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R-kiosk 0.5.2

R-kiosk 0.5.2


R-kiosk provides an extension that defaults to full screen, disables all menus, toolbars, key commands and right button menus. more>>
R-kiosk provides an extension that defaults to full screen, disables all menus, toolbars, key commands and right button menus.

Real Kiosk is a Firefox 2.0 extension that defaults to full screen, disables all menus, toolbars, key commands and right button menus. Alt+Home still takes you home.

You can enable Navigation toolbar by adding the following to user.js:
user_pref("rkiosk.navbar", true);

You might want to remove the print dialog by adding following lines to your user.js:
user_pref("print.always_print_silent",true);
user_pref("print.show_print_progress",false);

Notice that the user can still close Firefox with for example Alt-F4 and get access to your computer. You might want to prevent this with a suitable utility program for your operating system.

Caution! R-kiosk extension can be removed only in Firefox Safe Mode.

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Download (0.014MB)
Added: 2007-04-19 License: MPL (Mozilla Public License) Price:
560 downloads
OpenKiosk 2.0.6

OpenKiosk 2.0.6


OpenKiosk is a multi-platform kiosk management software. more>>
OpenKiosk is an open-source multi-platform kiosk system designed for use in libraries, offices, schools, internet cafes, airports, conference rooms, and more!

Openkiosk aims to be one of the best kiosk software available in the open-souce community. The following prototype screenshots of the OpenKiosk client reflects its evolution towards the goal of acheiving simplicity and elegance in kiosk terminals.

OpenKiosk, is a system made up of a collection of programs that work together in a local network of inter-connected computers. It is a centralized management software for kiosks. It assumes that the resources are shared and centralized as well, including the Internet connection. This implies that the shared Internet connection to the outside world is assumed to be always on at some point within the local network, perhaps a NAT server. It is up to the client program to automatically limit customers individually from accessing the Internet.

When a customer walks in and uses a kiosk or a workstation, the client program obtains his/her login/user account information. It then sends this login information to the server, which in turn, verifies this data and if valid, returns the access rights and duration of use for the customer back to the client program.

The client program at this point, handles the restrictions transparently including preventing running new programs and making it appear that the Internet connection is down if the time limit is reached or if the administrator manually stopped a customer from continuing to use a kiosk/workstation.

OpenKiosk is primarily designed with the multi-user network in mind. From a library containing 20 public browsing terminals to a large internet cafe or convention center containing hundreds to thousands of kiosks or workstations, OpenKiosk is built with components that are designed to scale up. It is not meant to be used on a single stand-alone computer

The Openkiosk system is basically composed of two parts. The first program is called NodeView. It acts as the OpenKiosk central server containing the client information database. It is responsible for administering all the clients on the network either automatically or manually. Monitoring and controlling the workstations can be done locally via the graphical user interfaces or remotely from a Java Applet in a browser.

The second part is simply called "The Client". It is the actual program that sits between the customer and the operating system interface on the workstations. It is the software which physically limits the users access to the Internet, network resources, the local programs on the workstation itself.

For automatic usage, it can take in membership card login. It is also possible to interface to much more advanced hardware readers such as smart card readers. The client is also capable of simple but important tasks such as remote shutdown, instant messaging, file updates and much more.

Presently, there are two versions of clients. The X11 Linux/Unix version, which is an applet that sits on top of the KDE panel (requires at least KDE 3.X) and the Windows version (Windows 95,98,NT,2000,XP).

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Download (1.1MB)
Added: 2005-08-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
872 downloads
Kiosk Admin Tool 1.0

Kiosk Admin Tool 1.0


Kiosk Admin Tool is a Point&Click tool for system administrators. more>>
Kiosk Admin Tool is a Point&Click tool for system administrators to enable KDEs KIOSK features or otherwise preconfigure KDE for groups of users.
Enhancements:
- Fixed lookup of UNIX-groups in kiosktool-kdedirs
- Removed "Lock down system wide Desktop icons", it was not implemented
- Removed duplicate "Disable Menu Editing" entry
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Download (1.1MB)
Added: 2005-07-13 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
882 downloads
R 2.5.1

