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NRPG RatioMaster 0.36

NRPG RatioMaster 0.36


NRPG Ratiomaster is a small standalone application which fakes upload and download stats of a torrent. more>>
NRPG Ratiomaster is a small standalone application which fakes upload and download stats of a torrent to almost all bittorrent trackers.

This means that it does NOT rely on your bittorrent client (uTorrent, Azureus, etc.) and it will NOT download/upload the files on a torrent - it only can fake download/upload.

The application has hardcoded emulations for the most commonly used BitTorrent clients: uTorrent, BitComet, Azureus, ABC, BitLord, BTuga, BitTornado, Burst, BitTyrant, BitSpirit.

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Download (0.090MB)
Added: 2007-07-16 License: Freeware Price:
568 downloads
gbrainy 0.1 Beta

gbrainy 0.1 Beta


gbrainy is a brain teaser game and trainer to have fun and to keep your brain trained. more>>
gbrainy is a brain teaser game and trainer to have fun and to keep your brain trained.

The application is written for GNOME using Mono, C# and Cairo.

gbrainy mission is to provide a platform for creating different kinds of brain-teasers and brain trainers games for GNOME.

Use cases:

Currently the following use cases are considered:

New user.A person that uses gbrainy to evaluate it and understand what can provide. Interested in see its different kinds of games in a short period of time.

Adult gamer.An adult that uses gbrainy just for fun.

Adult training.An adult that uses gbrainy to train her memory, arithmetical and logical capabilities.

Kid training.Her parents decided that she should use gbrainy to train her memory, arithmetical and logical capabilities.

The objective is to provide enough flexibility in terms of number of games and difficulty parametrization to make gbrainy use on these cases straight forward.

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Download (0.26MB)
Added: 2007-08-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
794 downloads
Vstr string library 1.0.15

Vstr string library 1.0.15


Vstr is a safe and fast string library for C. more>>
Vstr is a safe and fast string library for C. Vstr string library is designed for network communication. Its design uses chunks of ptr+length data, so adding, substituting, and deleting data are all fast operations.
This model also allows it to do automatic referencing for mmap() areas of memory. Shortcut APIs are included to mmap() a file into a Vstr string, and read()/write() data to/from a Vstr string. Another big feature of the library is a POSIX and ISO 9899:1999 compliant printf() like function, which can also be extended with user supplied formatters that are gcc warning compatible.
The total API is over 280 functions, but laid out in a easy to remember manner, including data parsing functions, a non-destructive split() function, and conversion functions (among others).
Main features:
- a printf like function that is fully ISO 9899:1999 (C99) compliant, also having %m as standard and POSIX i18n parameter number modifiers. It also allows gcc warning compatible customer format specifiers (and includes pre-written custom format specifiers for ipv4 and ipv6 addresses, Vstr strings and more)
- splitting of strings into parameter/record chunks (a la perl).
- substituting data in a Vstr string
- moving data from one Vstr string to another (or within a Vstr string).
- comparing strings (without regard for case, or taking into account version information)
- searching for data in strings (with or without regard for case).
- counting spans of data in a string (the equivalent of strspn() in ISO C).
- converting data in a Vstr (Ie. delete/substitute unprintable characters or making a Vstr string lowercase/uppercase).
- parsing data from a Vstr string (Ie. numbers, or ipv4 addresses).
- easily parsing and wrapping outgoing data in netstrings, for fast and simple (and hence less error prone) network communication
- the ability to cache aspects of data about a Vstr string, to both simplify and speedup use of the string.
- the ability to have empty data as part of the string, this is somewhat useful for representing file transfers as a string as you can represent the file data as empty data in the string.
Enhancements:
- Bytemap functions were added to accelerate parsing.
- Custom formatters were sped up with a hash.
- Workarounds were added for a hidden Linux UIO 2GB limit and GCC 4.x symbol aliasing brain damage.
- Solaris build fixes were made along with a fix for a problem with loading zero-sized files with vstr_sc_*_file() and a couple of other minor problems.
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Added: 2006-03-07 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
1326 downloads
++Skype library 1.10

