rammstein du hast
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Secleted [ 0 ] software to compare
Results 1 - 15 of about 26
KDirStat 2.5.2
KDirStat is a graphical disk usage utility, very much like the Unix more>>
KDirStat is a graphical disk usage utility, very much like the Unix "du" command.
KDirStat project displays a directory tree both in classical tree format (like Konqueror, but with accumulated tree sizes, shown as MB / GB and as percentage bars) and in "treemap" format like SequoiaView.
In addition to that, KDirStat provides cleanup facilities to reclaim disk space - both predefined and customizable.
Main features:
Display Features
- Graphical and numeric display of used disk space
- Files kept apart from directories in separate items to prevent cluttering the display
- All numbers displayed human readable - e.g., 34.4 MB instead of 36116381 Bytes
- Different colors in the directory tree display to keep the different tree levels visually apart
- Display of latest change time within an entire directory tree - you can easily see what object was changed last and when.
Treemap Display
- Treemap as alternate (auxiliary) view of a directory tree
- Easily find large in a directory tree: You see the entire tree at once. Large rectangles are large files - you can see them even if they are hidden somewhere deep within the tree.
- Treemap view slaved to the tree (list) view: Click on a file in the treemap, and it is selected in the tree view - and vice versa.
- Treemap tiles are colored by file type - all images in cyan, all audio tracks (MP3 etc.) in yellow, executables in magenta etc.; you can see from the color what a treemap rectangle is.
- Many treemap variants available:
- Plain treemap
- Squarified treemap (no thin elongated rectangles)
- Cushion treemap
- Colored treemap
- All combinations of the above
- Fast implementation: Treemap built in fractions of a second (on quite ordinary machines: Athlon-550 class)
- Treemap subwindow can be resized as the user prefers
- Treemap can be switched off with a single keypress (F9)
- Context menu with cleanup actions etc.
- Zoom the treemap in/out treemap with double click (left/right)
- Many treemap configuration options
Directory Reading
- Stays on one file system by default - reads mounted file systems only on request.
- You dont care about a mounted /usr file system if the root file system is full and you need to find out why in a hurry, nor do you want to scan everybodys home directory on the NFS server when your local disk is full.
- Network transparency: Scan FTP or Samba directories - or whatever else protocols KDE support.
- PacMan animation while directories are being read. OK, this is not exactly essential, but its fun.
Cleaning up
- Predefined cleanup actions: Easily delete a file or a directory tree, move it to the KDE trash bin, compress it to a .tar.bz2 archive or simply open a shell or a Konqueror window there.
- User-defined cleanup actions: Add your own cleanup commands or edit the existing ones.
- "Send mail to owner" report facility: Send a mail requesting the owner of a large directory tree to please clean up unused files.
Misc
- Feedback mail facility: Rate the program and tell the authors your opinion about it.
Whats New in 2.4.4 Release:
- Sparse files and hard links are now properly supported.
Whats New in 2.5.2 Release:
- Can now read and write directory contents from cache files generated by (supplied) Perl script, e.g. in cron job over night
<<lessKDirStat project displays a directory tree both in classical tree format (like Konqueror, but with accumulated tree sizes, shown as MB / GB and as percentage bars) and in "treemap" format like SequoiaView.
In addition to that, KDirStat provides cleanup facilities to reclaim disk space - both predefined and customizable.
Main features:
Display Features
- Graphical and numeric display of used disk space
- Files kept apart from directories in separate items to prevent cluttering the display
- All numbers displayed human readable - e.g., 34.4 MB instead of 36116381 Bytes
- Different colors in the directory tree display to keep the different tree levels visually apart
- Display of latest change time within an entire directory tree - you can easily see what object was changed last and when.
Treemap Display
- Treemap as alternate (auxiliary) view of a directory tree
- Easily find large in a directory tree: You see the entire tree at once. Large rectangles are large files - you can see them even if they are hidden somewhere deep within the tree.
- Treemap view slaved to the tree (list) view: Click on a file in the treemap, and it is selected in the tree view - and vice versa.