R 2.5.1


R is a language and environment for statistical computing. more>>
R is a language and environment for statistical computing and graphics. R is a GNU project which is similar to the S language and environment which was developed at Bell Laboratories (formerly AT&T, now Lucent Technologies) by John Chambers and colleagues. R can be considered as a different implementation of S. There are some important differences, but much code written for S runs unaltered under R.
R provides a wide variety of statistical (linear and nonlinear modelling, classical statistical tests, time-series analysis, classification, clustering, ...) and graphical techniques, and is highly extensible. The S language is often the vehicle of choice for research in statistical methodology, and R provides an Open Source route to participation in that activity.
One of Rs strengths is the ease with which well-designed publication-quality plots can be produced, including mathematical symbols and formulae where needed. Great care has been taken over the defaults for the minor design choices in graphics, but the user retains full control.
R is available as Free Software under the terms of the Free Software Foundations GNU General Public License in source code form. It compiles and runs on a wide variety of UNIX platforms and similar systems (including FreeBSD and Linux), Windows and MacOS.
R is an integrated suite of software facilities for data manipulation, calculation and graphical display. It includes:
- an effective data handling and storage facility,
- a suite of operators for calculations on arrays, in particular matrices,
- a large, coherent, integrated collection of intermediate tools for data analysis,
- graphical facilities for data analysis and display either on-screen or on hardcopy, and
- a well-developed, simple and effective programming language which includes conditionals, loops, user-defined recursive functions and input and output facilities.
The term "environment" is intended to characterize it as a fully planned and coherent system, rather than an incremental accretion of very specific and inflexible tools, as is frequently the case with other data analysis software.
R, like S, is designed around a true computer language, and it allows users to add additional functionality by defining new functions. Much of the system is itself written in the R dialect of S, which makes it easy for users to follow the algorithmic choices made. For computationally-intensive tasks, C, C++ and Fortran code can be linked and called at run time. Advanced users can write C code to manipulate R objects directly.
Many users think of R as a statistics system. We prefer to think of it of an environment within which statistical techniques are implemented. R can be extended (easily) via packages. There are about eight packages supplied with the R distribution and many more are available through the CRAN family of Internet sites covering a very wide range of modern statistics.
R has its own LaTeX-like documentation format, which is used to supply comprehensive documentation, both on-line in a number of formats and in hardcopy.
Enhancements:
- This is a maintenance release, and fixes a number of mostly minor bugs and platform issues.
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Download (10.4MB)
Added: 2007-06-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
979 downloads
Cluster Live 1.0

Cluster Live 1.0


Cluster Live is a live cd that boots a cluster of diskless Thin Clients. more>>
Cluster Live can do the following:
- Boots a cluster of diskless Thin Clients.
- Automatically loads a Web browser.
- Share workload between Thin Clients.
Why?
- No individual installations required.
- Fast deployment of centralised software over multiple computers.
- No need to access the hard disk of your existing system.
- Portable yet scalable infrastructure.
- Less spending on high end computer hardware such as hard drives, processors and memory.
Who can benefit from it?
- Public kiosk
- Internet cafe
- Home, Office and other intranet premises
- Training centre
- Government sectors, and other organisations requiring large deployment of dedicated applications.
- Ideal for academics in developing countries to make use of computers cost effectively.
- Open Source developers can freely create their own Cluster Live CDs.
How does it work?
- A server gets booted by a Cluster Live CD.
- The clients BIOS is configured to boot through the LAN by default.
- When the server has finished the bootup sequence, the client can be booted through the LAN.
What was it tested with?
- IBM Thinkpad T30 (CPU: Pentium 4 - 1GHz; RAM: 512MB)
- Virtual Machines (Software to allow running of multiple O.S. simultaneously)
- IDE CDRW (To rewrite the ISO image on to the CD for testing)
- A hub with several LAN cables connecting the infrastructure.
- Source built with Red Hat Fedora Core 3 Linux
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Download (147.1MB)
Added: 2007-02-21 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
977 downloads
R-bet 1.0

R-bet 1.0


Free Online Roulette Guide - Become what is known in the casino industry as an advantage player. This step-by-step guide will give you the advantage... more>> <<less
Download (6264KB)
Added: 2009-04-29 License: Freeware Price: Free
228 downloads
K.R.S.S 3.0

