Developer(s) | Juice Team |
---|---|
Stable release | |
Written in | Python |
Operating system | OS X, Windows |
Type | Podcasting |
Licence | GNU General Public License |
Website | juicereceiver.sourceforge.net |
Juice is a podcastaggregator for Windows and OS X used for downloading media files such as ogg and mp3 for playback on the computer or for copying to a digital audio player. Juice lets a user schedule downloading of specific podcasts, and will notify the user when a new show is available. It is free software available under the GNU General Public License. The project is hosted at SourceForge. Formerly known as iPodder and later as iPodder Lemon, the software's name was changed to Juice in November 2005 in the face of legal pressure from Apple, Inc.
Development[edit]
Supply chain sources tell us that Apple has told its suppliers to cut iPhone production by a further 10% over the next three months. Nikkei reports the request came from Apple late last month, which would put it slightly before Apple's announcement of reduced earnings guidance earlier this month, although it's likely that both decisions were made hand in han. Juice is the missing Bluetooth manager for macOS. Connect and manage your devices from. MacOS Notification Center 3. Menu Bar (Control Center) 4. Browser foxfire mac.
The original development team was formed by Erik de Jonge, Robin Jans, Martijn Venrooy, Perica Zivkovic from the company Active8 based in the Netherlands, Andrew Grumet, Garth Kidd and Mark Posth joined the team soon after the first release. The development team credited the program concept to Adam Curry who wrote a little Applescript as a proof of concept and provided the first podcast[1] shows (then referred to as 'audio enclosures') but primarily to Dave Winer who was the inspiration for Adam Curry. The first version also included a screenscraper for normal HTML files. Initially it was not clear that podcasting would be completely tied to RSS. Although that was eventually the method chosen, during the early development phase a diverse range of people were working on alternatives, including a version based on Freenet.
The program is written in Python and, through use of a cross-platform UI library, runs on Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows 2000 or Windows XP. A Linux variant has not been developed.
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The 2004 growth of podcasting inspired other podcatching programs, such as jPodder, as well as the June 2005 addition of a podcast subscription feature in Apple's iTunes music player. This development quickly put an end to the popularity of the Juice application.
In 2006 the team effectively stopped further development of the program, the developers started working in other fields, some Podcasting related. The team from Active8 created PodNova (http://www.podnova.com) an application which still integrates very well with Juice with the opml interface. Adam Curry and Andrew Grumet started working on a commercial show network (podshow) where all the shows are sponsored and the distinction between show and commercial is faded to the background. Others went on to other ventures.
Forks[edit]
Cached
There have been several forks of Juice:
- PodNova, which was available on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux, but closed at the end of February 2010.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Juice (crawlspace) Mac Os Download
External links[edit]
- Juice (aggregator) on SourceForge.net
OWASP Juice Shop is probably the most modern and sophisticated insecureweb application! It can be used in security trainings, awareness demos,CTFs and as a guinea pig for security tools! Juice Shop encompassesvulnerabilities from the entireOWASP Top Ten along with many other securityflaws found in real-world applications!
Description
Juice Shop is written in Node.js, Express and Angular. It was the firstapplication written entirely in JavaScript listed in theOWASP VWA Directory.
The application contains a vast number of hacking challenges of varyingdifficulty where the user is supposed to exploit the underlyingvulnerabilities. The hacking progress is tracked on a score board.Finding this score board is actually one of the (easy) challenges!
Apart from the hacker and awareness training use case, pentestingproxies or security scanners can use Juice Shop as a 'guineapig'-application to check how well their tools cope withJavaScript-heavy application frontends and REST APIs.
Translating 'dump' or 'useless outfit' into German yields 'Saftladen'which can be reverse-translated word by word into 'juice shop'. Hencethe project name. That the initials 'JS' match with those of'JavaScript' was purely coincidental!
Testimonials
The most trustworthy online shop out there.(@dschadow) —The best juice shop on the whole internet!(@shehackspurple) —Actually the most bug-free vulnerable application in existence!(@vanderaj) —First you 😂😂then you 😢(@kramse) —But this doesn't have anything to do with juice.(@coderPatros' wife) Gemini 2: the duplicate finder 2 0 5.
Juice (crawlspace) Mac Os Pro
Contributors
The OWASP Juice Shop has been created byBjörn Kimminich and is developed,maintained and translated by ateam of volunteers.Alive update of the project contributorsis found here.
Licensing
See Full List On Github.com
This program is free software: You can redistribute it and/or modify itunder the terms of theMIT License.OWASP Juice Shop and any contributions are Copyright © by BjoernKimminich 2014-2021.