- Treemap tiles are colored by file type - all images in cyan, all audio tracks (MP3 etc.) in yellow, executables in magenta etc.; you can see from the color what a treemap rectangle is.
- Many treemap variants available:
- Plain treemap
- Squarified treemap (no thin elongated rectangles)
- Cushion treemap
- Colored treemap
- All combinations of the above
- Fast implementation: Treemap built in fractions of a second (on quite ordinary machines: Athlon-550 class)
- Treemap subwindow can be resized as the user prefers
- Treemap can be switched off with a single keypress (F9)
- Context menu with cleanup actions etc.
- Zoom the treemap in/out treemap with double click (left/right)
- Many treemap configuration options
Directory Reading
- Stays on one file system by default - reads mounted file systems only on request.
- You dont care about a mounted /usr file system if the root file system is full and you need to find out why in a hurry, nor do you want to scan everybodys home directory on the NFS server when your local disk is full.
- Network transparency: Scan FTP or Samba directories - or whatever else protocols KDE support.
- PacMan animation while directories are being read. OK, this is not exactly essential, but its fun.
Cleaning up
- Predefined cleanup actions: Easily delete a file or a directory tree, move it to the KDE trash bin, compress it to a .tar.bz2 archive or simply open a shell or a Konqueror window there.
- User-defined cleanup actions: Add your own cleanup commands or edit the existing ones.
- "Send mail to owner" report facility: Send a mail requesting the owner of a large directory tree to please clean up unused files.
Misc
- Feedback mail facility: Rate the program and tell the authors your opinion about it.
Whats New in 2.4.4 Release:
- Sparse files and hard links are now properly supported.
Whats New in 2.5.2 Release:
- Can now read and write directory contents from cache files generated by (supplied) Perl script, e.g. in cron job over night
Download (0.30MB)
Added: 2006-01-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1392 downloads
INDI 0.5
INDI is an instrument-neutral distributed interface control protocol. more>>
INDI is an instrument-neutral distributed interface control protocol. INDI aims to provide backend driver support and automation for a wide range of astronomical devices (telescopes, focusers, CCDs, etc.).
Current supported devices include many telescopes, CCDs, filter wheels, focusers, and video cams. INDI is used in popular astronomy suites like Xephem, KStars, DCD, and Cartes Du Ciel.
Enhancements:
- This release adds two new devices, improves INDI server performance, and introduces inter-driver communication among drivers.
- It has many bugfixes.
<<lessCurrent supported devices include many telescopes, CCDs, filter wheels, focusers, and video cams. INDI is used in popular astronomy suites like Xephem, KStars, DCD, and Cartes Du Ciel.
Enhancements:
- This release adds two new devices, improves INDI server performance, and introduces inter-driver communication among drivers.
- It has many bugfixes.
Download (3.3MB)
Added: 2007-04-16 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
922 downloads

ScoreBoard for Linux 0.2 Beta
ScoreBoard is a tiny program to keep scores in a quiz. more>> ScoreBoard is a tiny program to keep scores in a quiz. It allows users to customize the appearance of each group.<<less
Download (647KB)
Added: 2009-04-25 License: Freeware Price: Free
181 downloads
GDU 0.3
GDU is equivalent to the du command-line tool. more>>
GDU is equivalent to the du command-line tool. The project displays a graphical tree showing the disk space used by each file/folder.
<<less Download (0.20MB)
Added: 2007-06-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
851 downloads
Qalculate! 0.9.6
Qalculate! is a multi-purpose desktop calculator for GNU/Linux. more>>
Qalculate! is a multi-purpose desktop calculator for GNU/Linux. Qalculate! project is small and simple to use but with much power and versatility underneath.
Features include customizable functions, units, arbitrary precision, plotting, and a user-friendly interface (KDE or GTK+).
Main features:
- Redesigned GUI with history view in the main window
- Display of as-you-type expression parsing and function hints
- Enhanced completion
- Scaling of result display to vertically fit the window
- Nicer history listing
- Enhanced result display with much nicer parentheses
- Meta modes
- 67 new units: bel (B) and neper (Np), information units such as bit and byte, many convenience units (km/h, deciliter, etc), and more.