K.R.S.S 3.0


K.R.S.S provides a news aggregator for the KDE desktop. more>>
K.R.S.S provides a news aggregator for the KDE desktop.
K.R.S.S. is a news aggregator for the KDE desktop. It downloads Rich (RDF) Site Summary files from multiple Web sites and displays them on your desktop in a ticker-tape fashion.
Main features:
- This application is perhaps the only rich site summary display to work on KDE.
- You can downloaded feeds and images locally, and display them as and when you wish.
- You can filter out unwanted news through the use MyFilters, so that you only see the news you want. A feature not found in any other news aggregator.
- You can view feeds either on-line or off-line.
- You can configure a personalized listing of the RSS Feeds, using MyFeeds. You can create and maintain both feeds which you would actively see and feeds which you could just save for future use.
- You can alter the text properties to display the news how you want by using configurable Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). You can start with the template which is provided.
- You can alter the text properties to display the news how you want, using configurable HTML tags ("schemes"). You can also preview instantly what your configuration will look like.
- You can "jump" between feeds, that is, scroll to the top of the feed that you click on, by using MyChannelBar.
- You can control whether or not the feed scrolls when displaying on your desktop, as well as the speed.
- You can define and save an unlimited number of feeds, as well as define which feeds are "active", permitting you to retrieve only the ones you want.
- You can share feeds with other individuals. Tell others of feeds you have discovered, as well as learn which feeds others are using.
- You can take advantage of the pre-loaded set of AmphetaDesks Site Listings - thousands of RSS feed locations, included with K.R.S.S. Or you can import or download the lastest site listings from their website at any time from within K.R.S.S.
- You can configure K.R.S.S. to use the System Tray when you minimize the main window.
- You can get Tips, upon starting up, which help you use K.R.S.S. to the fullest.
- You can set the frequency at which K.R.S.S. will automatically retrieve feeds - in days, hours, or minutes.
- You can temporarily pause or resume scrolling of the feeds.
- You can configure your own shortcut keys, or toolbar menu, or Search button.
- You can change the background and channel title colour, as well as change the spacing between Channels, using the scheming capabilities of MyChannelBar.
- You can DragnDrop RSS feed information using the MyChannelBar feature. Channel Titles and Descriptions are automatically filled in, so you dont have to spend any time typing.
- You can update one feed at a time by using the MyChannlBars popup menu.
- You can set K.R.S.S. to always stay on top of all other windows.
- You can toggle between having active feeds or no active feeds without having to actually specify that the feeds are active or not.
- You can still use K.R.S.S. while you update your feeds.
- You can display date and time information about when a feed was last downloaded and last displayed in the form of a tooltip, by using the Date and Time Tag in MyChannelBar.
- You can set an expiration date on the feeds so that they will expire (that is, become old) after a certain amount of time - in days, hours and minutes.
- You can configure new feeds to display in a different colour by using the Colour Code in MyChannelBar.
Enhancements:
- A fairly recent version of the KDE and QT libraries
- An internet connection
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Download (0.74MB)
Added: 2007-04-05 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
933 downloads
Clutter 0.230

Clutter 0.230


Clutter is a simple GL-based canvas library. more>>
Clutter is a simple GL-based canvas library.

SYNOPSIS

use Clutter qw( :init );

# create the main stage
my $stage = Clutter::Stage->get_default();
$stage->set_color(Clutter::Color->parse(DarkSlateGray));
$stage->signal_connect(key-press-event => sub { Clutter->main_quit() });
$stage->set_size(800, 600);

# add an actor and place it right in the middle
my $label = Clutter::Label->new("Sans 30", "Hello, Clutter!");
$label->set_color(Clutter::Color->new(0xff, 0xcc, 0xcc, 0xdd));
$label->set_position(($stage->get_width() - $label->get_width()) / 2,
($stage->get_height() - $label->get_height()) / 2);
$stage->add($label);

$stage->show_all();

Clutter->main();

0;

Clutter is a GObject based library for creating fast, visually rich graphical user interfaces. It is intended for creating single window heavily stylised applications such as media box uis, presentations or kiosk style programs in preference to regular desktop style applications.

