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UK Threat Level 0.15
UK Threat Level is an extension which displays the current UK Threat Level as an icon in the status bar. more>>
UK Threat Level is an extension which displays the current UK Threat Level as an icon in the status bar.
Future releases of this extension should include a preferences window allowing you to choose where you want your threat alert to appear and many other features.
<<lessFuture releases of this extension should include a preferences window allowing you to choose where you want your threat alert to appear and many other features.
Download (0.030MB)
Added: 2007-04-10 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
930 downloads
Level Shmup 1.0
Level Shmup is a frantic addictive shoot-em-up. more>>
Level Shmup is a frantic addictive shoot-em-up.
Level Shmup is an old-school arcade style shoot-em-up game in the style of classics such as R-Type and Gradius. Interesting features of this game include the ability to fire in eight directions, and an adaptive difficulty curve.
The game automatically gets easier or harder based on your performance, with bonuses awarded for completion on the highest difficulties.
Usage:
Level Shmup must be run from a terminal to work. Just navigate to the folder youve uncompressed the game to, and type ./levelshmup (then Enter, of course).
<<lessLevel Shmup is an old-school arcade style shoot-em-up game in the style of classics such as R-Type and Gradius. Interesting features of this game include the ability to fire in eight directions, and an adaptive difficulty curve.
The game automatically gets easier or harder based on your performance, with bonuses awarded for completion on the highest difficulties.
Usage:
Level Shmup must be run from a terminal to work. Just navigate to the folder youve uncompressed the game to, and type ./levelshmup (then Enter, of course).
Download (18MB)
Added: 2006-05-30 License: Freeware Price:
1296 downloads
Homeland Security Threat Level 0.52
Homeland Security Threat Level is an extension which displays the current U.S. Homeland Security Threat Level as an icon. more>>
Homeland Security Threat Level is an extension which displays the current U.S. Homeland Security Threat Level as an icon.
Displays the current U.S. Homeland Security Threat Level as an icon in the status bar.
<<lessDisplays the current U.S. Homeland Security Threat Level as an icon in the status bar.
Download (0.028MB)
Added: 2007-04-10 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
932 downloads
Data::ICal::Entry::Event 0.12
Data::ICal::Entry::Event is a Perl module that represents an event in an iCalendar file. more>>
Data::ICal::Entry::Event is a Perl module that represents an event in an iCalendar file.
SYNOPSIS
my $vevent = Data::ICal::Entry::Event->new();
$vevent->add_properties(
summary => "my party",
description => "Ill cry if I want to",
# Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here
dtstart => Date::ICal->new( epoch => time )->ical,
);
$calendar->add_entry($vevent);
$vevent->add_entry($alarm);
A Data::ICal::Entry::Event object represents a single event in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
my $vevent = Data::ICal::Entry::Event->new();
$vevent->add_properties(
summary => "my party",
description => "Ill cry if I want to",
# Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here
dtstart => Date::ICal->new( epoch => time )->ical,
);
$calendar->add_entry($vevent);
$vevent->add_entry($alarm);
A Data::ICal::Entry::Event object represents a single event in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2007-01-17 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1011 downloads
Recording level monitor 0.2.1
Recording level monitor records analog audio from the sources you choose and plays it back simultaneously. more>>
Recording level monitor records analog audio from the sources you choose and plays it back simultaneously so that you can hear it, while monitoring the loudness (input) level of the recording.
Youll be able to hear and see whether the volume is too high (introducing analog distortion and digital clipping) or too low (letting through background noise and hiss) on your audio gear.
Do you use your computer to record audio regularly? Have you noticed how hard it is to get great quality sound when recording into a computer? Did you ever try to set volume levels in your gear while juggling with input levels on your sound cards? Then this program is for you.
In the same spirit, you can choose which sound card you want to record from, which sound card you want use to hear the recorded sound, choose a recording input line and a recording input level mixer, and adjust the input level (optionally having the program lower the level if the input is too loud).
This program is licensed to you under the GNU General Public License.
<<lessYoull be able to hear and see whether the volume is too high (introducing analog distortion and digital clipping) or too low (letting through background noise and hiss) on your audio gear.
Do you use your computer to record audio regularly? Have you noticed how hard it is to get great quality sound when recording into a computer? Did you ever try to set volume levels in your gear while juggling with input levels on your sound cards? Then this program is for you.
In the same spirit, you can choose which sound card you want to record from, which sound card you want use to hear the recorded sound, choose a recording input line and a recording input level mixer, and adjust the input level (optionally having the program lower the level if the input is too loud).
