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F-Spot 0.4.0
F-Spot is an application designed to provide personal photo management to the GNOME desktop. more>>
F-Spot project is an application designed to provide personal photo management to the GNOME desktop.
Main features:
- import
- export
- printing
- advanced sorting of digital images.
<<lessMain features:
- import
- export
- printing
- advanced sorting of digital images.
Download (2.3MB)
Added: 2007-08-03 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
820 downloads
Cspot 0.0.5
Cspot is a semantic annotator designed only for the C programming language. more>>
Cspot is a semantic annotator designed only for the C programming language. It is quite similar to cscope, but some more functionality.
Cspot project can be used to find the declarations, definitions, and usages of functions, variables, macros, typedefs, and structs.
It can also find visible identifiers at some position in the source, functions called by a function, global variables used by a function, usages of local variable declarations, unused global variables, unused function definitions, and more. Because it uses sparse, cspot knows more about semantics than cscope.
cspot usage ( cspot -h )
cspot -db spot.db -regexp reg ;; prints all identifiers of project matching reg (extended regexp)
cspot -db spot.db -fc printf ;; prints all declarations of function printf
cspot -db spot.db -fu printf ;; prints all usages of function printf
cspot -db spot.db -vu stdout ;; prints all usages of variable stdout
cspot -db spot.db -sc my_sruct ;; prints places of forward declaration of struct my_struct
cspot -db spot.db -sf my_sruct ;; prints places of definition of struct my_struct
cspot -db spot.db -su my_sruct ;; prints places of usage of struct my_struct
cspot -db spot.db -si my_sruct ;; prints places of definition and variables in struct my_struct
etc.
cspot -va source.c 254 21 ;; prints all visible identifiers at source.c line 254 pos 21
cspot -vla source.c 254 21 ;; prints all visible identifiers (declared in file source.c) at source.c line 254 pos 21
commands for visible functions, macros, variable, called functions by function, global variables used by function ...
cspot -db spot.db -fu printf
printfs all usages of function printf in project (usage = call, assigning to variable)
printf at `base/cmd/commands.h 249:7
printf at `base/cmd/commands.h 327:8
printf at `base/cmd/commands.h 337:8
printf at `base/cmd.c 313:3
printf at `base/cmd.c 318:7
printf at `base/cmd.c 319:36
printf at `base/cmd.c 321:36
printf at `base/cmd.c 322:36
printf at `base/cmd.c 323:36
<<lessCspot project can be used to find the declarations, definitions, and usages of functions, variables, macros, typedefs, and structs.
It can also find visible identifiers at some position in the source, functions called by a function, global variables used by a function, usages of local variable declarations, unused global variables, unused function definitions, and more. Because it uses sparse, cspot knows more about semantics than cscope.
cspot usage ( cspot -h )
cspot -db spot.db -regexp reg ;; prints all identifiers of project matching reg (extended regexp)
cspot -db spot.db -fc printf ;; prints all declarations of function printf
cspot -db spot.db -fu printf ;; prints all usages of function printf
cspot -db spot.db -vu stdout ;; prints all usages of variable stdout
cspot -db spot.db -sc my_sruct ;; prints places of forward declaration of struct my_struct
cspot -db spot.db -sf my_sruct ;; prints places of definition of struct my_struct
cspot -db spot.db -su my_sruct ;; prints places of usage of struct my_struct
cspot -db spot.db -si my_sruct ;; prints places of definition and variables in struct my_struct
etc.
cspot -va source.c 254 21 ;; prints all visible identifiers at source.c line 254 pos 21
cspot -vla source.c 254 21 ;; prints all visible identifiers (declared in file source.c) at source.c line 254 pos 21
commands for visible functions, macros, variable, called functions by function, global variables used by function ...
cspot -db spot.db -fu printf
printfs all usages of function printf in project (usage = call, assigning to variable)
printf at `base/cmd/commands.h 249:7
printf at `base/cmd/commands.h 327:8
printf at `base/cmd/commands.h 337:8
printf at `base/cmd.c 313:3
printf at `base/cmd.c 318:7
printf at `base/cmd.c 319:36
printf at `base/cmd.c 321:36
printf at `base/cmd.c 322:36
printf at `base/cmd.c 323:36
Download (0.26MB)
Added: 2006-09-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1145 downloads
F-Prot GUI 0.5
F-Prot GUI is a graphical user interface for great (and free for individual users) command line antivirus called F-Prot. more>>
F-Prot GUI is a graphical user interface for great (and free for individual users) command line antivirus called F-Prot.
