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As this is not an official way of installing Arc, if you encounter any issues do NOT report them to the developers, they did not intend for people to be running Arc on Windows 10.
This guide is a bit more manual since I wanted to respect the developers' wishes and not directly link any downloads to the beta of Arc.
I don't know how this will work with updates, you may just need to redo the process to update it, but I'm not sure
Install this font: https://aka.ms/SegoeFluentIcons (this fixes the icons since Windows 10 doesn't have this font installed by default)
Download the Arc appinstaller and open it in notepad/some other text editor
Copy everything inside and paste it into this website: https://codebeautify.org/xmlviewer (this is optional, but it makes reading and copying from the file easier)
Find the mainpackage@Uri, it should end in Arc.x64.msix, and open that in a new tab. It should download that msix file.
This instructional guide will show you how to set up Windows Subsystem for Linux, along with Visual Studio Code integration; this will make writing, compiling, and testing code for the CS-120 and CS-170 courses more streamlined. I assume you are using the latest version of Microsoft Windows, have access to the Microsoft Store (only 1 free program is used), and have a basic knowledge of how to use the Windows operating system and command line. Prior knowledge of Linux and the Bash shell is not required, although it certainly doesn't hurt.
Windows Subsystem for Linux
Windows Subsystem for Linux is actually a Linux subsystem on your Windows system. Confusing names aside, it allows you to run Linux programs (such as Valgrind) on a Windows computer. Additionally, Linux shell syntax is preferred by some, including those who may need to be running Windows for other reasons. As such, WSL allows a good compromise between Linux functionality and Win
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dnsmasq config file for iPXE booting with an existing DHCP server
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List of languages with ISO 639-1 Alpha-2 codes in JSON.
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Run a shell script with bash, line-by-line, prompted on each command. Useful for running unknown scripts or debugging. Not a secure substitute for understanding a script beforehand.
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Using error messages to decloak an S3 bucket. Uses soap, unicode, post, multipart, streaming and index listing as ways of figure it out. You do need a valid aws-key (never the secret) to properly get the error messages
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