Clutters underlying graphics rendering is OpenGL (version 1.2+) based. The clutter API is intended to be easy to use, attempting to hide many of the GL complexities. It targets mainly 2D based graphics and is definetly not intended to be a general interface for all OpenGL functionality.

As well as OpenGL Clutter depends on and uses Glib, Glib::Object, Gtk2::Pango, Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf and GStreamer.

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Download (0.034MB)
Added: 2007-05-09 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
899 downloads
Firefox LiveCD

Firefox LiveCD


Firefox LiveCD is LiveCD similar to LiveKiosk, but with original binary version of Mozilla Firefox. more>>
Firefox LiveCD is LiveCD similar to LiveKiosk, but with original binary version of Mozilla Firefox. No changes were done to user interface and everything is set to Firefox defaults.

LiveFirefox is intended for people who want to have custom Firefox based LiveCD, but find LiveKiosk unsuitable for this purpose. You can find customization instructions in usersettings/ directory on CD.

If you are here because you are looking for locked-down kiosk we recommend you take a look at LiveKiosk (kiosk with user interface) and LiveInfo (full screenkiosk without interface).
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Download (132.2MB)
Added: 2006-03-31 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1315 downloads
UpYours! 0.1.3

UpYours! 0.1.3


UpYours! provides a simple file upload cgi-bin that can be used instead of FTP. more>>
UpYours! provides a simple file upload cgi-bin that can be used instead of FTP.

Sometimes, you just need to upload a file and you dont have your crypto bits handy.In this day and age, people should always use scp (or pscp.exe) to copy files around, but users are users, and even clueful people sometimes find themselves in a position where its not easy, convenient or even possible to use anything but a stupid web interface (a kiosk on a conference floor for example).

UpYours! is a simple solution to this problem.The idea is to provide a way for file uploads to occur that:

(a) doesnt leak information about the server to the (potentially malicious) client;
(b) does not present anything useful to people who want to use the server as a drop-point for files;
(c) does not open the server up to DoS attacks;
(d) is simple to use, and can be deployed over http and https;
(e) does not force the client to reveal any secret information

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Download (0.015MB)
Added: 2007-04-05 License: Freely Distributable Price:
936 downloads
Gecode/R 0.7.1

Gecode/R 0.7.1


Gecode/R is a Ruby interface to Gecode, allowing constraint programming in Ruby. more>>
Gecode/R is a Ruby interface to Gecode, allowing constraint programming in Ruby. The interface is intended for people with no previous experience of constraint programming, aiming to be easy to pick up and use in practice.
Constraint programming
Constraint programming is a declarative programming paradigm, you describe what kind of solution you want rather than how you want it computed. When using constraint programming you try to model the problem and then feed that model to the solver. The solver then searches for a solution by exploring the space of all possible assignments while using the constraints in the model to prune parts without having to visit them.
A popular example would be Soduko, to solve a Soduko with constraint programming you feed the rules (all numbers in each row must be distinct etc) to the solver, which then searches for a solution satisfying all the constraints.
Enhancements:
- A new Website has been launched, and a lot of documentation has been added (both code and user documentation).
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Download (0.088MB)
Added: 2007-08-12 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
804 downloads
L.A.U.R.A 0.0.1

