What do you mean by "not in working condition". I use it frequently and it just works. The little development on the project is probably due to it's age. I'm pretty sure we were using Spiderfoot when BackTrack was still around.
<pre><code> What do you mean by "not in working condition". I use it frequently and it just works.
</code></pre>
Some would disagree with that statement: https://github.com/smicallef/spiderfoot/issues
<pre><code> The little development on the project is probably due to it's age.
</code></pre>
How so? Even the most feature complete software is in need of regular maintenance to assure compatability with new versions of dependencies and OS. Such maintenance would appear to have stagnated since 2022, looking at the commit history.
Seems similar to reflex, just a little more pythonic. The only thing I'm currently missing is a properly working node-graph editor/library implementation or wrapper (e.g reactflow).
there are plenty of blockchain organizations I find legit, typically the people asking these questions are looking for a fictional use case they never imagined of which they are the target audience, and view not being the audience as invalidating everyone else that is. its an impossible standard to entertain, its not interesting to watch the goalposts move of them debating why its not useful to them, instead of legit, instead of asking why other people find it useful and then catering to whatever frictions they currently encounter….. like every competitive market does
I'm asking out of curiosity, probably just like the other guy. If you know a few Blockchain organizations, which you find legit, you could have just listed them.
Many other organizations surrounding forks of Uniswap V2 they deployed on other EVMs
Coinbase
Fidelity
Blackrock
Metamask
Phantom
Thirdweb
OpenZeppelin
Multicoin
Hardhat
Paradigm and their support of Foundry
Avalanche Labs
WAGMI
BuildBear
Solana Labs
Messari
Elliptic
Chainanalysis
Custodia bank
There are many charts of segments the ecosystem.
I would say many of the labs+foundation organizations are functioning in a noneventful fine way around their protocols. Other bounty systems are functioning fine noneventfully. Research firms as well. Private equity and hedge funds. Other institutional financial firms. Teams maintaining battle tested protocols.
Its just such a bizarre question to me, with my lack of answer being seen as an indictment validating everyone else's own…. ignorance? Whats the standard for legit? This is an article about changing a terms of service unscrupulously. Most tech companies that are respected have granted themselves the right to do that, and we debate that specific company’s policy and their leadership as individuals. “Legit” would be seen as a juvenile question towards those companies as they do 100 different things, some well, some controversial.
Most of those above organizations are employers, some of the ones with tokens compensate comparatively to FAANGs or way higher if the token grants appreciated in value. They have good relationships with all their stakeholders and their mission or products for their community.
Hope it inspires other people to ask a more intelligent question at the same standard they do of other industries.
I'm 50 and have noticed that drivers are more cavalier these days than at any other time in any of the other decades, from the 1970s on up, that I've watched cars, watch people's behavior.
The expectation that you are your work, and you're always busy, seems to have given permission for people to be like,"My life is out of control so I will be too".
Goes hand in hand with the society not being for the care of people but for the care of bank accounts, gripe about the way they were doing capitalism these days. Setting people's wants higher and higher while simultaneously continuing down the path of stratifying society into permanent lower income class.
An Acer Aspire V3 from ~2013 (my first Laptop). It also has an NVIDIA card (GTX 750M), but I can't remember having any issues with the drives, since you can just apt-get them. Even CUDA works, even though it's not really that useful on a machine like that. Upgraded the RAM to 32GB and installed an additional SSD. The Keyboard broke once and the original Battery was pretty much dead, both could be replaced for cheap. The new battery even is double the capacity and lifts the laptop up a bit which solves the airflow issue it originally had. For a 10 year old device it surely still runs great and still gets used for development when not at home.
Edit: Have been running Backtrack 5, Kali, Parrot, Pop and now Debian.