
PLine is a profiler for Ruby1.9.3 and Ruby1.9.2. PLine profiles each line of Ruby method (method written in Ruby) you specified. Using PLine, you can profile each line of Ruby method easily.
ruby-prof is a fast code profiler for Ruby. It is a C extension and therefore is many times faster than the standard Ruby profiler. It supports both flat and graph profiles. For each method, graph profiles show how long the method ran, which methods called it and which methods it called. RubyProf generate both text and html and can output it to standard out or to a file.
clean Apple Certificate files and Provisioning Profile.
RMonitor is a tool for defining monitor profiles that can be invoked. This is useful when you often find yourself in situations with different monitor configurations.
By annotating your test, profile their performance and check performance regression since last run.
A Rails engine with profiling options for StimulusReflex
Badges is a Ruby gem that allows you to connect to different API's to retrieve your earned badges and profile information.
Mark the timestamp of RSpec example starts/ends, and log other stuff for profiling
Finger(er) is a finger server that returns the GitHub profile associated with the provided username. Quickly lookup GitHub user and organization information using a standard finger command.
A better formatter for the rspec performance profile
rspec-blame provides a Blame formatter that outputs git blame details for the slowest examples above a profile threshold when profiling with RSpec.
Periodically dump StackProf profile result to tmp directory with easy-to-understand filename
Updated code signing settings from 'Automatic' to a specific profile
Allows for displaying Twitter profile picture in a view with only a Twitter username and size option
An interactive Ruby shell with auto-reloading, shell-outs, profiling, and integrated help.
ruby-prof is a fast code profiler for Ruby. It is a C extension and therefore is many times faster than the standard Ruby profiler. It supports both flat and graph profiles. For each method, graph profiles show how long the method ran, which methods called it and which methods it called. RubyProf generate both text and html and can output it to standard out or to a file.
Get the followers number for the given social media profile
Fluent input plugin for Werkzeug WSGI application profiler statistics.
google_plus_archiver is a simple command-line tool to archive Google+ profiles and public streams.
Profiled on the Web
Runtime Profiler for Rails Applications
Description of
Loads a given steam profile in ruby
A modern profiler for your Rails application
Extract profile metadata from various social-media-profiles, such as Twitter, XING, Github, Stackoverflow or generic og-metatags.
A client for the Kodi JSON API v12, currently implemented methods are Addons, Application, AudioLibrary Favourites, Files, GUI, Input, Player, Profiles and System (more will be added with the time). For more information how to use it and how to activate Remote Control in Kodi, please check the github page https://github.com/cfe86/RubyKodiClient