++Skype library 1.10


++Skype is a C++ library for skype add-on platform independent software development. more>>
++Skype is a C++ library for skype add-on platform independent software development.
++Skype library is platform independent, easy to use, and easy to extend because of the flexible library design, inspired by modern C++ design ideas.
Performance is one of the goals: only compile-time polymorphism is used. The library license allows you to develop freely redistributed applications without any fee.
Main features:
- Platform independent (Now only linux and windows platforms are supported, but we are looking into the future! Smiling);
- Easy to use;
- Easy to extend because of the flexible library design, inspired by modern C++ design ideas;
- Perfomance was on of our goals - only compile-time polymorphism is used;
- Library license allows you to develop freely redistributed applications without any fee;
- Open source.
Enhancements:
- X11 Protocol support is included in the Linux implementation of the library.
- D-BUS library is no longer a requirement.
- You can remote control Skype via the X11 protocol.
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Added: 2006-10-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
644 downloads
Gnaural for Linux 1.0

Gnaural for Linux 1.0


a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator more>> Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator, implementing the principle of binaural beats as described in the October 1973 Scientific American article "Auditory Beats in the Brain" (Gerald Oster). There has been considerable research done on the subject since that publication, and WinAural (an early version in the Gnaural lineage) was used as the audio stimulus for at least one published study
The central theme of Osters article is that processesing of auditory binaural beats bears distinct differences from that done for normal sound, emphasizing different neural pathways and highlighting different parameters of the sound stimulus.
Osters observations inspired a wave of research in to the ways in which binaural beats could affect the brain. One area of research explored how binaural beats could evoke a "frequency-following response" (also known as "brainwave entrainment") in EEG measures. My personal interest in binaural beats has centered almost exclusively around exploring this entrainment potential as a means of facilitating meditative states. However, Gnaural was designed to be neutral with regard to any hypothesis or application, relying strictly on the fundamental findings as described in Osters 1973 overview.
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Added: 2009-04-26 License: Freeware Price: Free
188 downloads
PySubMind 0.2.5

PySubMind 0.2.5


PySubMind is a note manager with organization based on tags. more>>
PySubMind project is a note manager with organisation based on tags.
The main goal is to unload your brain with all the little things that you want keep a mark but you dont know when you will reuse them:
- notes about a book
- a good web link
- an picture
- the email of some people
and maybe organise all this inside one web page
You can use it by a web interface and connect it to PostGreSQL, Sqlite and MySQL.
Use :
Try it at http://l-homme.net/pysubmind/pysubmind.py
The thing to remenber its when you create a note, fill the tags with the answer at the question :
"If i want find this note in 1 year, what tags i will looking for ?"
Enhancements:
- A new CSS, a new menu, and a new search toolbar were added, a default tag for bookmarklet was added, and the documentation for MySQL was completed.
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Added: 2006-03-01 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1332 downloads
NRIA 1.0.6

NRIA 1.0.6


NRIA is an XView-based interactive image analysis program developed and used at BBL and which runs under Solaris 2.5 through 2.7 more>>
NRIA is New Region of Interest Analysis.

NRIA is a medical image processing program developed at the Brain Behavior Laboratory (BBL) of the University of Pennsylvania; it specializes in the quantitative analysis of PET and MRI images of the brain. The perpetrators are listed in the Credits file.

Despite a nearly total lack of user documentation, NRIA is used heavily at BBL and has been carried by ex-students to infect a few other universities. The only known way to learn how to use the program (unless you wrote it yourself) is to get hands-on training by someone else who already knows how to use it.

NRIA currently runs under Solaris (aka SunOS 5 or greater). A port to any other platform is unlikely, due to the prevalence of non-portable constructs in the code. NRIA will compile but not run successfully using gcc on Linux/Intel; no one is known to have tried it on Linux/Sparc.

