#csharp#agent#ai#avalonia#chat#claude#deepseek#gpt_oss#grok#llm#mcp#ollama#openai#rag#ui_automation
Everywhere is an AI assistant that works directly on your screen without needing screenshots or app switching. You just press a shortcut and it understands the context instantly to help you with tasks like fixing errors, summarizing articles, translating text, or improving your writing tone. It supports many AI models and runs on Windows, with macOS and Linux versions coming soon. This tool saves you time and effort by giving quick, relevant help exactly where you need it, making your work and browsing smoother and more efficient. It also supports multiple languages and has a modern, easy-to-use interface.
https://github.com/DearVa/Everywhere
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/oauthlib
A generic, spec-compliant, thorough implementation of the #OAuth request-signing logic for python
OAuth often seems complicated and difficult-to-implement. There are several prominent libraries for handling OAuth requests, but they all suffer from one or both of the following:
They predate the OAuth 1.0 spec, AKA RFC 5849.
They predate the OAuth 2.0 spec, AKA RFC 6749.
They assume the usage of a specific HTTP request library.
OAuthLib is a generic utility which implements the logic of OAuth without assuming a specific HTTP request object or web framework. Use it to graft OAuth client support onto your favorite HTTP library, or provide support onto your favourite web framework. If you’re a maintainer of such a library, write a thin veneer on top of OAuthLib and get OAuth support for very little effort.
https://aaronparecki.com/2012/07/29/2/oauth2-simplified#others
OAuth 2 Simplified
Sun, Jul 29, 2012 9:30am -07:00
Many services such as #Facebook, #Github, and #Google have already deployed OAuth 2 servers, and deployed implementations win.
The #OAuth 2 spec itself leaves many decisions up to the implementor. Instead of describing all possible decisions that need to be made to successfully implement OAuth 2, this post makes decisions that are appropriate for most implementations.
This post is an attempt to describe OAuth 2 in a simplified format to help developers and service providers implement the protocol.