F-Prot GUI is a very simple script but not featureless, I hope it will be useful.
For home users using the Linux open-source operating system, we offer F-Prot Antivirus for Linux Workstations. F-Prot Antivirus for Linux Workstations utilizes the renowned F-Prot Antivirus scanning engine for primary scan but has in addition to that a system of internal heuristics devised to search for unknown viruses
F-Prot Antivirus for Linux was especially developed to effectively eradicate viruses threatening workstations running Linux. It provides full protection against macro viruses and other forms of malicious software - including Trojans.
Main features:
- Scans for over 314168 known viruses and their variants
- Ability to perform scheduled scans when used with the cron utility
- Scans hard drives, CD-ROMS, diskettes, network drives, directories and specific files
- Scans for images of boot sector viruses, macro viruses and Trojan Horses
<<lessF-Prot GUI is a very simple script but not featureless, I hope it will be useful.
For home users using the Linux open-source operating system, we offer F-Prot Antivirus for Linux Workstations. F-Prot Antivirus for Linux Workstations utilizes the renowned F-Prot Antivirus scanning engine for primary scan but has in addition to that a system of internal heuristics devised to search for unknown viruses
F-Prot Antivirus for Linux was especially developed to effectively eradicate viruses threatening workstations running Linux. It provides full protection against macro viruses and other forms of malicious software - including Trojans.
Main features:
- Scans for over 314168 known viruses and their variants
- Ability to perform scheduled scans when used with the cron utility
- Scans hard drives, CD-ROMS, diskettes, network drives, directories and specific files
- Scans for images of boot sector viruses, macro viruses and Trojan Horses
Download (0.009MB)
Added: 2006-08-14 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1174 downloads
Visual F-Prot 2.1
Visual F-Prot is an F-Prot Antivirus for Linux Workstations graphical interface. more>>
Visual F-Prot is an F-Prot Antivirus for Linux Workstations graphical interface.
Visual F-Prot is graphical interface for F-Prot Antivirus(TM) for Linux Workstations for home use (available for free download) copyrighted by Frisk Software International (www.firsk.is). Before you install this program, you must install F-Prot Antivirus, because it wont work without it.
It works with F-Prot antivirus version 4.5.3 and above - its not tested with earlier versions,but it should also work with them.
Also, youll need "xterm" terminal emulator, provided by most, if not all linux distributions.
This program is built with GTKMM 2.4 C++ libraries, so youll also need those for it to work.
<<lessVisual F-Prot is graphical interface for F-Prot Antivirus(TM) for Linux Workstations for home use (available for free download) copyrighted by Frisk Software International (www.firsk.is). Before you install this program, you must install F-Prot Antivirus, because it wont work without it.
It works with F-Prot antivirus version 4.5.3 and above - its not tested with earlier versions,but it should also work with them.
Also, youll need "xterm" terminal emulator, provided by most, if not all linux distributions.
This program is built with GTKMM 2.4 C++ libraries, so youll also need those for it to work.
Download (1.2MB)
Added: 2006-02-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
756 downloads
Kitco Spot Gold Price Watcher 1.0
Kitco Spot Gold Price Watcher is an extension which fetches the Bid and Ask price of Spot Gold from Kitcos website. more>>
Kitco Spot Gold Price Watcher is an extension which fetches the Bid and Ask price of Spot Gold from Kitcos website.
This extension retrieve the Bid and Ask price of Spot Gold from Kitcos website.
<<lessThis extension retrieve the Bid and Ask price of Spot Gold from Kitcos website.