Bug reports may be sent to Paul Hughett (hughett@bbl.psycha.upenn.edu), who will add them to his collection. Bug fixes and other improvements may be sent to the same person; context diffs are the preferred format. Should you want to make a more substantial contribution, read the file CodingStyle.

If you still want to install NRIA, see the INSTALL file for instructions. The COPYING file describes the license terms under which the software is made available.

Installation:

These instructions assume that you will put the source tree (where the program is compiled) in a directory /usr/local/src/nria and the executable programs and shared data in a directory /usr/local/nria; if you place them elsewhere, make the appropriate modifications to these instructions.

1. Unpack the source tree with the commands

cd /usr/local/src
gunzip nria-1.0.6.src.tgz
tar xf nria-1.0.6.src.tar

2. Compile NRIA and its supporting programs with the commands

cd nria-1.0.6
make clean
make all

The compiled executables will be placed in one of the directories arch/Linux/bin, arch/SunOS-4/bin, or arch/SunOS-5/bin, depending on your machine architecture and operating system version. (Note that NRIA will compile but not run successfully on Linux; if you want to really use the program you will need a Sun.)

Compiling the whole thing takes about 20-30 minutes, so you might as well go get a cup of coffee while youre waiting. There are about a thousand or so compiler warnings that havent been fixed yet; ignore them.

3. Install the binaries and man pages by

cp -p arch/SunOS-5/bin/* /usr/local/nria
cp -p man/man1/*.1 /usr/local/man/man1

If this is a new installation, install the shared data by

cp -p nria/share/* /usr/local/nria

If this isnt a new installation, you will need to figure some way of merging the new shared data with any local modifications.

You will probably need to be root to do the installation; on the other hand, you can install them in your personal home directory without being root.

4. Add /usr/local/nria to your path, if not already there:

If you are using csh as your shell, then place the following at the end of your $HOME/.login file:

set path = ($path $NRIA)

If you are using sh, ksh, or bash as your shell, then place the following at the end of your $HOME/.profile file:

PATH=${PATH}:$NRIA
export PATH

5. To run NRIA, re-login or type the above appropriate path commands at your shell prompt, and then type:

nria

If you dont have any .nhdr files in the current directory, you will see an empty file dialog. You will need to change directories to one which holds nria format images (raw *.img file, header *.nhdr file). If you only have raw images, then for each image you will need to use the img2ria program (type "man img2ria" for more details). If you have individual slices in their own files, you will need to concatenate all slices into one raw image file, and then run img2ria. NRIA is designed to work with 3D multi-slice volumes, not individual 2D slices.
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Added: 2006-03-15 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1318 downloads
DTI-Query 1.1 Beta

DTI-Query 1.1 Beta


DTI-Query allows neuroscientists to place and interactively manipulate box-shaped regions... more>>
DTI stands for Diffusion Tensor Imaging and is a magnetic resonance imaging method that can be used to measure local information about the structure of white matter pathways within the human brain. Combining DTI data with the computational methods of MR tractography, neuroscientists can estimate the locations and sizes of nerve bundles (white matter pathways) that course through the human brain. DTI-Query allows neuroscientists to place and interactively manipulate box-shaped regions (or volumes of interest) to selectively display pathways that pass through specc anatomical areas.
Enhancements:
- Improved support for tensor data formats. (Now supports 5D tensor files, and arbitrary ordering of tensor indices.) Has been tested with tensor image files output by the AFNI tools: http://afni.nimh.nih.gov/sscc/dglen/DTIQuery
- Support for Mac OS X (Carbon)
- Binaries released for Windows, Linux (32- and 64-bit), and MacOS X (PPC and Intel)
- Added choice of integration method (Eulers method, Runge Kutta 2nd order, Runge Kutta 4th order) for STT tracking.
- Improved support for reading NIFTI background images (correctly handles q-form/s-form matrices).
- Can now save visible pathways (as a binary format, or as a NIFTI mask image).
- Many minor GUI enhancements and bug-fixes.
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Added: 2007-06-26 License: Freely Distributable Price:
850 downloads
NRobot 0.21

NRobot 0.21


NRobot project is an autonomous robot fighting game. more>>
NRobot project is an autonomous robot fighting game.