This program is licensed to you under the GNU General Public License.
Download (0.045MB)
Added: 2005-11-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1442 downloads
System for Internet-Level Knowledge 0.11.1
System for Internet-Level Knowledge (SiLK) project is a collection of traffic analysis tools. more>>
System for Internet-Level Knowledge (SiLK) project is a collection of traffic analysis tools developed by the CERT Network Situational Awareness Team (CERT NetSA) to facilitate security analysis of large networks.
The SiLK tool suite supports the efficient collection, storage and analysis of network flow data, enabling network security analysts to rapidly query large historical traffic data sets. SiLK is ideally suited for analyzing traffic on the backbone or border of a large, distributed enterprise or mid-sized ISP.
SiLK consists of two sets of tools: a packing system and analysis suite. The packing system receives Netflow V5 PDUs and converts them into a more space efficient format, recording the packed records into service-specific binary flat files. The analysis suite consists of tools which can read these flat files and then perform various query operations, ranging from per-record filtering to statistical analysis of groups of records. The analysis tools interoperate using pipes, allowing a user to develop a relatively sophisticated query from a simple beginning.
The vast majority of the current code-base is implemented in C, Perl, or Python. This code has been tested on Linux, Solaris, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X, but should be usable with little or no change on other Unix platforms.
System for Internet-Level Knowledge software components are released under the GPL.
Enhancements:
- New scan detection system: rwscan and rwscanquery
- rwscan reads SiLK Flow data and uses a hybrid of Threshold Random Walk and Bayesian Logistic Regression to detect scanning activity. rwscan output textual records describing the scan. If these are inserted into a relational database, rwscanquery can be used to query for the scanning activity. rwscanquery can query Oracle, Postgres, or MySQL databases.
- New tools for IPFIX support
- rwsilk2ipfix converts SiLK Flow records to an IPFIX format.
- rwipfix2silk converts IPFIX flow records to the SiLK format.
- These tools can be used in place of the rwp2yaf2silk script.
- Support for these tools requires that libfixbuf-0.6.0 be installed prior to building SiLK.
- New tools for IP storage
- rwipaexport takes IP addresses from an IP Address Association (IPA) catalog and creates a SiLK IPset, Bag, or Prefix Map (pmap).
- rwipaimport enters the IP addresses from a SiLK IPset, Bag, or Prefix Map into an IPA catalog.
- Support for these tools requires that libipa-0.2.0 be installed prior to building SiLK.
- Additional new tools
- rwsplit divides a SiLK Flow file into smaller files based on the number of flows, bytes, packets, or unique IPs. It also provides the ability to sample the input.
- rwsettool provides the functionality of rwsetintersect and rwsetunion and additional functions such as set difference and sampling of an IPset. The rwsetintersect and rwsetunion tools are deprecated.
- rwsetmember determines if a (textual) IP is a member of an IPset. Determinating this in previous releases of SiLK required filtering the output of rwsetcat or creating an IPset containing a single IP.
- rwpmapcat prints the contents of a Prefix Map (pmap) file.
- rwfilter enhancements and bug fixes
- Allow the the parameter to the --flags-all, --flags-init, and --flags-session switches can be a list of HIGH/MASK pairs separated by commas, e.g., --flags-all=S/S,A/A
- Do not print statistics or create output files when the --dry-run switch is specified.
- Fix a file corruption issue that would occur when processing multiple files if the first input file was not successfully opened: the output file would be generated without a SiLK header.
- Exit with a non-zero exit status if the class, type, or sensor values are invalid.
- Fix a bug in processing the --start-date and --end-date switches when local timezone support was enabled and the local timezone was east of UTC.
- rwbag enhancements and bug fixes
- rwbag now supports creating Bags whose key is the sensor ID, next hop IP, input interface or output interface.
- Allow rwbag to act like UNIX tee(1) by adding the --copy-input switch. This switch sends all SiLK Flow input to the specified file, stream, or named pipe.
- Print errors as human readable text, not error codes
- Fix a bug with releasing memory multiple times when rwbag ran out of memory.
- rwrandomizeip enhancement
- Allow the user to restrict the set of IPs that are modified via two command line arguments: --dont-change-set and --only-change-set. Both switches take an IPset; the first switch prevents the IP from being changed; the second causes only the listed IPs to be changed.
- mapsid enhancement
- The --print-classes switch will print the class(es) to which each sensor belongs.