Download (0.004MB)
Added: 2007-04-04 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
635 downloads
Digg.com Comment Spotlight 2.0
Digg.com Comment Spotlight is an extension which does exactly what its name hints, it spots Digg comments. more>>
Digg.com Comment Spotlight is an extension which does exactly what its name hints, it spots Digg comments.
Digg Comment Spotlight does exactly what its name hints, it spots comments that other readers have taken the time to Digg, allowing you to easily wade through 100s of comments in an article.
<<lessDigg Comment Spotlight does exactly what its name hints, it spots comments that other readers have taken the time to Digg, allowing you to easily wade through 100s of comments in an article.
Download (0.06MB)
Added: 2007-04-06 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
934 downloads
Antivirus Scan with F-Prot 0.5
Antivirus Scan with F-Prot is a simple servicemenu for konqueror that allows to scan single or multiple files and folders. more>>
Antivirus Scan with F-Prot is a simple servicemenu for konqueror that allows to scan single or multiple files and folders using the F-Prot Antivirus. Antivirus Scan with F-Prot shows the result of the scanning in a textbox using kdialog. It can also show the progress of the scanning in a terminal.
I hope you may find it useful.
Comments or/and translations are welcome.
TO INSTALL: extract the content of the tarball and copy the file f-prot_virus_scan.desktop into ~/.kde/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus (just for your user) or in /usr/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus, /opt/kde/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus... etc, depending on your distro, to make it system-wide.
This is only the service-menu, you need to have F-Prot antivirus installed on your system.
Enhancements:
- Added Danish translation by Kefeus
<<lessI hope you may find it useful.
Comments or/and translations are welcome.
TO INSTALL: extract the content of the tarball and copy the file f-prot_virus_scan.desktop into ~/.kde/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus (just for your user) or in /usr/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus, /opt/kde/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus... etc, depending on your distro, to make it system-wide.
This is only the service-menu, you need to have F-Prot antivirus installed on your system.
Enhancements:
- Added Danish translation by Kefeus
Download (MB)
Added: 2006-08-14 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1187 downloads
TCPDF PHP4 4.6.022
TCPDF PHP4 provides you with an excellent and open Source PHP class which is designed for generating PDF documents. more>>
TCPDF PHP4 4.6.022 provides you with an excellent and open Source PHP class which is designed for generating PDF documents. TCPDF project was started in 2002 and now it is freely used all over the world by millions of people. TCPDF is a Free Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS).
Major Features:
- No external libraries are required for the basic functions
- Supports all ISO page formats
- Supports custom page formats, margins and units of measure
- Supports UTF-8 Unicode and Right-To-Left languages
- Supports TrueTypeUnicode, OpenTypeUnicode, TrueType, OpenType, Type1 and CID-0 fonts;
- Supports document encryption
- Includes methods to publish some (x)HTML code
- Includes graphic (geometric) and transformation methods
- Includes Javascript and forms support
- Includes a method to print various barcode formats: CODE 39, ANSI MH10.8M-1983, USD-3, 3 of 9, CODE 93, USS-93, Standard 2 of 5, Interleaved 2 of 5, CODE 128 A/B/C, 2 and 5 Digits UPC-Based Extention, EAN 8, EAN 13, UPC-A, UPC-E, MSI, POSTNET, PLANET, RMS4CC (Royal Mail 4-state Customer Code), CBC (Customer Bar Code), KIX (Klant index - Customer index), Intelligent Mail Barcode, Onecode, USPS-B-3200, CODABAR, CODE 11, PHARMACODE, PHARMACODE TWO-TRACKS;
- Includes methods to set Bookmarks and print a Table of Content
- Includes a method to move pages
- Includes methods for automatic page header and footer management
- Supports automatic page break
- Supports automatic page numbering and page groups
- Supports automatic line break and text justification
- Supports JPEG and PNG images natively, all images supported by GD (GD, GD2, GD2PART, GIF, JPEG, PNG, BMP, XBM, XPM) and all images supported via ImagMagick;
- Supports stroke and clipping mode for text
- Supports clipping masks
- Supports Grayscale, RGB, CMYK, Spot Colors and Transparencies
- Supports several annotations, including links, text and file attachments
- Supports page compression (requires zlib extension)
- Supports text hyphenation
- Supports transactions to UNDO commands.