Instead of directly controlling a robot, the human playing the game must write a program that acts as the "brain" of the robot.

The robot will then be dumped into the game arena and must attempt to survive on its own. NRobot is written for the ECMA CLR. Its been tested on Mono and on Microsofts .NET framework. Currently, it is functional and "playable".

It comes with three sample robot implementations, so that "out of the box" you can watch a game. One important missing feature is a security architecture: robot code executes with full privileges.

Thus, its recommended that if you are running any robots from untrusted sources, NRobot is run under a user account with no privileges over files you care about.

Its also short on documentation, and the GUI implementations have some rough edges.

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Added: 2006-11-21 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1067 downloads
Fenris 0.07-m2 build 3245

Fenris 0.07-m2 build 3245


Fenris is a multipurpose tracer, debugger, and code analysis tool. more>>
Fenris is a suite of tools suitable for code analysis, debugging, protocol analysis, reverse engineering, forensics, diagnostics, security audits, vulnerability research and many other purposes.
The main logical components are:
- Fenris: high-level tracer, a tool that detects the logic used in C programs to find and classify functions, logic program structure, calls, buffers, interaction with system and libraries, I/O and many other structures. Fenris is mostly a "whats inside" tracer, as opposed to ltrace or strace, tracers intended to inspect external "symptoms" of the internal program structure. Fenris does not depend on libbfd for accessing ELF structures, and thus is much more robust when dealing with "anti-debugging" code.
- libfnprints and dress: fingerprinting code that can be used to detect library functions embedded inside a static application, even without symbols, to make code analysis simplier; this functionality is both embedded in other components and available as a standalone tool that adds symtab to ELF binaries and can be used with any debugger or disassembler.
- Aegir: an interactive gdb-alike debugger with modular capabilities, instruction by instruction and breakpoint to breakpoint execution, and real-time access to all the goods offered by Fenris, such as high-level information about memory objects or logical code structure.
- nc-aegir: a SoftICE-alike GUI for Aegir, with automatic register, memory and code views, integrated Fenris output, and automatic Fenris control (now under development).
- Ragnarok: a visualisation tool for Fenris that delivers browsable information about many different aspects of program execution - code flow, function calls, memory object life, I/O, etc (to be redesigned using OpenDX or a similar data exploration interface).
- ...and some other companion utilities.
Code analysis is not limited to debugging, quality assurance or security audits. Understanding and handling file formats or communication protocols used by proprietary solutions, a problem that many corporations face when they decide to change their base software platform from one, obsolete or insufficient solution to another, perhaps more suitable, is a task that can consume long months and millions of dollars, especially when any misjudgment or misinterpretation is made.
Because of that, accurate and complete information about existing solutions has to be obtained and evaluated in a timely manner. This project is an attempt to fill the gap between currently used tools by providing a freely available program analysis utility, suitable for black-box code audits, algorithm analysis,
rapid reconnaissance in open-source projects, tracking down bugs, evaluating security subsystems, performing computer forensics, etc.
This program does not automate the process of auditing, and does not favor any particular use. Instead of that, it is intended to be a flexible and universal application that will be a valuable solution for many advanced users. While functional, it is probably not tested sufficiently, there are many issues to fix, several known bugs, some portability problems.
It is being released primarily to get user feedback, comments, and, most important, to request development support, as my resources are very limited, both in terms of available time and development platforms. This project is and will be distributed as a free software, regardless of projected use, accompanied by complete sources, under the terms and
conditions of GPL. Why do you might need this code? Well, there are few reasons...
Human beings are, so far, the best code analysts. Unlike computer programs, they have imagination, ability to build synthetic abstract models, and yet to observe and analyze smallest details at the same time. Functionality is often being described as "doing what the program is supposed to do", security as "doing what the program is supposed to do and
nothing more". While it might sound funny, that is the most general and complete definition we have. In most real-life scenarios only humans really know what are their expectations. Building strict formal models of our expectations does not necessarily mean that models themselves are flawless, and is very time-consuming. Then, even with such models,