- Binary prefixes
- Some new variables and functions
- Fixed help display in new yelp
- Fixed compile with cln-1.1.10
- Fixed regressions in simplification
- Fixed f(x) return type analysis (ex. log(x) represents a real number if x represents a positive). This was by accident unused.
- ...and many more bug fixes and enhancements...
Enhancements:
- Use Lambert W to solve more equations and avoid infinite loop when solving some equations
- More data on elements
- Fix simplification of (1-1/x)^3 and similar
- Fix clumsy mistakes in with prefixes leading to crashes
- Fix parsing of unit expressions (when converting) such as W/(m K)
- Add more exact values for sin() and cos() and avoid floating point underflow by, in approximate mode, checking against the value of pi
- Always input decimal separator sign on keypad separator press
- New units: typographic units, pouce, pied du roi, grams of TNT and tons of TNT
- New functions: lambertW(), addDays(), addMonths(), addYear(), addTime(), isNumber(), isReal(), isRational(), isInteger(), representsNumber(), representsReal(), representsRational(), representsInteger()
- New variable: omega constant
- Other minor fixes and enhancements
<<lessFeatures include customizable functions, units, arbitrary precision, plotting, and a user-friendly interface (KDE or GTK+).
Main features:
- Redesigned GUI with history view in the main window
- Display of as-you-type expression parsing and function hints
- Enhanced completion
- Scaling of result display to vertically fit the window
- Nicer history listing
- Enhanced result display with much nicer parentheses
- Meta modes
- 67 new units: bel (B) and neper (Np), information units such as bit and byte, many convenience units (km/h, deciliter, etc), and more.
- Binary prefixes
- Some new variables and functions
- Fixed help display in new yelp
- Fixed compile with cln-1.1.10
- Fixed regressions in simplification
- Fixed f(x) return type analysis (ex. log(x) represents a real number if x represents a positive). This was by accident unused.
- ...and many more bug fixes and enhancements...
Enhancements:
- Use Lambert W to solve more equations and avoid infinite loop when solving some equations
- More data on elements
- Fix simplification of (1-1/x)^3 and similar
- Fix clumsy mistakes in with prefixes leading to crashes
- Fix parsing of unit expressions (when converting) such as W/(m K)
- Add more exact values for sin() and cos() and avoid floating point underflow by, in approximate mode, checking against the value of pi
- Always input decimal separator sign on keypad separator press
- New units: typographic units, pouce, pied du roi, grams of TNT and tons of TNT
- New functions: lambertW(), addDays(), addMonths(), addYear(), addTime(), isNumber(), isReal(), isRational(), isInteger(), representsNumber(), representsReal(), representsRational(), representsInteger()
- New variable: omega constant
- Other minor fixes and enhancements
Download (1.3MB)
Added: 2007-06-17 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
860 downloads
gt5 1.3d
gt5 is a text-mode utility that makes it easier to determine what is using your disk space. more>>
gt5 is a text-mode utility that makes it easier to determine what is using your disk space. gt5 runs du and generates HTML, which is then shown using links.
The data is clearly arranged and intuitive to browse.
Main features:
- gt5 shows the diskspace used by files and directories within a given directory,
- intelligent cutting of small files/directories to keep the results readable,
- you can easily browse through the subdirectories, using the cursor-keys,
- optionally gt5 gives links to the files, so you can also browse them,
- show entries with their size and the percentage of their parent,
- the results can be saved to a file, for later use
Enhancements:
- just some minor fixes in the manpage
<<lessThe data is clearly arranged and intuitive to browse.