Added: 2009-07-24 License: LGPL Price: FREE
1 downloads
Photo Grid Print 0.2
Photo Grid Print is a software which can print photos in a grid on a single page. more>>
Photo Grid Print is a software which can print photos in a grid on a single page.
Photo Grid Print is a dialog window that lets you print a set of photos in a grid on a single page. You set the number of rows and columns in the grid. It figures out an efficient layout to maximize the photo size and minimize the paper used, rotating photos as needed. You can tell it to fill the page with your photo(s), repeating them as needed.
Once installed, the dialog is started by selecting some photos in the Gnome file manager (nautilus) or in the F-Spot application: right-click > Open With... > Open with Photo Grid Print.
Photo Grid Print was eritten using Python, GTK+ and Glade.
<<lessPhoto Grid Print is a dialog window that lets you print a set of photos in a grid on a single page. You set the number of rows and columns in the grid. It figures out an efficient layout to maximize the photo size and minimize the paper used, rotating photos as needed. You can tell it to fill the page with your photo(s), repeating them as needed.
Once installed, the dialog is started by selecting some photos in the Gnome file manager (nautilus) or in the F-Spot application: right-click > Open With... > Open with Photo Grid Print.
Photo Grid Print was eritten using Python, GTK+ and Glade.
Download (0.005MB)
Added: 2007-03-02 License: MIT/X Consortium License Price:
974 downloads
SCLog 0.1.3
SCLog is a little tool for GNOME, released under GPL license, thought to simplify the life to whom. more>>
SCLog is a little tool for GNOME, released under GPL license, thought to simplify the life to whom, like me, has the defect of checking Slackware current ChangeLog a bit too often.
Once selected a timeout and the ChangeLog url, SCLog will periodically check for upgrades and, if available, will change the icon shown in the tray area with a white exclamation mark inside a red spot.
Clicking the icon a menu will appear letting the user see available upgrades, modify preferences or quit the application.
<<lessOnce selected a timeout and the ChangeLog url, SCLog will periodically check for upgrades and, if available, will change the icon shown in the tray area with a white exclamation mark inside a red spot.
Clicking the icon a menu will appear letting the user see available upgrades, modify preferences or quit the application.
Download (0.024MB)
Added: 2005-08-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1522 downloads
polyBSD 0.1
polyBSD is a multi-purpose (hence poly) framework for building embedded systems based on NetBSD. more>>
polyBSD is a "multi"-purpose (hence "poly") framework for building embedded systems based on NetBSD.
Of the three major *BSD flavors, FreeBSD and OpenBSD are often in the spotlight.
FreeBSD is touted for its stability, while OpenBSD usually claims the title of
the most secure operatin system available.
However, the third flavor (NetBSD) is what many consider to be the unsung hero - it has features that rival those of both FreeBSD and OpenBSD however is not often seen in the news. NetBSD has arguably the cleanest code base of all open source operating systems this fact has unforseen effect on its overall features. The reason for
NetBSDs clean code is the its stated goal to run on as many hardware architecture
as possible. In order to do that, the team behind NetBSD has been forced to write
code that is portable and easy to debug.
Portable code is achieved by using mostly libraries and functions that are likely to compile and run well on most platforms. In addition, in order to be able to reliably port the code to over 40 different architecture, the code has to be well written so that a large group of people can look at and understand it well so they can modify it easily and port it to a new architecture. But how does that translate into stability and security touted by FreeBSD and OpenBSD respectively. Well, clean code usually translates directly into stability - one cant expect a messy code to perform well or be easy to debug.
Clean code also leads to improved security - security bugs are easy to spot and
correct. Also the portability of the code ensures that only standard libraries
and functions are used. However, those standard libarries and functions are the
ones that have been around longer, which means they have been well tested and are
likely to contain the fewest number of security bugs.
The one feature that FreeBSD had long been able to claim exclusively is that in
terms of performance it blows all other *BSD flavors out of the water when it
comes to the i386 architecture.
