chai
CUPS
chai | CUPS | |
---|---|---|
6 | 52 | |
360 | 1,846 | |
6.1% | 1.2% | |
6.8 | 2.3 | |
24 days ago | 6 months ago | |
Shell | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
chai
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MuPDF WASM Viewer Demo
But not just off-topic: abusive, and dishonest.
I'm not sure this even applies as we call the mutool binary installed via apt, rather than use or modify their libraries.
Even if it applies, Mu's AGPL requires you release the source code, which is what we already and have always done. So it doesn't apply. It doesn't require you use a particular license.
As you're so keen on searching our source you could have also easily read what the AGPL means, and seen that we use mutool^0, which I guess you would have done, if you were actually intending to be helpful rather than just trying to make us look bad, right? Hahaha! :)
I guess you're one of those people bitter at our success or maybe you were trying to use BrowserBox without paying the licensing fees and you didn't like that we made it commercial, is that right? Hahaha! :)
It seems if you were genuinely trying to be helpful rather than dishonest and trying to make us look bad, you would have just emailed me, right? Hahahahaha! :)
https://github.com/dosyago/chai/blob/37c1a1ec0941d81e0d6f8af...
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PostScript’s Sudden Death in Sonoma
If you're interested in this kind of thing, I packaged a lot of functionality (including zip files) into an open source doc viewer called "chai" (that also works on mac, install deps via brew).
Please note its focus is on security rather than looks so it converts docs to page images that you then view in (an optionally local) web client.
You can easily modify the convert process to move it to PDF rather than page images tho. Check it out: https://github.com/dosyago/chai
- Show HN: Explore zips and other archives from a safe distance before download
- Show HN: Chai – a zero-trust viewer for PDFs and other docs
CUPS
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A new, modern, and secure print experience from Windows
If your printer for example supports IPP and Postscript or PDF then that would be possible. Higher end (commercial) HP printers usually offer this functionality. Take a look at CUPS [1] if you want to know more about IPP.
[1] https://www.cups.org/
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Trying to set up an old Zebra LP2844 as a network printer
Your best bet is to set up a print server. The support page even has a CUPS driver. CUPS is well known for supporting a lot of printers. I run it on an old Mac-mini running Ubuntu. You can run it on something as small as a Raspberry Pi.
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PostScript’s Sudden Death in Sonoma
Apple should be more open about their removals. It isn't clear how this affects their CUPS implementation or PostScript printers https://www.cups.org
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Microsoft to kill off third-party printer drivers in Windows
CUPS is under the Apache License 2.0 , so they can just use it, if they wanted: https://github.com/apple/cups/blob/master/LICENSE
They won't of course.
- On the harm shareholders can do to OpenSource
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My collection of Ansible roles for self-hosting everything with Rocky Linux and FreeIPA
CUPS printing server
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Is this easily solvable? I am going crazy
Another alternative is for you to set up a print server in VLAN20. Then set up the print server to print to the printer in VLAN99. CUPS is pretty easy to set up.
- “Sorry to bother you” me, to my printer
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Sharing a Printer in a WiFi Network
But after both Apple and Linux switched their CUPS-based printing systems to Python 3 or some other breaking change that I don't mind to understand, the only way to print a document seemed to be using a PC running Microsoft Windows. So I had to save a PDF in the cloud or email it to myself, then startup Windows on a laptop physically connected to the printer, start the printing process, check if the paper has been printed successfully, and shut down Windows. What a waste of time and energy!
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House upgrade: Need to keep an old USB-only printer connected wirelessly, would this work? (Old Router connected to new router)
Another option is to set up a print server. There are free print server programs that you can run on a computer. CUPS is pretty popular. I used to run it on a Raspberry Pi for an ancient LaserJet 1012. That printer just keeps going.