- rwcount enhancement and changes
- Implemented the --output-path switch which directs rwcount to write its output to the specified location.
- Allow rwcount to act like UNIX tee(1) by adding the --copy-input switch. This switch sends all SiLK Flow input to the specified file, stream, or named pipe.
- The column widths have changed slightly
- rwaddrcount enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path and --copy-input switches as described for rwcount.
- rwcut enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path and --copy-input switches as described for rwcount.
- rwstats enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path and --copy-input switches as described for rwcount.
- rwset enhancement
- Implmented the --copy-input switch as described for rwcount.
- rwtotal enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path switch as described for rwcount.
- rwuniq enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path switch as described for rwcount.
- rwsetcat bug fix
- Fix bug where the $PAGER was not being used.
- rwbagcat bug fixes
- Do not print a warning message when attempting to print an empty Bag or when the min/max limits caused no entries to be printed.
- Fix bug where the $PAGER was not being used.
- Print errors as human readable text, not error codes
- rwbagtool bug fix
- Print errors as human readable text, not error codes
- rwcat bug fix
- Modify rwcat so it will always print the SiLK header to a file, even when no records are present
- rwappend enhancement and bug fix
- New --print-statistics switch causes the number of records processed to be printed to the standard error.
- Output change: Modified rwappend so it only prints the number of records processed when --print-statistics is given.
- Fix a problem that occurred when SiLK was compiled with compression enabled by default and the applications were processing SiLK files produced by releases of SiLK prior to 0.10.5: the application would exit with the error message "Operation not permitted on compressed file" and no output would be generated.
- rwswapbytes bug fix
- See compression-related bug fix for rwappend
- rwnetmask bug fix
- See compression-related bug fix for rwappend
- Administration and configuration changes:
- New "silk.conf" file removes the requirement that sensors be defined at compile-time.
- The sensors, classes, and types are now defined at run-time through the use of a "silk.conf" text file. This file should be installed in the SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR directory.
- The run-time configuration allows a single installation of the analysis tools to query multiple data sets; simply set the SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR environment variable to the location of the data.
- The location of this file can also be specified by setting the SILK_CONFIG_FILE environment variable to its location, or by using the --site-config-file switch on most SiLK applications.
- The packer (rwflowpack) still requires certain classes and types to be defined, and it cannot use new classes and types without modifying C code. This restriction will go away in a future release.
- Major changes to the build system.
- The build system now uses all aspects of the GNU Autotools chain including automake and libtool.
- The tools can now be built with shared library support, reducing the size of the binaries and allowing the kernel to use a single copy of libsilk when multiple SiLK tools are running.
- Note that the use of shared libraries means the binaries can no longer easily be relocated; instead you should run "make install" again with the new location.
- The SiLK headers are now copied to the install target directory
- GNU make is no longer required to build the tools.
- New packing rules are used by default.
- The default site has changed from "generic" to "twoway". The twoway site allows flow records to be categorized and stored as internal-to-internal (int2int) and external-to-external (ext2ext). In addition, the "out" type is no longer everything that is not "in". The files created by the generic site are forward compatible with the twoway site; however, if you wish to continue using your current packing rules, run configure with the --enable-silk-site=generic switch. See the SiLK Installation Handbook for details.
- New transfer daemons: rwsender and rwreceiver
- These are meant to replace the direct connectivity between flowcap and rwflowpack. These daemons allow the flowcap files to be sent to multiple rwflowpack processes.
- In addition, they allow rwflowpack to process data on one system and send small files containing SiLK Flow records (called "incremental files") to another system (where the rwflowappend daemon is running) for analysis.
- New packing tool: rwflowappend
- rwflowappend appends SiLK Flow records contained in "incremental files" to hourly files.
- Changes to flowcap and rwflowpack
- The flowcap and rwflowpack tools have been modified to work with the new rwsender and rwreceiver, though they can also be used in legacy mode. With the transport removed from flowcap, flowcap files can now be sent to multiple locations.
- IPFIX flow collection enhancement
- Previous releases of SiLK (rwflowpack and flowcap) could only read IPFIX streams generated by YAF. With this release, SiLK can read flows from any IPFIX-compliant generator.
- Remove zlib requirement in rwflowpack
- Allow rwflowpack to be built even if zlib is not available. However, rwflowpack will not be able to read files of NetFlow PDUs when zlib is not present.
- New packing tool: rwpackchecker
- rwpackchecker performs a basic integrity check of a packed SiLK file.