Main features:
- gt5 shows the diskspace used by files and directories within a given directory,
- intelligent cutting of small files/directories to keep the results readable,
- you can easily browse through the subdirectories, using the cursor-keys,
- optionally gt5 gives links to the files, so you can also browse them,
- show entries with their size and the percentage of their parent,
- the results can be saved to a file, for later use
Enhancements:
- just some minor fixes in the manpage
Download (0.016MB)
Added: 2007-02-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
975 downloads
Number::Bytes::Human 0.07
Number::Bytes::Human is a Perl module that can convert byte count to human readable format. more>>
Number::Bytes::Human is a Perl module that can convert byte count to human readable format.
SYNOPSIS
use Number::Bytes::Human qw(format_bytes);
$size = format_bytes(0); # 0
$size = format_bytes(2*1024); # 2.0K
$size = format_bytes(1_234_890, bs => 1000); # 1.3M
$size = format_bytes(1E9, bs => 1000); # 1.0G
# the OO way
$human = Number::Bytes::Human->new(bs => 1000, si => 1);
$size = $human->format(1E7); # 10MB
$human->set_options(zero => -);
$size = $human->format(0); # -
THIS IS ALPHA SOFTWARE: THE DOCUMENTATION AND THE CODE WILL SUFFER CHANGES SOME DAY (THANKS, GOD!).
This module provides a formatter which turns byte counts to usual readable format, like 2.0K, 3.1G, 100B. It was inspired in the -h option of Unix utilities like du, df and ls for "human-readable" output.
From the FreeBSD man page of df: http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=df
"Human-readable" output. Use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte,
Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the
number of digits to four or fewer using base 2 for sizes.
byte B
kilobyte K = 2**10 B = 1024 B
megabyte M = 2**20 B = 1024 * 1024 B
gigabyte G = 2**30 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
terabyte T = 2**40 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
petabyte P = 2**50 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
exabyte E = 2**60 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
zettabyte Z = 2**70 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
yottabyte Y = 2**80 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
I have found this link to be quite useful:
http://www.t1shopper.com/tools/calculate/
If you feel like a hard-drive manufacturer, you can start counting bytes by powers of 1000 (instead of the generous 1024). Just use bs => 1000.
But if you are a floppy disk manufacturer and want to start counting in units of 1024000 (for your "1.44 MB" disks)? Then use bs => 1_024_000.
If you feel like a purist academic, you can force the use of metric prefixes according to the Dec 1998 standard by the IEC. Never mind the units for base 1000 are (B, kB, MB, GB, TB, PB, EB, ZB, YB) and, even worse, the ones for base 1024 are (B, KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB, PiB, EiB, ZiB, YiB) with the horrible names: bytes, kibibytes, mebibytes, etc. All you have to do is to use si => 1. Aint that beautiful the SI system? Read about it:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
You can try a pure Perl "ls -lh"-inspired command with the one-liner, er, two-liner:
$ perl -MNumber::Bytes::Human=format_bytes
-e printf "%5s %sn", format_bytes(-s), $_ for @ARGV *
Why to write such a module? Because if people can write such things in C, it can be written much easier in Perl and then reused, refactored, abused. And then, when it is much improved, some brave soul can port it back to C (if only for the warm feeling of painful programming).
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Number::Bytes::Human qw(format_bytes);
$size = format_bytes(0); # 0
$size = format_bytes(2*1024); # 2.0K
$size = format_bytes(1_234_890, bs => 1000); # 1.3M
$size = format_bytes(1E9, bs => 1000); # 1.0G
# the OO way
$human = Number::Bytes::Human->new(bs => 1000, si => 1);
$size = $human->format(1E7); # 10MB
$human->set_options(zero => -);
$size = $human->format(0); # -
THIS IS ALPHA SOFTWARE: THE DOCUMENTATION AND THE CODE WILL SUFFER CHANGES SOME DAY (THANKS, GOD!).
This module provides a formatter which turns byte counts to usual readable format, like 2.0K, 3.1G, 100B. It was inspired in the -h option of Unix utilities like du, df and ls for "human-readable" output.