L.A.U.R.A 0.0.1


L.A.U.R.A project provides a secure and performant e-mail proxy. more>>
L.A.U.R.A project provides a secure and performant e-mail proxy designed with the goal of shutting down the "Unsolicited Commercial/Bulk E-mail Era".
What is "Greenmarking"?
Greenmarking is something I think I invented myself (I might be wrong though, I coulndt find it anywhere else). Greenmarking works like this: if a triplet of (sender_ip, sender, recipient) is first seen, it gets marked green. The message will be sent unmarked with the meaning of "never seen it before". Next time the triplet is met, the message will also be marked green, meaning "I know this guy already".
Yes I know this sounds like greylisting (its a variation of it, hence the name). However, greenmarking is (and should be) done after greylisting. Why? Greylisting mostly means that the passing message is almost certalny originating from a valid (E)SMTP mail server daemon. Worms usually dont retry too much. So greenmarking is effective especially against evil mail selvers. Its implemented in the project. Just add an Inbox filter to your (web)mail client and move all the messages with a "neverseen" header in a special suspect folder. If you dont want to hassle with them, activate the Inbox filter only after youve run the greenmarking daemon for a while (1/2 weeks maybe?).
Main features:
- ESMTP capability for interoperating with Postfix
- Lightening fast B+ infrastructure for internal database
- No false positives
- No "lost" e-mail messages
- No miss-rate
- BSD license (the most liberal and FREE, in honour to the FreeBSD team)
- Its written in plain old C
- It was designed to be as fast as applicable
- It is (going to be) very secure (multiple audits, formal verifications, programming care)
- No package dependencies - no extra libraries or tools needed
- Hassle-free for admins - just install it
- Hassle-free for users - it just works, without user intervention
- Hassle-free and polite with other Internet neighbours - no rude messages, nothing
- Secure inter-server cooperation for MX backups - without any hassle or complexity (needs to be done)
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Download (0.046MB)
Added: 2006-04-20 License: BSD License Price:
1282 downloads
SAP R/3 Communications Suite 0.9 Beta1

SAP R/3 Communications Suite 0.9 Beta1


SAP R/3 Communications Suite allows SAP R/3 servers to communicate with external devices such as fax and GSM modems. more>>
SAP R/3 Communications Suite allows SAP R/3 servers to communicate with external devices such as fax and GSM modems by sending and receiving a fax or SMS.

SAP R/3 Communications Suite provides an easy configuration through a Web interface and a JMX console.
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Download (28.6MB)
Added: 2006-07-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
702 downloads
X-ITEC CMS/R 4.48

X-ITEC CMS/R 4.48


X-ITEC CMS/R is a German content management system. more>>
X-ITEC CMS/R project is a German content management system.
Enhancements:
- More than 200 new features.
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Download (79.5MB)
Added: 2007-02-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
987 downloads
oxine 0.6.5

oxine 0.6.5


oxine is a purely OSD-based xine frontend. more>>
oxine project is a lightweight gui for the famous xine engine which uses the on screen display functionality of xine to display its user interface elements like buttons, lists sliders and so on.
Due to this, oxine can easily be ported to any video output device the xine library provides (e.g. frame buffer, dxr3,...) and is particularly suitable for appliances like set-top boxes, home entertainment systems or kiosk systems.
Main features:
- x11, dxr3 and framebuffer output
- mouse, keyboard and lirc support
- autoplay dvd, vcd, svcd, cdrom and audio cd
- browse and select from your own mediamarks
- browsing through file system, m3u playlists and audio cd tracks
- goom support
- playlists
- automatic stream title blending
Quite straight forward. Make sure that you have installed the latest version of xine-lib. At least beta9 is required. Then download and unpack oxine source tarball, change to the directory created and type.
./configure --prefix=/some/path
make
make install
If you checked oxine out of CVS make sure that you have recent versions of autoconf and automake installed. (Tested with: automake 1.7.2 and autoconf 2.57.) Then type
./autogen.sh --prefix=/some/path
make
make install
To set up autoplay functionality make sure of the following things:
- cdrom or dvd drive is mountable by the user oxine runs with
- cdrom or dvd device and mountpoint are set correctly. Default is device: /dev/dvd mountpoint: /dvd. To change this, run oxine one time and click on shutdown. Oxine will then create its default config file in your home (~/.oxine/config). While oxine is not running, edit this file with an editor.
If you use lirc, make sure that you dont have irxevent daemon running. Otherwise oxine may get all lirc events twice which is really frustrating. There is a default lircrc installed in $PREFIX/share/oxine. You can customize this file in place or - much better - copy it to ~/.oxine where it will not be overwritten if oxine is reinstalled. If you upgrade oxine, read the ChangeLog - the lirc file config options may change from time to time.
Start oxine with
oxine [options] [mrls...]
options are:
-h print command line help
-v print oxines version
-f start in fullscreen mode
-V driver let xine use specified video driver e.g.: auto, xv, xshm, dxr3, ...
-A driver let xine use specified audio driver e.g.: auto, oss, alsa, ...
Enhancements:
- Added check for version of libjsw to catch JSClose bug.
- Added check for necessary files to detect bad installation.
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Download (0.28MB)
Added: 2007-03-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
949 downloads
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