ESPN's hidden API endpoints
Latest News: http://site.api.espn.com/apis/site/v2/sports/football/college-football/news
Latest Scores: http://site.api.espn.com/apis/site/v2/sports/football/college-football/scoreboard
<html> | |
<head> | |
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/dankogai/js-deflate/rawdeflate.js"></script> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<h1>SAMLAuthnRequest Test</h1> | |
<br /> | |
To use, modify the following variables: |
#Logging Setup | |
create ltm rule telemetry_local_rule | |
when CLIENT_ACCEPTED { | |
node 127.0.0.1 6514 | |
} | |
create ltm rule telemetry_local_rule when CLIENT_ACCEPTED { node 127.0.0.1 6514 } |
Latest News: http://site.api.espn.com/apis/site/v2/sports/football/college-football/news
Latest Scores: http://site.api.espn.com/apis/site/v2/sports/football/college-football/scoreboard
Probably one of the easiest things you'll ever do with gpg
Install Keybase: https://keybase.io/download and Ensure the keybase cli is in your PATH
First get the public key
keybase pgp export | gpg --import
Next get the private key
A lot of times you are developing a web application on your own laptop or home computer and would like to demo it to the public. Most of those times you are behind a router/firewall and you don't have a public IP address. Instead of configuring routers (often not possible), this solution gives you a public URL that's reverse tunnelled via ssh to your laptop.
Because of the relaxation of the sshd setup, it's best used on a dedicated virtual machine just for this (an Amazon micro instance for example).