Skip to main content

X4D Icons released

I am releasing some icons under MIT license. They will be hosted at x4d.surgut.co.uk and available for development on GitHub.

I had to create my own icons, as I couldn't find icons of similar nature under a free license. Hopefully others will find these useful as well.

The icons below are all available in PNG, GIF, SVG and EPS. To link to a specific version directly, add .png, .gif, -v.svg or -v.eps to the generic URI (or browse the icons repository to see all versions).

Document type Light Dark
HTML 2.0 Valid HTML2 Valid HTML20
HTML 3.2 Valid HTML32 Valid HTML32
HTML 4.0 Valid HTML40 Valid HTML40
HTML 4.01 Valid HTML4.01 Valid HTML4.01
XHTML 1.0 Valid XHTML10 Valid XHTML10
XHTML 1.1 Valid XHTML11 Valid XHTML11
XHTML Basic 1.0 Valid XHTML Basic 10 Valid XHTML Basic 10
XHTML-Print 1.0 Valid XHTML Print 10 Valid XHTML Print 10
CSS Valid CSS Valid CSS
CSS 1 Valid CSS1 Valid CSS1
CSS 2 Valid CSS2 Valid CSS2
MathML 2.0 Valid MathML 20 Valid MATHML20
SVG 1.0 Valid SVG10 Valid SVG10
SVG 1.1 Valid SVG11 Valid SVG11
SVG 1.2 Valid SVG12 Valid SVG12
SVG Tiny 1.1 Valid SVG Tiny11 Valid SVG Tiny11
SVG Tiny 1.2 Valid SVG Tiny12 Valid SVG Tiny12
XML 1.0 well-formed XML10 well-formed XML10
XML 1.1 well-formed XML11 well-formed XML11

Comments

  1. You can then practice taking part in} until you might be} ready to play for real money. Now you’ve learned thecasinosource.com the straightforward roulette rules and how to to|tips on how to} play the game. While it’s important to know taking part in} roulette, understanding what you stand to win with every bet is equally crucial.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

How to disable TLS 1.0 and TLS 1.1 on Ubuntu

Example of website that only supports TLS v1.0, which is rejected by the client Overivew TLS v1.3 is the latest standard for secure communication over the internet. It is widely supported by desktops, servers and mobile phones. Recently Ubuntu 18.04 LTS received OpenSSL 1.1.1 update bringing the ability to potentially establish TLS v1.3 connections on the latest Ubuntu LTS release. Qualys SSL Labs Pulse report shows more than 15% adoption of TLS v1.3. It really is time to migrate from TLS v1.0 and TLS v1.1. As announced on the 15th of October 2018 Apple , Google , and Microsoft will disable TLS v1.0 and TLS v1.1 support by default and thus require TLS v1.2 to be supported by all clients and servers. Similarly, Ubuntu 20.04 LTS will also require TLS v1.2 as the minimum TLS version as well. To prepare for the move to TLS v1.2, it is a good idea to disable TLS v1.0 and TLS v1.1 on your local systems and start observing and reporting any websites, systems and applications that

Ubuntu 23.10 significantly reduces the installed kernel footprint

Photo by Pixabay Ubuntu systems typically have up to 3 kernels installed, before they are auto-removed by apt on classic installs. Historically the installation was optimized for metered download size only. However, kernel size growth and usage no longer warrant such optimizations. During the 23.10 Mantic Minatour cycle, I led a coordinated effort across multiple teams to implement lots of optimizations that together achieved unprecedented install footprint improvements. Given a typical install of 3 generic kernel ABIs in the default configuration on a regular-sized VM (2 CPU cores 8GB of RAM) the following metrics are achieved in Ubuntu 23.10 versus Ubuntu 22.04 LTS: 2x less disk space used (1,417MB vs 2,940MB, including initrd) 3x less peak RAM usage for the initrd boot (68MB vs 204MB) 0.5x increase in download size (949MB vs 600MB) 2.5x faster initrd generation (4.5s vs 11.3s) approximately the same total time (103s vs 98s, hardware dependent) For minimal cloud images that do not in

Ubuntu Livepatch service now supports over 60 different kernels

Linux kernel getting a livepatch whilst running a marathon. Generated with AI. Livepatch service eliminates the need for unplanned maintenance windows for high and critical severity kernel vulnerabilities by patching the Linux kernel while the system runs. Originally the service launched in 2016 with just a single kernel flavour supported. Over the years, additional kernels were added: new LTS releases, ESM kernels, Public Cloud kernels, and most recently HWE kernels too. Recently livepatch support was expanded for FIPS compliant kernels, Public cloud FIPS compliant kernels, and as well IBM Z (mainframe) kernels. Bringing the total of kernel flavours support to over 60 distinct kernel flavours supported in parallel. The table of supported kernels in the documentation lists the supported kernel flavours ABIs, the duration of individual build's support window, supported architectures, and the Ubuntu release. This work was only possible thanks to the collaboration with the Ubuntu C