TODO
----
+- tests (design is starting to take shape, so it is time)
+- show how many Debian package updates are available
+- show how many Debian package security-updates are available
+- monitor disk usage rate of change and alert if suspiciously fast
+- bring back CPU usage monitor
+- actual METAR parser, to replace the flaky `metar` program
- status bar templating language
- retry/cache for sensors fetching flaky remote resources (such as weather)
- throttling of broken sensors (constantly returns errors)
until sensor execution is complete - this will allow us to reconfigure
intervals at runtime (which seems like a better idea than the above in-memory
DB one).
+
+Ideas
+-----
+
+- store data with rrdtool
+- report detailed status upon request (to a terminal)
+ - use color to indicate age of data
+- monitor tracking numbers (17track should be easiest to get started with)
+- monitor stock prices
+- monitor some item price(s) at some store(s) (Amazon, etc.)
+- monitor eBay auctions (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_API)
+- monitor PayPal (https://www.programmableweb.com/api/paypal)
+- monitor bank account balance and transactions
+ - https://communities.usaa.com/t5/Banking/Banking-via-API-Root/m-p/180789/highlight/true#M50758
+ - https://plaid.com/
+ - https://plaid.com/docs/api/
+ - https://plaid.com/docs/api/#institution-overview
+ - https://github.com/plaid
+ - https://www.bignerdranch.com/blog/online-banking-apis/
+- monitor/log road/traffic conditions
+ - travel times for some route over a course of time
+ - https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh441725
+ - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/
+ - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/routes/
+ - https://developer.mapquest.com/documentation/traffic-api/
+ - https://developer.here.com/api-explorer/rest/traffic/traffic-flow-bounding-box
+- monitor news sources for patterns/substrings
+ - http://developer.nytimes.com/
+ - https://news.ycombinator.com/
+ - https://lobste.rs/
+ - https://www.undeadly.org/
+ - http://openbsdnow.org/
+ - https://lwn.net/
+- monitor a git repository
+ - General
+ - total branches
+ - age of last change per branch
+ - change set sizes
+ - GitHub
+ - pull requests
+ - issues
+- monitor CI
+ - Travis
+ - Jenkins
+- pull/push data from/to other monitoring systems (Nagios, Graphite, etc.)
+- monitor file/directory age (can be used for email and other messaging systems)
+- monitor mailboxes for particular patterns/substrings
+- monitor IRC server(s)/channel(s) for particular patterns/substrings (use `ii`)
+- monitor iptables log
+ - auto-(un)block upon some threshold of violations
+- monitor changes in an arbitrary web resource
+ - deletions
+ - insertions
+ - delta = insertions - deletions
+- monitor/log LAN/WAN configurations (address, router, subnet)
+- monitor/log geolocation based on WAN IP address
+- correlate iptables violations with network/geolocation
+- monitor vulnerability databases
+ - https://nvd.nist.gov/
+ - https://vuldb.com/
+ - http://cve.mitre.org/
+- monitor processes
+ - zombies
+ - CPU hogs
+ - memory hogs
+ - memory leaks (if some process consistently grows)
+- browse https://www.programmableweb.com/ for some more ideas
+- GC trick: instead of actually doing GC, do a dummy run of building a status
+ bar at `BEGIN`, to fill-in the atimes for keys we need, then use the atimes
+ keys to build a regular expression to accept messages only from keys we
+ actually use
+
+Many of the above will undoubtedly need non-standard-system dependencies
+(languages, libraries, etc.), in which case - would they be better off as
+separate projects/repos?
+
+With all these ideas, it is starting to sound very noisy, but no worries - to
+quickly and temporarily shut everything up - just kill `dunst` and or toggle
+the status bar (`Alt` + `B` in `dwm`). For a permanent change - just don't
+turn-on the unwanted monitors/sensors.