<<lessThe SiLK tool suite supports the efficient collection, storage and analysis of network flow data, enabling network security analysts to rapidly query large historical traffic data sets. SiLK is ideally suited for analyzing traffic on the backbone or border of a large, distributed enterprise or mid-sized ISP.
SiLK consists of two sets of tools: a packing system and analysis suite. The packing system receives Netflow V5 PDUs and converts them into a more space efficient format, recording the packed records into service-specific binary flat files. The analysis suite consists of tools which can read these flat files and then perform various query operations, ranging from per-record filtering to statistical analysis of groups of records. The analysis tools interoperate using pipes, allowing a user to develop a relatively sophisticated query from a simple beginning.
The vast majority of the current code-base is implemented in C, Perl, or Python. This code has been tested on Linux, Solaris, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X, but should be usable with little or no change on other Unix platforms.
System for Internet-Level Knowledge software components are released under the GPL.
Enhancements:
- New scan detection system: rwscan and rwscanquery
- rwscan reads SiLK Flow data and uses a hybrid of Threshold Random Walk and Bayesian Logistic Regression to detect scanning activity. rwscan output textual records describing the scan. If these are inserted into a relational database, rwscanquery can be used to query for the scanning activity. rwscanquery can query Oracle, Postgres, or MySQL databases.
- New tools for IPFIX support
- rwsilk2ipfix converts SiLK Flow records to an IPFIX format.
- rwipfix2silk converts IPFIX flow records to the SiLK format.
- These tools can be used in place of the rwp2yaf2silk script.
- Support for these tools requires that libfixbuf-0.6.0 be installed prior to building SiLK.
- New tools for IP storage
- rwipaexport takes IP addresses from an IP Address Association (IPA) catalog and creates a SiLK IPset, Bag, or Prefix Map (pmap).
- rwipaimport enters the IP addresses from a SiLK IPset, Bag, or Prefix Map into an IPA catalog.
- Support for these tools requires that libipa-0.2.0 be installed prior to building SiLK.
- Additional new tools
- rwsplit divides a SiLK Flow file into smaller files based on the number of flows, bytes, packets, or unique IPs. It also provides the ability to sample the input.
- rwsettool provides the functionality of rwsetintersect and rwsetunion and additional functions such as set difference and sampling of an IPset. The rwsetintersect and rwsetunion tools are deprecated.
- rwsetmember determines if a (textual) IP is a member of an IPset. Determinating this in previous releases of SiLK required filtering the output of rwsetcat or creating an IPset containing a single IP.
- rwpmapcat prints the contents of a Prefix Map (pmap) file.
- rwfilter enhancements and bug fixes
- Allow the the parameter to the --flags-all, --flags-init, and --flags-session switches can be a list of HIGH/MASK pairs separated by commas, e.g., --flags-all=S/S,A/A
- Do not print statistics or create output files when the --dry-run switch is specified.
- Fix a file corruption issue that would occur when processing multiple files if the first input file was not successfully opened: the output file would be generated without a SiLK header.
- Exit with a non-zero exit status if the class, type, or sensor values are invalid.
- Fix a bug in processing the --start-date and --end-date switches when local timezone support was enabled and the local timezone was east of UTC.
- rwbag enhancements and bug fixes
- rwbag now supports creating Bags whose key is the sensor ID, next hop IP, input interface or output interface.
- Allow rwbag to act like UNIX tee(1) by adding the --copy-input switch. This switch sends all SiLK Flow input to the specified file, stream, or named pipe.
- Print errors as human readable text, not error codes
- Fix a bug with releasing memory multiple times when rwbag ran out of memory.
- rwrandomizeip enhancement
- Allow the user to restrict the set of IPs that are modified via two command line arguments: --dont-change-set and --only-change-set. Both switches take an IPset; the first switch prevents the IP from being changed; the second causes only the listed IPs to be changed.
- mapsid enhancement
- The --print-classes switch will print the class(es) to which each sensor belongs.
- rwcount enhancement and changes
- Implemented the --output-path switch which directs rwcount to write its output to the specified location.
- Allow rwcount to act like UNIX tee(1) by adding the --copy-input switch. This switch sends all SiLK Flow input to the specified file, stream, or named pipe.
- The column widths have changed slightly
- rwaddrcount enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path and --copy-input switches as described for rwcount.
- rwcut enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path and --copy-input switches as described for rwcount.
- rwstats enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path and --copy-input switches as described for rwcount.
- rwset enhancement
- Implmented the --copy-input switch as described for rwcount.
- rwtotal enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path switch as described for rwcount.
