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Get an OpenID®

Get an OpenID®
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kirtsy / Popular Logos and Badges Below you’ll find copies of the OpenID logo for use in presentations, articles, blog posts, etc. They are all in PNG 24-bit format unless otherwise noted. Enjoy! The OpenID logo was masterfully designed by Randy Reddig. OpenID wordmark measurement guidelines are available. Logos OpenID Logos as vector art (PDF) OpenID Icon: Super Big Logo with Text: Tiny Logo (GIF):

Saisie pour clavier d'ordinateur Choisissez la position la plus confortable pour vous. Personnellement, c'est la position naturelle qui me convient. Les index sont positionnés sur les lettres F et J. Sur les clés de ces deux lettres, une barre en relief permet de repérer facilement la position des index sans regarder le clavier. Ceci est très important, car pour que l'apprentissage soit efficace, vous devez regarder l'écran, non le clavier. Les exercices Il n'est pas possible d'accéder aux exercices à venir. NOUVEAU. AVIS : les exercices sont ennuyants mais nécessaires. Cookie Un cookie est utilisé afin de retenir le modèle de votre clavier et l'exercice rendu.[ Comment activer ou désactiver les cookies ] Identifiez votre clavier Sélectionnez votre modèle de clavier ci-haut, puis allez aux exercices Après votre première visite aux exercices, vous pourrez ouvrir directement la page des exercices (conservez la page des exercices dans vos favoris).

OpenID The extension makes a MediaWiki installation OpenID 2.0-aware and lets users log in using their OpenID identity - a special URL - instead of (or as an alternative to) standard username/password log in. In that way, the MediaWiki acts as the Relying party (RP) = OpenID consumer.[1] As an option, it also allows the MediaWiki to act as OpenID provider, so that users with an account on that wiki can use a special identity URL as their OpenID for logging in to other OpenID-aware web sites. Pre-requisites and dependencies[edit | edit source] Databases[edit | edit source] The OpenID extension has been confirmed to work with MySQL databases since the beginning, and with PostgreSQL databases since version 3.43, November 2013. php-openid library[edit | edit source] The extension depends on the OpenID PHP library from . PHP extensions or modules[edit | edit source] Download[edit | edit source] ☉ recommended Installation[edit | edit source] Done! Yahoo!

Single sign-on Single sign-on (SSO) is a property of access control of multiple related, but independent software systems. With this property a user logs in once and gains access to all systems without being prompted to log in again at each of them. Conversely, single sign-off is the property whereby a single action of signing out terminates access to multiple software systems. As different applications and resources support different authentication mechanisms, single sign-on must internally translate and store credentials for the different mechanisms, from the credential used for initial authentication. Benefits[edit] Benefits of using single sign-on include: Reducing password fatigue from different user name and password combinationsReducing time spent re-entering passwords for the same identityReducing IT costs due to lower number of IT help desk calls about passwordsIncreases security of third party accounts because long and complicated passwords can be set without needing to remember them.

Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware - Social Source Commons Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware is a full-featured, web-based, multilingual (35+ languages), tightly integrated, all-in-one Wiki+CMS+Groupware, Free Source Software (GNU/LGPL), using PHP, MySQL, Zend Framework, jQuery and Smarty. It is actively developed by a very large international community. Tiki can be used to create all kinds of Web applications, sites, portals, knowledge base, intranets, and extranets. Tiki offers a very large number of features "out-of-the-box", arguably more than any other Open Source Web Application.

jQuery OpenID Plug-in The jQuery OpenID Plugin is a free plugin to add easy login support for the most popular OpenID RP's such as Google, Yahoo, AOL, and more. The inspiration for this plugin is based on openid-selector, openid-realselector, and ID Selector. This selector is different because it does not hide the markup details in javascript. The plugin defaults to the first provider in the list which in the above case is a normal OpenID login box. The HTML for the above form is simple. The CSS (shown below) floats the items in the list so they appear inline. The plugin works by attaching a different click event to each type of provider. The whole plugin is very light weight at only 2.5KB javascript (not minified or compressed), 1KB CSS, and 3KB for the HTML. View all the Javascript Download the plugin (js + css + html + images) License update: You may freely use the code in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution License. Provider Listing Additional Images

DataPortability.org - Share and remix data using open standards Multisite Login Multisite Login allows a user to login to all sites in a multisite configuration, even though the multisites do not share domain names. For example: politicker.com politickernj.com politickerny.com etc. NOTE: if you are using several sites on the same domain (ex. politicker.com, nj.politicker.com, ny.politicker.com, etc.), then you do not need this module. The multisite functionality in Drupal core has the ability to share logins for sites like these without additional modules. This module was designed to be an alternative to the singlesignon module but using a technique that does not block search engines from accessing your websites. You must be: Using a multisite installation.Using a separate database for each site (no table prefixing, though the code could be modified to allow for this, patches welcome). See the README.txt file for more information.

Social Source Commons Problem Statement A great range of resources exist to inform software selection, use and support in NPOs and NGOs, but they are not well connected, and rarely share common formats or metadata. To date, there is no place for comprehensively mapping the full range of "what's out there" and "who's using what", and in turn aggregating relevant information for tools and categories of tools. There is also no general platform for sharing collective software knowledge in geographic, subsector and other specialized contexts. Anecdotal inquiry and formal research both indicate that software selection in the NPO/NGO sector is usually done by "asking friends what they use". A resource that systematically inventories available tools, and connects that inventory to the wealth of relevant information resources is long overdue. Aggregating Software Knowledge for the NPO/NGO Sector The Social Source Commons (SSC) is standards-based, open source web platform for mapping "what's out there???

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