Extracted events alone rarely reveal attacks. SilverBullet’s second module – sb_correlate – implements a sliding-window correlator. Given two event lists (e.g., failed logins + process creations), it finds all instances where event B occurs within N seconds of event A. For a brute-force investigation:
sb_correlate failed_logins.csv process_events.csv -w 30 -o brute_force_indicators.csv
This output shows every sudo or bash execution that happened ≤30 seconds after a failed SSH login from the same source IP – a strong indicator of lateral movement or password spraying. The tool supports fuzzy matching on IPs, usernames, or binary paths, turning isolated events into high-confidence incidents.
Head to the SilverBullet GitHub releases page and grab SilverBullet-1.1.4.zip.
Unzip. Run. Point it at a folder of markdown files (or an empty one). Press Space.
That’s it. No onboarding survey. No “upgrade to pro.” Just a tool that gets out of your way and lets you think in plain text.
Have you taken SilverBullet 1.1.4 for a spin? Let me know what queries or templates you’re building. And yes, the name is silly. The software is not.
In the quiet hours of a rainy Tuesday, sat before his dual-monitor setup, the soft hum of his PC the only sound in his cramped apartment. He was a "productivity freak," the kind of person who found peace in the orderly rows of a well-organized database SilverBullet-1.1.4.zip
. For months, he had been building his "Space"—a digital sanctuary of knowledge—using SilverBullet , a private, browser-based markdown platform. Today was different. Today, he was moving to SilverBullet version 1.1.4
He clicked the download button, watching the progress bar crawl until SilverBullet-1.1.4.zip
finally rested in his downloads folder. This wasn't just an update; for Elias, it was a ritual. He unzipped the file, feeling the thrill of the new "Space Lua" improvements and the promises of better sync reliability.
As he launched the new version, the interface flickered to life. He noticed the "Dirty state" indicator—a subtle tint on the page name—letting him know his thoughts were finally, safely aligned with the server. He navigated through his notes using the Page Picker
, jumping from "Ancient Philosophy" to "Local Coffee Recipes" with the grace of a digital librarian.
The real magic happened when he began experimenting with the new tag.define(spec) Extracted events alone rarely reveal attacks
API. He wasn't just writing notes anymore; he was building a living, breathing map of his mind. He used the "New Page: Create Under Cursor" command to plant seeds for future ideas, watching as his web of links grew more complex and beautiful.
Outside, the rain intensified, but Elias was deep in his own "Chromaverse," a place where markdown objects and Lua queries acted as catalysts for new insights. In version 1.1.4, he found no "silver bullet" for his life's problems, but he found the perfect tool to organize them. As the clock struck midnight, he closed his laptop, his digital Space perfectly synced, and for the first time in weeks, his mind was finally quiet. specific feature of your digital workspace would you like to organize next? Releases · silverbulletmd/silverbullet - GitHub
After unzipping and running ./silverbullet (yes, it’s that simple), here’s what stood out:
The speed – Page loads are near-instant. The editor uses CodeMirror 6, so even huge lists of tasks don’t lag.
The query language – Want all pages tagged #recipe modified in the last week?
#page tag:recipe date:>7d ago – it just works.
The “Space” bar – Press Cmd+K (or Ctrl+K), and you get a command palette that would make VS Code jealous. Filter pages, run templates, insert embeds. This output shows every sudo or bash execution
The one papercut – Mobile web UI is still a little cramped. But for a self-hosted tool that’s half a megabyte (unzipped? kidding, but it’s small), that’s forgivable.
The file SilverBullet-1.1.4.zip is a compressed archive containing the complete build of the SilverBullet application for version 1.1.4. Upon extraction, users typically find:
The .zip format ensures a small download size and wide compatibility across Windows, macOS, and Linux systems.
A defender facing an alert from yesterday’s auth.log spike would:
Total time: under 10 seconds for a 500 MB log file on a standard laptop.