validating the code is not always possible, due to its computational complexity. That is why real, live programs (not including some critical developments) do not have such models, do not follow any particular coding guidelines, and cannot be formally examined without human judgment.
Unfortunately, humans are also highly inaccurate and very expensive. They work slowly, and better results can be achieved by hiring better specialists and performing more careful audit. And after all, even the best expert can overlook something in complex, hard to read code. It is almost impossible for human to perform an accurate audit of a large, complex, heterogeneous project written e.g. in C - like Sendmail, BIND, Apache - and provide results in reasonable time.
Things get even worse when humans try to understand algorithms and protocols used by complex closed-source black box solutions. They are simply too slow, and not always able to make accurate guesses about dozens of complicated, conditional parameter passes and function calls before final action is taken.
While it might sound surprising, human-driven code audit is very similar to playing chess - it is a general analysis of possible states, way too many to be implicitly projected by our conscience, a result of experience, knowledge, some unparalleled capabilities of human brain, and luck. It is also a subject to false moves and misjudgment. And there are maybe just a few hundred excellent players.
As for today, freely and commercially available audit tools both use two opposite approaches. First approach tends to minimize human role by automating the review of source code. Source code analysis methods are good in spotting known, repeatable static errors in the code - such as format string vulnerabilities. On the other hand, static tools are not able to trace and analyze all possible execution paths of complex application by
simply looking at its source.
The reason for inability to follow all execution paths lies deeply in the foundations of modern computation theory, and one of its aspects is known as "the halting problem". Speaking in more general terms, in many cases (such as complex software, or even underlying operating system), the amount of medium needed to store all possible states of a complex program exceeds significantly the number of particles in the
universe; and the amount of time needed to generate and process them sequentially is greater than the lifetime of our universe, even having a machine that works with the speed of light.
This might be changed by the development of new computation models, such as quantum computing, or by creating mathematical models that allow us to make such problems non-polynomial - but for now, we are far from this point, and static analysis is restrained in many very serious ways, even though many software suppliers tend to market their products as the ultimate, 100% solutions. Subtle, complex, conditional dynamic errors, such as privilege dropping problems, input-dependent table overflows in C and many other issues usually cannot be detected without generating a completely unacceptable number of false positives.
This kind of software is highly dependent on coding style, and specific notation or development practices might render them less efficient - for example, automated audit utilities can usually detect problems like insecure call to strcpy() function, but will very likely not notice insecure manual copy in do-while
loop. The truth is, for programs that do not have previously built formal models, static auditing utilities look for known, common problems in known, common types of code in a very limited scope.
Another issue is the applicability of this approach to algorithm analysis tasks. In the domain of automated audit tools, this problem is "reduced" to building a formal model of program behavior, or, more appropriately, generating certain predictive statements about the code. While there are very interesting developments in this direction, such as the work of professor Patrick Cousot, it is very difficult to make any detailed, accurate and abstract enough run-time predictions for complex source code that has any immediate value in the analysis of unknown algorithm.
Last but not least, static analysis of sources can be deployed only when the source code is available, which does not have to be the case. This approach is a subject to many shortcomings, tricky assertions, and is a technique of strictly limited capabilities. This is, of course, not to dismiss this method - but to demonstrate that this much favored approach is not flawless and how much it needs to be accompanied with auxiliary methods.
The second approach to be discussed here is based on a dynamic run-time program analysis. This method is usually used to provide the user with information about actual program execution path, letting him make decisions on which path to follow and giving him free will to draw any conclusions and perform all the synthetic reasoning.
This method is
