kitchen-sink for hooking functions (and finding patterns)
A flexible library for generating human-readable, memorable identifiers.
Convert IP addresses to memorable, family-friendly word groups. Interactive TUI with real-time autocomplete. IPv4 = 4 words, IPv6 = 6-12 words. Perfect reconstruction with progressive hints.
List of memorable words
Convert IP addresses to memorable, family-friendly word groups. IPv4 = 3 words, IPv6 = 6 or 9 words. Perfect reconstruction with human-readable vocabulary.
Simple memoization macro for rust
Lock-free, ordered and multiple version memory table for key-value databases.
Versatile and fast closure cacher with support for recursive algorithms
Access the most common information about your system using a single command
Core library for ramem: schema, storage, embedding, ingestion, and search
Local, offline AI agent memory using LanceDB and MCP — the ram CLI
secure password generator over CLI
A more memorable password generator. Swordfish? No, I got tired of that. I changed it.
Memorization through written repetition - Socrates is not amused
A more memorable password generator. Swordfish? No, I got tired of that. I changed it.
check memorized words and make reference materials
Generate random memorable passwords
RailheadMemorize is a Ruby on Rails plugin that easily memorize model functions.
Adds a feedback look and gamifies your shell usage to help you learn your aliases.
For us humans, it's always easier to remember a pronounceable string, even if it is meaningless, than to remember a long number. Koremutake is a system you can use to translate any number (of course, particularly suited at long numbers) to a sequence of syllables. Typical uses of Koremutake strings are auto-generated user passwords or URLs. This module is based in Leon Brocard's String::Koremutake Perl module, available at http://search.cpan.org/dist/String-Koremutake/lib/String/Koremutake.pm which is, in turn, based upon Shorl (http://shorl.com/koremutake.php). Koremutake is a «way to express any large number as a sequence of syllables», and the general idea is based in Sean B. Palmer's «Memorable Random String» term, http://infomesh.net/2001/07/MeRS/
A more memorable password generator. Swordfish? No, I got tired of that. I changed it. Extends Haddock. Gives some fun.
A more memorable, fun, and useful variant of the tripcode.
SSHP - Let's Pablo memorize your ssh credentials
Generate Heroku-like memorable random names like adorable-ox-1234.