- rwuniq enhancement
- Implemented the --output-path switch as described for rwcount.
- rwsetcat bug fix
- Fix bug where the $PAGER was not being used.
- rwbagcat bug fixes
- Do not print a warning message when attempting to print an empty Bag or when the min/max limits caused no entries to be printed.
- Fix bug where the $PAGER was not being used.
- Print errors as human readable text, not error codes
- rwbagtool bug fix
- Print errors as human readable text, not error codes
- rwcat bug fix
- Modify rwcat so it will always print the SiLK header to a file, even when no records are present
- rwappend enhancement and bug fix
- New --print-statistics switch causes the number of records processed to be printed to the standard error.
- Output change: Modified rwappend so it only prints the number of records processed when --print-statistics is given.
- Fix a problem that occurred when SiLK was compiled with compression enabled by default and the applications were processing SiLK files produced by releases of SiLK prior to 0.10.5: the application would exit with the error message "Operation not permitted on compressed file" and no output would be generated.
- rwswapbytes bug fix
- See compression-related bug fix for rwappend
- rwnetmask bug fix
- See compression-related bug fix for rwappend
- Administration and configuration changes:
- New "silk.conf" file removes the requirement that sensors be defined at compile-time.
- The sensors, classes, and types are now defined at run-time through the use of a "silk.conf" text file. This file should be installed in the SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR directory.
- The run-time configuration allows a single installation of the analysis tools to query multiple data sets; simply set the SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR environment variable to the location of the data.
- The location of this file can also be specified by setting the SILK_CONFIG_FILE environment variable to its location, or by using the --site-config-file switch on most SiLK applications.
- The packer (rwflowpack) still requires certain classes and types to be defined, and it cannot use new classes and types without modifying C code. This restriction will go away in a future release.
- Major changes to the build system.
- The build system now uses all aspects of the GNU Autotools chain including automake and libtool.
- The tools can now be built with shared library support, reducing the size of the binaries and allowing the kernel to use a single copy of libsilk when multiple SiLK tools are running.
- Note that the use of shared libraries means the binaries can no longer easily be relocated; instead you should run "make install" again with the new location.
- The SiLK headers are now copied to the install target directory
- GNU make is no longer required to build the tools.
- New packing rules are used by default.
- The default site has changed from "generic" to "twoway". The twoway site allows flow records to be categorized and stored as internal-to-internal (int2int) and external-to-external (ext2ext). In addition, the "out" type is no longer everything that is not "in". The files created by the generic site are forward compatible with the twoway site; however, if you wish to continue using your current packing rules, run configure with the --enable-silk-site=generic switch. See the SiLK Installation Handbook for details.
- New transfer daemons: rwsender and rwreceiver
- These are meant to replace the direct connectivity between flowcap and rwflowpack. These daemons allow the flowcap files to be sent to multiple rwflowpack processes.
- In addition, they allow rwflowpack to process data on one system and send small files containing SiLK Flow records (called "incremental files") to another system (where the rwflowappend daemon is running) for analysis.
- New packing tool: rwflowappend
- rwflowappend appends SiLK Flow records contained in "incremental files" to hourly files.
- Changes to flowcap and rwflowpack
- The flowcap and rwflowpack tools have been modified to work with the new rwsender and rwreceiver, though they can also be used in legacy mode. With the transport removed from flowcap, flowcap files can now be sent to multiple locations.
- IPFIX flow collection enhancement
- Previous releases of SiLK (rwflowpack and flowcap) could only read IPFIX streams generated by YAF. With this release, SiLK can read flows from any IPFIX-compliant generator.
- Remove zlib requirement in rwflowpack
- Allow rwflowpack to be built even if zlib is not available. However, rwflowpack will not be able to read files of NetFlow PDUs when zlib is not present.
- New packing tool: rwpackchecker
- rwpackchecker performs a basic integrity check of a packed SiLK file.
Download (1.8MB)
Added: 2007-05-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
891 downloads
Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy 0.12
Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy is a Perl module that represents blocks of free and busy time in an iCalendar file. more>>
Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy is a Perl module that represents blocks of free and busy time in an iCalendar file.