However, this crown was recently captured by NetBSD thanks to an extensive performance benchmarking, the results of which are referenced on the section "NetBSD tools" on this site. So to sum it all up, NetBSD is no longer simply the portability prodigy on the block. It is a fast, rock-solid and secure operating system that can successfully meet the demands of the modern enterprise. Thats the reason for it being used by the people behind this project to build some tools that will hopefully be useful.
<<lessOf the three major *BSD flavors, FreeBSD and OpenBSD are often in the spotlight.
FreeBSD is touted for its stability, while OpenBSD usually claims the title of
the most secure operatin system available.
However, the third flavor (NetBSD) is what many consider to be the unsung hero - it has features that rival those of both FreeBSD and OpenBSD however is not often seen in the news. NetBSD has arguably the cleanest code base of all open source operating systems this fact has unforseen effect on its overall features. The reason for
NetBSDs clean code is the its stated goal to run on as many hardware architecture
as possible. In order to do that, the team behind NetBSD has been forced to write
code that is portable and easy to debug.
Portable code is achieved by using mostly libraries and functions that are likely to compile and run well on most platforms. In addition, in order to be able to reliably port the code to over 40 different architecture, the code has to be well written so that a large group of people can look at and understand it well so they can modify it easily and port it to a new architecture. But how does that translate into stability and security touted by FreeBSD and OpenBSD respectively. Well, clean code usually translates directly into stability - one cant expect a messy code to perform well or be easy to debug.
Clean code also leads to improved security - security bugs are easy to spot and
correct. Also the portability of the code ensures that only standard libraries
and functions are used. However, those standard libarries and functions are the
ones that have been around longer, which means they have been well tested and are
likely to contain the fewest number of security bugs.
The one feature that FreeBSD had long been able to claim exclusively is that in
terms of performance it blows all other *BSD flavors out of the water when it
comes to the i386 architecture.
However, this crown was recently captured by NetBSD thanks to an extensive performance benchmarking, the results of which are referenced on the section "NetBSD tools" on this site. So to sum it all up, NetBSD is no longer simply the portability prodigy on the block. It is a fast, rock-solid and secure operating system that can successfully meet the demands of the modern enterprise. Thats the reason for it being used by the people behind this project to build some tools that will hopefully be useful.
Download (31.8MB)
Added: 2006-11-01 License: BSD License Price:
1087 downloads
Quantum::Superpositions 2.02
Quantum::Superpositions package contains QM-like superpositions in Perl. more>>
Quantum::Superpositions package contains QM-like superpositions in Perl.
SYNOPSIS
use Quantum::Superpositions;
if ($x == any($a, $b, $c)) { ... }
while ($nextval < all(@thresholds)) { ... }
$max = any(@value) < all(@values);
use Quantum::Superpositions BINARY => [ CORE::index ];
print index( any("opts","tops","spot"), "o" );
print index( "stop", any("p","s") );
BACKGROUND
Under the standard interpretation of quantum mechanics, until they are observed, particles exist only as a discontinuous probability function. Under the Cophenhagen Interpretation, this situation is often visualized by imagining the state of an unobserved particle to be a ghostly overlay of all its possible observable states simultaneously. For example, a particle that might be observed in state A, B, or C may be considered to be in a pseudo-state where it is simultaneously in states A, B, and C. Such a particle is said to be in a superposition of states.
Research into applying particle superposition in construction of computer hardware is already well advanced. The aim of such research is to develop reliable quantum memories, in which an individual bit is stored as some measurable property of a quantised particle (a qubit). Because the particle can be physically coerced into a superposition of states, it can store bits that are simultaneously 1 and 0.
Specific processes based on the interactions of one or more qubits (such as interference, entanglement, or additional superposition) are then be used to construct quantum logic gates. Such gates can in turn be employed to perform logical operations on qubits, allowing logical and mathematical operations to be executed in parallel.
Unfortunately, the math required to design and use quantum algorithms on quantum computers is painfully hard. The Quantum::Superpositions module offers another approach, based on the superposition of entire scalar values (rather than individual qubits).
