Open Peeps by Pablo Stanley.
Free for commercial and personal use under CC0 License.
The library works like building blocks made of vector arms, legs, and emotions. You can mix these elements to create different Peeps.
You can use Open Peeps in product illustration, marketing imagery, comics, product states, user flows, personas, storyboarding, invitations for your quinceañera...or anything else not on this list.
The library is in the public domain under the CC0 License. This means you can copy, modify, distribute, remix, burn, and use the work, even for commercial purposes, without asking permission.
For a broader understanding of how these utilities fit into modern firmware security, AMI's Aptio V Security Features Whitepaper
While newer versions of DMI utilities exist, version 5.20 is frequently sought after for several reasons:
In the world of firmware utilities, version numbers matter immensely. is recognized as a stable, mature release often associated with major OEMs like Dell and Intel.
Without hesitation, yes. succeeds in doing what few software updates achieve: it adds meaningful features without bloat. It runs faster, debugs better, and supports more databases than ever before. For individual developers, freelancers, and even small-to-medium enterprises, it represents a perfect balance between power and simplicity.
Productivity enthusiasts will appreciate the fully rebindable keyboard shortcuts. You can import/export shortcut profiles, meaning your muscle memory from VS Code or SSMS can be replicated inside dmiedit 5.20.
| Operation | dmiedit 5.10 | | Improvement | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Startup time (cold) | 4.2 seconds | 1.8 seconds | 57% faster | | Opening 10,000-row result set | 3.1 seconds | 1.2 seconds | 61% faster | | Syntax parsing for 5,000-line script | 2.5 seconds | 0.9 seconds | 64% faster | | Search across open files (regex) | 1.8 seconds | 0.6 seconds | 66% faster |
Visit the official DMI tools repository (or authorized mirror). Ensure you download the correct installer for your OS. The filename typically follows the pattern: dmiedit-5.20-setup-[os].exe/.dmg/.sh
When a motherboard is replaced, the DMI/SMBIOS data often needs to be manually updated to reflect the original system's serial numbers and product names to ensure software licensing and management tools function correctly.
DMIEdit (Desktop Management Interface Editor) serves as a bridge for developers and technicians to modify SMBIOS tables without needing to reflash the entire BIOS.
For a broader understanding of how these utilities fit into modern firmware security, AMI's Aptio V Security Features Whitepaper
While newer versions of DMI utilities exist, version 5.20 is frequently sought after for several reasons:
In the world of firmware utilities, version numbers matter immensely. is recognized as a stable, mature release often associated with major OEMs like Dell and Intel. dmiedit 5.20
Without hesitation, yes. succeeds in doing what few software updates achieve: it adds meaningful features without bloat. It runs faster, debugs better, and supports more databases than ever before. For individual developers, freelancers, and even small-to-medium enterprises, it represents a perfect balance between power and simplicity.
Productivity enthusiasts will appreciate the fully rebindable keyboard shortcuts. You can import/export shortcut profiles, meaning your muscle memory from VS Code or SSMS can be replicated inside dmiedit 5.20. For a broader understanding of how these utilities
| Operation | dmiedit 5.10 | | Improvement | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Startup time (cold) | 4.2 seconds | 1.8 seconds | 57% faster | | Opening 10,000-row result set | 3.1 seconds | 1.2 seconds | 61% faster | | Syntax parsing for 5,000-line script | 2.5 seconds | 0.9 seconds | 64% faster | | Search across open files (regex) | 1.8 seconds | 0.6 seconds | 66% faster |
Visit the official DMI tools repository (or authorized mirror). Ensure you download the correct installer for your OS. The filename typically follows the pattern: dmiedit-5.20-setup-[os].exe/.dmg/.sh succeeds in doing what few software updates achieve:
When a motherboard is replaced, the DMI/SMBIOS data often needs to be manually updated to reflect the original system's serial numbers and product names to ensure software licensing and management tools function correctly.
DMIEdit (Desktop Management Interface Editor) serves as a bridge for developers and technicians to modify SMBIOS tables without needing to reflash the entire BIOS.
Download the illustration library and create your own Peeps!
Open Peeps by Pablo Stanley. Part of the Open Doodles project.
Free for commercial and personal use under CC0 License.
Oh, btw, you should check out Lummi for more free illustrations.