SYNOPSIS
my $vfreebusy = Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy->new();
$vfreebusy->add_properties(
organizer => MAILTO:jsmith@host.com,
# Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here
freebusy => Date::ICal->new( epoch => ... )->ical . / . Date::ICal->new( epoch => ... )->ical,
);
$calendar->add_entry($vfreebusy);
A Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy object represents a request for information about free and busy time or a reponse to such a request, in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
METHODS
ical_entry_type
Returns VFREEBUSY, its iCalendar entry name.
optional_unique_properties
According to the iCalendar standard, the following properties may be specified at most one time for a free/busy entry:
contact dtstart dtend duration dtstamp
organizer uid url
optional_repeatable_properties
According to the iCalendar standard, the following properties may be specified any number of times for free/busy entry:
attendee comment freebusy request-status
<<lessSYNOPSIS
my $vfreebusy = Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy->new();
$vfreebusy->add_properties(
organizer => MAILTO:jsmith@host.com,
# Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here
freebusy => Date::ICal->new( epoch => ... )->ical . / . Date::ICal->new( epoch => ... )->ical,
);
$calendar->add_entry($vfreebusy);
A Data::ICal::Entry::FreeBusy object represents a request for information about free and busy time or a reponse to such a request, in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
METHODS
ical_entry_type
Returns VFREEBUSY, its iCalendar entry name.
optional_unique_properties
According to the iCalendar standard, the following properties may be specified at most one time for a free/busy entry:
contact dtstart dtend duration dtstamp
organizer uid url
optional_repeatable_properties
According to the iCalendar standard, the following properties may be specified any number of times for free/busy entry:
attendee comment freebusy request-status
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2007-01-17 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1011 downloads
Nameko 20070620 (Low Level Classes)
Nameko was born as a simple PHP webmail. more>>
Nameko was born as a simple PHP webmail. Now Nameko is much more than this: its a set of classes to manage e-mail with PHP.
The project can retrieve message from a POP3 server, parse e-mails, send email through SMTP server, and so on.
The mail parser was totally rewritten from the original version: now its greatly improved, and it can read every kind of email.
The Nameko webmail has also been totally rewritten: now it has a great interface, fast, powerful, with a lot of advanced tools.
Each component of the webmail is customizable, with a sort of plug-ins system: you can add only the plug-ins for the functions you really need.
The basic version on Nameko is always a one-file script: so simple tu set up!
Enhancements:
- This release include great performance improvements, making parsing also of heavy email (> 50MB) much faster.
- It includes some code cleanup and small bugfixes.
<<lessThe project can retrieve message from a POP3 server, parse e-mails, send email through SMTP server, and so on.
The mail parser was totally rewritten from the original version: now its greatly improved, and it can read every kind of email.
The Nameko webmail has also been totally rewritten: now it has a great interface, fast, powerful, with a lot of advanced tools.
Each component of the webmail is customizable, with a sort of plug-ins system: you can add only the plug-ins for the functions you really need.
The basic version on Nameko is always a one-file script: so simple tu set up!
Enhancements:
- This release include great performance improvements, making parsing also of heavy email (> 50MB) much faster.
- It includes some code cleanup and small bugfixes.
Download (0.020MB)
Added: 2007-06-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
859 downloads
US Department of Homeland Insecurity Idiocy Level 0.1.2.3.2-zomg
US Department of Homeland Insecurity Idiocy Level is a Firefox extension that displays the current Idiocy Level in the statusbar more>>
US Department of Homeland Insecurity Idiocy Level is a Firefox extension that displays the current Idiocy Level in the status bar.
<<less Download (0.26MB)
Added: 2007-06-05 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
873 downloads
Message Level Authentication for WebMail 0.7.5.2
Message Level Authentication for WebMail is a Firefox extension that authenticates mail from Message Level Network users. more>>
Message Level Authentication for WebMail is a Firefox extension that authenticates mail from Message Level Network users, Mail Reputation provided by Sender Score for each message and Anti-Phishing Data from PhishTank. Registration is FREE but not required.
Currently works with the following web mail providers: Google Mail (GMail), Yahoo Mail and Comcast Mail.
Use these best practices to thwart spam and phishing attempts.
<<lessCurrently works with the following web mail providers: Google Mail (GMail), Yahoo Mail and Comcast Mail.
Use these best practices to thwart spam and phishing attempts.
Download (0.15MB)
Added: 2007-07-18 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
832 downloads
Tilt-n-Roll Demo
Tilt-n-Roll is a puzzle game where you must roll your marble through the 3d maze to the exit. more>>
Tilt-n-Roll is a puzzle game where you must roll your marble through the 3d maze to the exit.
This game is an entry into Intels Game Demo 2007 contest. Please take the time to rate my game and help me win a prize!