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Quantum::Superpositions;
if ($x == any($a, $b, $c)) { ... }
while ($nextval < all(@thresholds)) { ... }
$max = any(@value) < all(@values);
use Quantum::Superpositions BINARY => [ CORE::index ];
print index( any("opts","tops","spot"), "o" );
print index( "stop", any("p","s") );
BACKGROUND
Under the standard interpretation of quantum mechanics, until they are observed, particles exist only as a discontinuous probability function. Under the Cophenhagen Interpretation, this situation is often visualized by imagining the state of an unobserved particle to be a ghostly overlay of all its possible observable states simultaneously. For example, a particle that might be observed in state A, B, or C may be considered to be in a pseudo-state where it is simultaneously in states A, B, and C. Such a particle is said to be in a superposition of states.
Research into applying particle superposition in construction of computer hardware is already well advanced. The aim of such research is to develop reliable quantum memories, in which an individual bit is stored as some measurable property of a quantised particle (a qubit). Because the particle can be physically coerced into a superposition of states, it can store bits that are simultaneously 1 and 0.
Specific processes based on the interactions of one or more qubits (such as interference, entanglement, or additional superposition) are then be used to construct quantum logic gates. Such gates can in turn be employed to perform logical operations on qubits, allowing logical and mathematical operations to be executed in parallel.
Unfortunately, the math required to design and use quantum algorithms on quantum computers is painfully hard. The Quantum::Superpositions module offers another approach, based on the superposition of entire scalar values (rather than individual qubits).
Download (0.014MB)
Added: 2007-05-21 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
890 downloads
Foresight Linux 1.3.2
Foresight Linux is a distribution based on Specifix Linux which showcases the latest and greatest from the GNOME project. more>>
Foresight Linux OS is a Distribution which showcases some of the latest and greatest from GNOME. Some of the things that may not be mature enough for some of the other distros.
Some of the more innovative things are included, like beagle, f-spot, howl, and the latest hal. All of this plus some nice, clean default themes and artwork.
Foresight Linux is built using the conary package management system. Conary is a way of managing software using a loosely knit group of network repositories. There are tools included to make it very simple to install and update packages.
There are four basic operations involved in package management; querying, installing, upgrading, removing.
Main features:
- Beagle :: Search tool that ransacks your personal information space to find whatever youre looking for.
- f-spot :: Personal photo management.
- Howl :: Cross-platform implementation of Zeroconf networking
- Hal :: Hardware abstraction layer that makes hardware just work.
- Conary :: A new way of looking at package management.
- Oversite :: Web based systems management.
- GNOME-Office :: Suite of Productivity Applications
- Mono :: .NET implementation for Linux
Querying
There are two type of searches you can do, local and remote. A local search queries localling installed software. A remote search queries network repositories for available software. Here are some examples:
To see what version of firefox you have installed, you run the conary command with the "q" argument as well as the package name "firefox"
foresight$ conary q firefox
firefox 1.0-2-1
This shows that firefox 1.0 build 3 is installed.
To see what versions of firefox are available, you run the conary command with the "rq" argument as well as the package name "firefox"
foresight$ conary rq firefox
firefox 1.0-3-1
This shows that firefox 1.0 build 3 is available. In this example, there is a newer version, so it can be upgraded
Installing/Upgrading
Installing and upgrading is basically the same operation, conary with the argument "update". To upgrade or install firefox:
foresight$ conary update firefox
foresight$
Note: There will be no feedback on success, so if you just get returned to a prompt without an error it was successful. Some of these operations could take a while, so be assured if you dont see an error that things are working. Remember, these packages are being downloaded over the internet prior to installation.
Removing
To remove a package, conary with the argument "erase". To remove firefox:
foresight$ conary erase firefox
foresight$
Note: As with update, there will be no feedback on success.
For more information of how conary works, see the Conary Wiki. This is more of a developer reference, but has lots of good information.
Checking for out of date packages
There is a handy utility called "yuck" which compares your versions of packages to those available from the repository." Yuck can also update those packages (requires root), the default behavior is to simply display.
foresight$ yuck
This will display a list of available updates.
foresight# yuck --update --except kernel
This will update everything that is out of date with the exception of the kernel. You can specifiy a comma separated list of exceptions (no spaces). I would recommend always excluding the kernel and update that individually with "conary update --keep-existing kernel".