applied to a live binary executed in real-time and is based on monitoring syscalls (strace), libcalls (ltrace) or functions (xtrace); in certain cases, breakpoint debuggers, such as gdb, can be used, however it is usually not feasible to use them to perform anything more than in-depth analysis of a very small portion of program functionality. Usually, such analysis provides a very useful information on what is happening, and this information is provided in uniform, reduced-output form.
A careful auditor can analyze program behavior and find interesting or potentially dangerous run-time conditions. By monitoring how a given application interacts with external world, he (or she) can determine whether some other
conditions can be triggered and eventually explore them by examining sources or re-running the program. Advantages are enormous, as such software enables the auditor to spot very subtle errors in code that "looked good", to observe actual execution, not to try to figure it out, and to find or trace down not obvious or non-schematic vulnerabilities. Run-time trace tools are primarily used for fast reconnaissance tasks and for tracing down notorious errors that are not clearly visible in the source, significantly reducing the time of such operations.
There are, however, serious drawbacks related to this method. First of all, known tracing tools do not provide the complete information. They will detect strcpy() call, but wont report if exactly the same functionality has been implemented from scratch by the author of given program. And, in some cases, the amount of produced data
can be enormous, and because of its completely unstructured character, it makes the observation of overall execution vector almost impossible. Two most important problems are: correlating trace data with actual code, and determining what occurred in the "dark matter" between two lines of trace output.
There are some attempts to combine both approaches - run-time evaluation and source code analysis - such as Purify or many other commercial development support products. Unfortunately, they all feature a limited set of capabilities that need development-side or compilation-time support and are not really suitable for comprehending black box solutions or performing a general analysis. Most of them are targeted for dynamic memory debugging and code / memory profiling.
While not mentioned above, there is also another approach to black-box code - high-level decompiler. However, the complexity of modern compilers makes it very difficult to develop an effective C decompiler or similar utility, and there are only a few (two?) projects available to accomplish it, all of them not able to deal with too complex or optimized code. Finally, there is no guarantee that generated output code will be any help in comprehending the program. For now, this approach remains almost purely theoretical,
and I am not aware of any auditors using it extensively. Why? Well, heres an example of decompiled, mildly optimized code *with* some symbolic information: http://www.backerstreet.com/rec/ex386/hdgO.rec . One may argue it is less readable than cross-referenced disassembly.
This project, Fenris, is named after the monstrous wolf, son of the Norse god Loki. It is not the ultimate answer to all questions, not a solution for all problems, and under no circumstances is intended to replace other tools and techniques. On the other hand, it makes one step forward compared to other tools, trying to support the auditor and to make his work much more effective. This is accomplished by combining a number of techniques, including partial run-time decompiler, stateful analysis, code fingerprinting, I/O analysis, high-level visualization layer, traditional interactive debugger features and run-time code modification capabilities. The goal is to provide a very detailed trace information, and, at the same time, to provide data suitable to build a model of program behavior more quickly and in more convenient way.
Fenris is not supposed to find vulnerabilities or bugs, or to guess algorithms or describe protocols. It is supposed to report and analyze the execution path - detect and describe functional blocks, monitor data flow in the program, marking its lifetime, source, migration and destination, analyze how functions work and what conditions are evaluated.
At the end, it can deliver you an execution model of traced program (or arbitrarily chosen portion of it, if complete trace results in too much noise or irrelevant information), and hint you how this model can change in different conditions. Fenris does not need source codes of analyzed application, but obviously does not keep the auditor from using them.
For many users, Fenris might be a new tool or tools, for others - just a command-line replacement or addition to strace, ltrace, gdb or similar applications (theres a brief list of other nice tools in doc/other.txt). And thats the idea - to build a tool that is simple, reusable, but also precise and smart. It is supposed to have advantages over other tools, but not to be an ultimate replacement or the final solution. Some users can just use very specific features, such as automated function fingerprinting, and use companion tools instead of the main program.
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Added: 2005-04-18 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1657 downloads
SBaGen 1.4.3