Tilt the 3d maze and roll your marble to the exit. The final version will fully support laptop SMS / HDAPS sensors to allow players to tilt the laptop to play! (Support is partially there now - Linux users get an SDL patch and Mac users can wrangle with Unimotion).
Main features:
- Multiple powerups, monsters, switches, puzzles, traps...
- Built-in level editor: design and share your mazes with friends!
- Keyboard or mouse control for unsupported laptops
- Plenty of sound effects and catchy music
- Physics calculations are run in a second thread: multicore users should see an increase in both framerate and simulation accuracy
- Runs on Windows, Mac OS or Linux.
- Completely open-source software under the GNU GPL!
<<lessThis game is an entry into Intels Game Demo 2007 contest. Please take the time to rate my game and help me win a prize!
Tilt the 3d maze and roll your marble to the exit. The final version will fully support laptop SMS / HDAPS sensors to allow players to tilt the laptop to play! (Support is partially there now - Linux users get an SDL patch and Mac users can wrangle with Unimotion).
Main features:
- Multiple powerups, monsters, switches, puzzles, traps...
- Built-in level editor: design and share your mazes with friends!
- Keyboard or mouse control for unsupported laptops
- Plenty of sound effects and catchy music
- Physics calculations are run in a second thread: multicore users should see an increase in both framerate and simulation accuracy
- Runs on Windows, Mac OS or Linux.
- Completely open-source software under the GNU GPL!
Download (2.3MB)
Added: 2007-07-16 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
834 downloads
High Level Virtual Machine 0.1
High Level Virtual Machine is a toolkit for developing virtual machines for dynamic languages. more>>
High Level Virtual Machine is a toolkit for developing virtual machines for dynamic languages.
The High Level Virtual Machine is:
- Based on LLVM (Low Level Virtual Machine). LLVM is HLVMs sister project. HLVM gains tremendous capability from LLVM in the areas of code generation, bytecode storage, runtime execution, etc.
- Aimed at supporting dynamic languages such as Ruby, Python, Perl, Jython, Haskell, Prolog, etc.
- A complete compiler developers toolkit for creating new languages easily. To write a new compiler, language designers simply write a plugin that describes the language to HLVM and how to translate the grammar productions into HLVMs comprehensive Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). After that, HLVM handles all aspects of code generation, bytecode storage, XML translation, JIT execution or interpretation, and native compilation.
- A language interoperability framework. Because all front end compilers generate code in the same AST, they can interoperate. Use of the runtime library for common constructs (e.g. "string") allow even complex data types to be shared between languages. Users of HLVM can write complex programs in multiple languages and be assured the result can be executed efficiently.
- A code management system including code revisioning, interface versioning, automated recompilation, separation of workspaces, etc.
- Currently under development. Project started April 20th, 2006. Stay tuned to this web site for future developments.
<<lessThe High Level Virtual Machine is:
- Based on LLVM (Low Level Virtual Machine). LLVM is HLVMs sister project. HLVM gains tremendous capability from LLVM in the areas of code generation, bytecode storage, runtime execution, etc.
- Aimed at supporting dynamic languages such as Ruby, Python, Perl, Jython, Haskell, Prolog, etc.
- A complete compiler developers toolkit for creating new languages easily. To write a new compiler, language designers simply write a plugin that describes the language to HLVM and how to translate the grammar productions into HLVMs comprehensive Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). After that, HLVM handles all aspects of code generation, bytecode storage, XML translation, JIT execution or interpretation, and native compilation.
- A language interoperability framework. Because all front end compilers generate code in the same AST, they can interoperate. Use of the runtime library for common constructs (e.g. "string") allow even complex data types to be shared between languages. Users of HLVM can write complex programs in multiple languages and be assured the result can be executed efficiently.
- A code management system including code revisioning, interface versioning, automated recompilation, separation of workspaces, etc.
- Currently under development. Project started April 20th, 2006. Stay tuned to this web site for future developments.
Download (0.12MB)
Added: 2006-06-15 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
1227 downloads
Data::ICal::Entry::Journal 0.12
Data::ICal::Entry::Journal is a Perl module that represents a journal entry in an iCalendar file. more>>
Data::ICal::Entry::Journal is a Perl module that represents a journal entry in an iCalendar file.