This will also make it install a new kernel and leave the old one... so you system is still bootable if things arent right. From time to time you can remove the unused kernel with "conary erase kernel=[version]".
<<lessSome of the more innovative things are included, like beagle, f-spot, howl, and the latest hal. All of this plus some nice, clean default themes and artwork.
Foresight Linux is built using the conary package management system. Conary is a way of managing software using a loosely knit group of network repositories. There are tools included to make it very simple to install and update packages.
There are four basic operations involved in package management; querying, installing, upgrading, removing.
Main features:
- Beagle :: Search tool that ransacks your personal information space to find whatever youre looking for.
- f-spot :: Personal photo management.
- Howl :: Cross-platform implementation of Zeroconf networking
- Hal :: Hardware abstraction layer that makes hardware just work.
- Conary :: A new way of looking at package management.
- Oversite :: Web based systems management.
- GNOME-Office :: Suite of Productivity Applications
- Mono :: .NET implementation for Linux
Querying
There are two type of searches you can do, local and remote. A local search queries localling installed software. A remote search queries network repositories for available software. Here are some examples:
To see what version of firefox you have installed, you run the conary command with the "q" argument as well as the package name "firefox"
foresight$ conary q firefox
firefox 1.0-2-1
This shows that firefox 1.0 build 3 is installed.
To see what versions of firefox are available, you run the conary command with the "rq" argument as well as the package name "firefox"
foresight$ conary rq firefox
firefox 1.0-3-1
This shows that firefox 1.0 build 3 is available. In this example, there is a newer version, so it can be upgraded
Installing/Upgrading
Installing and upgrading is basically the same operation, conary with the argument "update". To upgrade or install firefox:
foresight$ conary update firefox
foresight$
Note: There will be no feedback on success, so if you just get returned to a prompt without an error it was successful. Some of these operations could take a while, so be assured if you dont see an error that things are working. Remember, these packages are being downloaded over the internet prior to installation.
Removing
To remove a package, conary with the argument "erase". To remove firefox:
foresight$ conary erase firefox
foresight$
Note: As with update, there will be no feedback on success.
For more information of how conary works, see the Conary Wiki. This is more of a developer reference, but has lots of good information.
Checking for out of date packages
There is a handy utility called "yuck" which compares your versions of packages to those available from the repository." Yuck can also update those packages (requires root), the default behavior is to simply display.
foresight$ yuck
This will display a list of available updates.
foresight# yuck --update --except kernel
This will update everything that is out of date with the exception of the kernel. You can specifiy a comma separated list of exceptions (no spaces). I would recommend always excluding the kernel and update that individually with "conary update --keep-existing kernel".
This will also make it install a new kernel and leave the old one... so you system is still bootable if things arent right. From time to time you can remove the unused kernel with "conary erase kernel=[version]".
Download (650MB)
Added: 2007-07-24 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
823 downloads
F Modular Synthesizer 1.0 RC2
F Modular Synthesizer (FMS) is basically a tool to generate all kinds of sounds. more>>
F Modular Synthesizer (FMS) is basically a tool to generate all kinds of sounds. It should work on any up-to-date Linux system.
