freeTSA.org provides a free Time Stamp Authority. Adding a trusted timestamp to code or to an electronic signature provides a digital seal of data integrity and a trusted date and time of when the transaction took place.
Watching 3D movies at home using the same from a movie theater requires more than just software; it also requires a 3D-capable display that supports polarization (interleaved rows). Standard PC monitors and laptops usually lack the physical polarizing filter needed to work with theater glasses. If you have a compatible 3D monitor or TV, several media players can handle the 3D signal for you. Top 3D Video Players for Polarized Glasses
These players support various 3D output modes, including "Interleaved" or "Row Interlaced," which is the specific format used by polarized displays.
marlam/bino: 3D video player with support for 180 ... - GitHub
$ curl --data "screenshot=https://www.fsf.org/&delay=n" https://freetsa.org/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf $ curl --data "screenshot=https://www.fsf.org/&delay=y" https://freetsa.org/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf # (I'm Feeling Lucky) ### HTTP 2.0 in cURL: Get the latest cURL release and use this command: curl --http2. ### REST API in Tor: Add "-k --socks5-hostname localhost:9050". # Normal domains within the Tor-network. $ curl -k --socks5-hostname localhost:9050 --data "screenshot=https://www.fsf.org/&delay=y" https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf # ".onion" domain within the Internet. $ curl -k --data "screenshot=https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/&delay=y&tor=y" https://freetsa.org/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf # ".onion" domain within the Tor network. $ curl -k --socks5-hostname localhost:9050 --data "screenshot=https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/&delay=y&tor=y" https://4bvu5sj5xok272x6cjx4uurvsbsdigaxfmzqy3n3eita272vfopforqd.onion/screenshot.php > screenshot.pdf
Watching 3D movies at home using the same from a movie theater requires more than just software; it also requires a 3D-capable display that supports polarization (interleaved rows). Standard PC monitors and laptops usually lack the physical polarizing filter needed to work with theater glasses. If you have a compatible 3D monitor or TV, several media players can handle the 3D signal for you. Top 3D Video Players for Polarized Glasses
These players support various 3D output modes, including "Interleaved" or "Row Interlaced," which is the specific format used by polarized displays.
marlam/bino: 3D video player with support for 180 ... - GitHub