SBaGen 1.4.3


SBaGen generates sounds that give an altered state of consciousness. more>>
SBaGen generates sounds that give an altered state of consciousness. The theory behind binaural beats is that if you apply slightly different frequency sine waves to each ear, a beating affect is created in the brain itself, due to the brains internal wiring.
If, in the presence of these tones, you relax and let your mind go, your mind will naturally synchronize with the beat frequency. In this way it is possible to tune the frequency of your brain waves to particular frequencies that you have selected, using of the four bands: Delta: deep sleep, Theta: dreaming and intuitive stuff, Alpha: awake, focussed inside, and Beta: awake, focussed outside.
It is also possible to produce mixtures of brain waves of different frequencies by mixing binaural tones, and in this way, with practice and experimentation, it is reportedly possible to achieve rather unusual states, such as out-of-body stuff, and more. See the books by Ken Eagle Feather, and the Monroe Institute site for more details. The Monroe Institute have apparently put 40 years of research into these techniques.
Centerpointe have also done a great deal of research into binaural beats, concentrating more on improving overall well-being and holistic functioning rather than reaching unusual states, and I recommend reading some of the articles on their site (look under "Site Map", for example their Special Report: "How The Holosync Technology Works" and their FAQ).
I should add that I have only read about the more advanced and unusual uses (OOBEs and so on). My own experiences have not reached quite that far, but still I feel that I have benefitted immensely from using these techniques over the last few years: from simply getting my head clear in confusing moments, to the energy boosts that come at times, to more general emotional clearing, and occasional very intense dreams (although not quite lucid).
So, SBAGEN is my utility, released as free software (under the GNU General Public Licence) for Linux, Windows, DOS and Mac OS X, that generates binaural tones in real-time according to a 24-hour programmed sequence read from a file. It can also be used to play a sequence on demand, rather than according to the clock, or to write a WAV file for playing later. Pink noise, MP3 and Ogg files (since version 1.2.0) may also be mixed with the binaural beats to provide background sounds. (Two files of randomly-looping river sounds are provided from version 1.4.0 onwards). This tool is ideal for anyone who wishes to experiment with these techniques and do research into this for themselves. (For those who would rather pay for a pre-packaged programme with support, I recommend taking a look at the Centerpointe site -- and see my disclaimer)
My original idea was to use this utility to play a programme of different tones throughout the night, hoping to improve dreaming and dream-recall, and then to bring myself up into Alpha rhythms to (hopefully) make a good start to the day. I am now using it more for shorter focussed sessions of about an hour, both during daytime and at night. However, other people have used this software in many different ways. For example, one person suffering constant pain from historical injuries appreciated the way that he could tune the frequencies very accurately to his needs to help him sleep better at night. Other more unusual uses have included: mixing the sounds in as part of musical compositions, and generating ambient sounds during live DJ sets or trance music.
Enhancements:
- Fixed problem when playing 7+ hour sequences with -SE or -L
- Warns properly if the WAV file limit of ~7 hours is exceeded, and truncates
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Added: 2006-07-20 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1203 downloads
Scrinchy 0.15

Scrinchy 0.15


Scrinchy is a tiny HTTP multitasking webserver. more>>
Scrinchy is a tiny HTTP multitasking webserver that I wrote for my own purposes, but which is also a fitting response to the now fairly bloated Apache.
Its name derives from an obscure English verb "to scrinch" which generally means to willfully compress a thing which is not very large into a smaller size. For instance "to scrinch your eyes". This is apt, because Scrinchy is a project where the goal is constantly to make it smaller but yet as feature-rich as possible.
Scrinchy is capable of serving HTML, JPG, GIF, TIFF, PNG, and various other file types, as well as running Perl, Python and (theoretically) PHP scripts externally and passing GET params and cookies to those scripts. At this stage, Scrinchy does not support POST but it will later.
Scrinchy also has some anti-hacker features, described in the README file. The more I use the server myself and observe all the hair-brained things attackers and infected computers do, the more amusement I find in squashing their pitiful efforts.
Enhancements:
- This release improves the internal stack-based interpretive language.
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Added: 2006-03-14 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1320 downloads
tidyup-mail 0.12