Main features:
Playing sounds
- with any frequency and volume
- one after another or at the same time (mixer) or both
- stereo (different sounds on different channels)
- with any balance between the two channels
- with built-in sweep that even follows frequency modulation
- like speech synthesis [listen]
- both on-the-fly playing with direct user access and asynchronous, pre-computed output; also combining the two, taking the best of both
- with all modulation options described below
Making noise
- now although it tends to get noisy in any way, we mean real noise here
- in 4 different ways
- nearly-white noise
- narrow band noise
Modulating
- amplitude (volume)
- frequency
- minima, maxima, amplitude and frequency of the modulation (here the "Fully Modular" comes to existence)
- balance, moving the sound from left to right and back in stereo mode
- narrowness of the noise frequency band in many different ways
Making music
- some-kind-of-midi-mapping mode (sound + envelope => instrument, FMS midi file format)
- auto-converter and player for MUS file format, listen [here] (Musplay)
- auto-composer for those who like a rather modern kind of music
- chords
Displaying
- spectrum of a sound
- oscillogram of a sound
- mixes between different sounds with different volumes / frequencies
Saving
- sounds as oscillograms in FMS file format (mathematical description, not complete wavetables)
- sounds as Fourier overtone amplitudes
- music in FMS midi format
- FMS output in wave format
- wave file sounds in FMS file format (auto-converter) - experimental
GUI
- a somewhat ugly and extremely limited tcl/tk gui
- FROCOR, an installation that connects the FMS sound backend to graphical interfaces and outputs
- a fully modular Qt GUI - experimental, but Ill give you a [screenshot]
Enhancements:
- This release fixes all bugs discovered via user feedback, and should be quite stable.
- Sweep frequency modulation is now implemented, and using both blur and frequency modulation on the same sound at the same time is possible.
<<lessMain features:
Playing sounds
- with any frequency and volume
- one after another or at the same time (mixer) or both
- stereo (different sounds on different channels)
- with any balance between the two channels
- with built-in sweep that even follows frequency modulation
- like speech synthesis [listen]
- both on-the-fly playing with direct user access and asynchronous, pre-computed output; also combining the two, taking the best of both
- with all modulation options described below
Making noise
- now although it tends to get noisy in any way, we mean real noise here
- in 4 different ways
- nearly-white noise
- narrow band noise
Modulating
- amplitude (volume)
- frequency
- minima, maxima, amplitude and frequency of the modulation (here the "Fully Modular" comes to existence)
- balance, moving the sound from left to right and back in stereo mode
- narrowness of the noise frequency band in many different ways
Making music
- some-kind-of-midi-mapping mode (sound + envelope => instrument, FMS midi file format)
- auto-converter and player for MUS file format, listen [here] (Musplay)
- auto-composer for those who like a rather modern kind of music
- chords
Displaying
- spectrum of a sound
- oscillogram of a sound
- mixes between different sounds with different volumes / frequencies
Saving
- sounds as oscillograms in FMS file format (mathematical description, not complete wavetables)
- sounds as Fourier overtone amplitudes
- music in FMS midi format
- FMS output in wave format
- wave file sounds in FMS file format (auto-converter) - experimental
GUI
- a somewhat ugly and extremely limited tcl/tk gui
- FROCOR, an installation that connects the FMS sound backend to graphical interfaces and outputs
- a fully modular Qt GUI - experimental, but Ill give you a [screenshot]
Enhancements:
- This release fixes all bugs discovered via user feedback, and should be quite stable.
- Sweep frequency modulation is now implemented, and using both blur and frequency modulation on the same sound at the same time is possible.
Download (0.18MB)
Added: 2007-04-15 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
925 downloads
wmfire 1.2.3
wmfire is a fiery dock app. more>>
wmfire is a fiery dock app.
This is an update of the original wmfire dock applet. Like the wmufo program it uses the GDK library to improve its speed - using less than half the cpu of the original program.
It can monitor the average cpu load, or individual cpu load on SMP computers. Additionally it can monitor the memory, network load, a file or just be set to show a pretty flame. On entering the dock a burning spot replaces the cursor, and after two seconds symbols to represent the current monitor are "burnt" onscreen. The flame colour can also be changed.
Enhancements:
- Add sticky option and fix regression causing second window
<<lessThis is an update of the original wmfire dock applet. Like the wmufo program it uses the GDK library to improve its speed - using less than half the cpu of the original program.
It can monitor the average cpu load, or individual cpu load on SMP computers. Additionally it can monitor the memory, network load, a file or just be set to show a pretty flame. On entering the dock a burning spot replaces the cursor, and after two seconds symbols to represent the current monitor are "burnt" onscreen. The flame colour can also be changed.
Enhancements:
- Add sticky option and fix regression causing second window
Download (0.089MB)
Added: 2006-10-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1094 downloads
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