SYNOPSIS
my $vjournal = Data::ICal::Entry::Journal->new();
$vjournal->add_properties(
summary => "Minutes of my party",
description => "I cried because I wanted to.",
# Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here
dtstart => Date::ICal->new( epoch => time )->ical,
);
$calendar->add_entry($vjournal);
A Data::ICal::Entry::Journal object represents a single journal entry in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
my $vjournal = Data::ICal::Entry::Journal->new();
$vjournal->add_properties(
summary => "Minutes of my party",
description => "I cried because I wanted to.",
# Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here
dtstart => Date::ICal->new( epoch => time )->ical,
);
$calendar->add_entry($vjournal);
A Data::ICal::Entry::Journal object represents a single journal entry in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2007-01-17 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1012 downloads
Convert::yEnc::Entry 1.02
Convert::yEnc::Entry is a Perl module as an entry in a Convert::yEnc::RC database. more>>
Convert::yEnc::Entry is a Perl module as an entry in a Convert::yEnc::RC database.
SYNOPSIS
use Convert::yEnc::Entry;
$entry = new Convert::yEnc::Entry { size => 10000 };
$entry = new Convert::yEnc::Entry { size => 50000, part => 1 };
$entry = load Convert::yEnc::Entry "10000t10000";
$entry = load Convert::yEnc::Entry "20000t1-20000t1-2";
$ok = $entry->ybegin( { size=>10000 } );
$ok = $entry->ypart ( { begin=>1, end=>10000 } );
$ok = $entry->yend ( { size=>10000 } );
$entry->complete and ...
print "$entryn";
ABSTRACT
An entry in a Convert::yEnc::RC database
Convert::yEnc::Entry manages a single entry in a Convert::yEnc::RC database
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Convert::yEnc::Entry;
$entry = new Convert::yEnc::Entry { size => 10000 };
$entry = new Convert::yEnc::Entry { size => 50000, part => 1 };
$entry = load Convert::yEnc::Entry "10000t10000";
$entry = load Convert::yEnc::Entry "20000t1-20000t1-2";
$ok = $entry->ybegin( { size=>10000 } );
$ok = $entry->ypart ( { begin=>1, end=>10000 } );
$ok = $entry->yend ( { size=>10000 } );
$entry->complete and ...
print "$entryn";
ABSTRACT
An entry in a Convert::yEnc::RC database
Convert::yEnc::Entry manages a single entry in a Convert::yEnc::RC database
Download (0.055MB)
Added: 2006-08-18 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1163 downloads
Net::Google::Calendar 0.5
Net::Google::Calendar is a programmatic access to Googles Calendar API. more>>
Net::Google::Calendar is a programmatic access to Googles Calendar API.
SYNOPSIS
my $cal = Net::Google::Calendar->new( url => $url );
$cal->login($u, $p);
for ($cal->get_events()) {
print $_->title."n";
print $_->content->body."n*****nn";
}
my $entry = Net::Google::Calendar::Entry->new();
$entry->title($title);
$entry->content("My content");
$entry->location(London, England);
$entry->transparency(transparent);
$entry->status(confirmed);
$entry->when(DateTime->now, DateTime->now() + DateTime::Duration->new( hours => 6 ) );
my $author = Net::Google::Calendar::Person->new();
$author->name(Foo Bar);
$author->email(foo@bar.com);
$entry->author($author);
my $tmp = $cal->add_entry($entry);
die "Couldnt add event: $@n" unless defined $tmp;
print "Events=".scalar($cal->get_events())."n";
$tmp->content(Updated);
$cal->update_entry($tmp) || die "Couldnt update ".$tmp->id.": $@n";
$cal->delete_entry($tmp) || die "Couldnt delete ".$tmp->id.": $@n";
<<lessSYNOPSIS
my $cal = Net::Google::Calendar->new( url => $url );
$cal->login($u, $p);
for ($cal->get_events()) {
print $_->title."n";
print $_->content->body."n*****nn";
}
my $entry = Net::Google::Calendar::Entry->new();
$entry->title($title);
$entry->content("My content");
$entry->location(London, England);
$entry->transparency(transparent);
$entry->status(confirmed);
$entry->when(DateTime->now, DateTime->now() + DateTime::Duration->new( hours => 6 ) );
my $author = Net::Google::Calendar::Person->new();
$author->name(Foo Bar);
$author->email(foo@bar.com);
$entry->author($author);
my $tmp = $cal->add_entry($entry);
die "Couldnt add event: $@n" unless defined $tmp;
print "Events=".scalar($cal->get_events())."n";
$tmp->content(Updated);
$cal->update_entry($tmp) || die "Couldnt update ".$tmp->id.": $@n";
$cal->delete_entry($tmp) || die "Couldnt delete ".$tmp->id.": $@n";
Download (0.008MB)
Added: 2006-11-25 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1063 downloads
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