tidyup-mail 0.12


tidyup-mail software is especially useful for russian/ukrainian/belarusian users but however can help those who reads mail... more>>
tidyup-mail software is especially useful for russian/ukrainian/belarusian users but however can help those who reads mail from people that uses such brain-damaged web-mailers as yahoo mail.

Fatigue with xterm when reading mail from mutt? Tired to press "Do Full reset" every time when terminal becames full of garbage? This program is for you! It removes unsafe characters for email & makes xterm happy!

Note that all documentation comes in russian language. Check for your local russian hacker.

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Download (0.007MB)
Added: 2007-02-27 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
969 downloads
tideup_mail 0.12

tideup_mail 0.12


tideup_mail is especially useful for russian/ukrainian/belarusian users but however can help those who reads mail from people. more>>
tideup_mail is especially useful for russian/ukrainian/belarusian users but however can help those who reads mail from people that uses such brain-damaged web-mailers as yahoo mail.

Fatigue with xterm when reading mail from mutt? Tired to press "Do Full reset" every time when terminal becames full of garbage? This program is for you! It removes unsafe characters for email & makes xterm happy!

Note that all documentation comes on russian language. Check for your local russian hacker.

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Download (0.007MB)
Added: 2006-05-03 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1269 downloads
EHNT 0.4

EHNT 0.4


EHNT is a tool which turns streams of Netflow (version 5) data into something useful and human-readable. more>>
EHNT is a tool which turns streams of Netflow (version 5) data into something useful and human-readable. (Netflow is a UDP-based traffic reporting protocol created by Cisco, generated by Cisco, Juniper, Foundry, and other routers.)
Netflow operates in many ways. It will dump flow records in human-readable form. It will also provide reports on top ASes, IP protocols, and tcp/udp ports. The reports can be generated over various intervals, from 1 minute to 1 day.
Component programs are:
1. ehntserv listens to netflow version 5 UDP packets, and also listens for client TCP connections. When a TCP client connects, the server starts forwarding all the netflow packets it receives (plus the IP address of the originating device) to that client.
ehntserv does not currently do any IP access control. I suggest that you use ipchains or iptables on your linux box, or IP Filter (ipf) (http://coombs.anu.edu.au/ipfilter/) on your Solaris or BSD box. I dont know what the current state of packet filtering is on other Unixes; IP Filter seems to support several.
2. ehnt connects to ehntserv and displays the flows it receives in various ways. It currently has four modes (-m ):
- top mode displays average utilization by top ASes, IP protocols, or tcp/udp ports over a given interval (from 1 minute to 1 day).
Top mode is different when it focuses on a single interface on a single router, because then you get to see summaries of source and destionation for both inbound and outbound traffic. Otherwise, you just get summaries of source and destination.
- dump mode displays individual flows
- shortdump mode display individual flows in a more compact but hard
to read fashion
- colondump mode display individual flows in a machine-readable format.
And yes, I recognize that the name of this mode is unpleasant.
In all three modes, simple (REALLY simple) filtering can be done for AS
number, TCP/UDP port, IP protocol number, device sending the flow record,
and SNMP interface index.
You may think of ehnt in the three dump modes as a brain-dead and incredibly
simple tcpdump for netflow.
ehnt also has the silly and uninspiredly-named big filter, in which it
only displays flows with are bigger (in packets or bytes) than any flow
received before it. This only makes sense in the three dump modes.
Enhancements:
- Added Unix domain support for client connections, enabled by default
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Download (2.3MB)
Added: 2006-07-03 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1209 downloads
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