From the FreeBSD man page of df: http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=df
"Human-readable" output. Use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte,
Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the
number of digits to four or fewer using base 2 for sizes.
byte B
kilobyte K = 2**10 B = 1024 B
megabyte M = 2**20 B = 1024 * 1024 B
gigabyte G = 2**30 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
terabyte T = 2**40 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
petabyte P = 2**50 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
exabyte E = 2**60 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
zettabyte Z = 2**70 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
yottabyte Y = 2**80 B = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024 B
I have found this link to be quite useful:
http://www.t1shopper.com/tools/calculate/
If you feel like a hard-drive manufacturer, you can start counting bytes by powers of 1000 (instead of the generous 1024). Just use bs => 1000.
But if you are a floppy disk manufacturer and want to start counting in units of 1024000 (for your "1.44 MB" disks)? Then use bs => 1_024_000.
If you feel like a purist academic, you can force the use of metric prefixes according to the Dec 1998 standard by the IEC. Never mind the units for base 1000 are (B, kB, MB, GB, TB, PB, EB, ZB, YB) and, even worse, the ones for base 1024 are (B, KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB, PiB, EiB, ZiB, YiB) with the horrible names: bytes, kibibytes, mebibytes, etc. All you have to do is to use si => 1. Aint that beautiful the SI system? Read about it:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
You can try a pure Perl "ls -lh"-inspired command with the one-liner, er, two-liner:
$ perl -MNumber::Bytes::Human=format_bytes
-e printf "%5s %sn", format_bytes(-s), $_ for @ARGV *
Why to write such a module? Because if people can write such things in C, it can be written much easier in Perl and then reused, refactored, abused. And then, when it is much improved, some brave soul can port it back to C (if only for the warm feeling of painful programming).
Download (0.009MB)
Added: 2007-07-03 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
844 downloads
ScoreBoard 0.2 Beta
ScoreBoard is a tiny program to keep scores in a quiz. more>>
ScoreBoard is a tiny program to keep scores in a quiz. It allows users to customize the appearance of each group.
ScoreBoard project may comes handy if you are organizing a quiz.
This is my first QT project. I am still trying to get to the subtle details of QT. There maybe bugs in this program. Please contact me if you found any.
Icons used in this application are taken from Crystal Clear icon set and Emotion Icons.
<<lessScoreBoard project may comes handy if you are organizing a quiz.
This is my first QT project. I am still trying to get to the subtle details of QT. There maybe bugs in this program. Please contact me if you found any.
Icons used in this application are taken from Crystal Clear icon set and Emotion Icons.
Download (0.64MB)
Added: 2006-07-29 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
2153 downloads
PAUD 2.0.3
PAUD is a Linux utility bootdisk. more>>
PAUD (Parted And Utilities Disk) is a Linux utility boot disk distribution. It fits on a single 1.44 floppy disk. It contains mc, parted, and other utilities such as filesystem utilities for ext2, ext3, and Reiserfs. It is great for partition maintenance and for rescue purposes.
The latest version of PAUD (1.0.4) has glibc-2.2.5, kernel 2.4.20, support for up to 4 virtual consoles. Kernel has DMA support (click here for more info on DMA) , SCSI support is not available out-of-the-box but it can be easily implemented.
The kernel has filesystem support for FAT/VFAT, EXT2, EXT3, ReiserFS 3.5, and ReiserFS 3.6 filesystems. Parted supports creating, resizing, copying, and destroying of these filesystem types (please read notes for reiserfs and ext3).
This is a list of all the commands, some of these commands are internal commands of busybox:
busybox commands:
[, ash, basename, busybox, cat, chgrp, chmod, chown, chroot, chvt, clear, cp, cut, date, dd, df, dirname, dmesg, du, echo, env, false, find, free, grep, gunzip, gzip, halt, head, id, init, kill, killall, klogd, linuxrc, ln, logger, ls, lsmod, mkdir, mknod, mkswap, modprobe, more, mount, mv, pidof, poweroff, ps, pwd, reboot, reset, rm, rmdir, sed, sh, sleep, sort, swapoff, swapon, sync, syslogd, tail, tar, test, touch, true, tty, umount, uname, uniq, uptime, wc, which, whoami, xargs, yes, zcat
Other commands:
e2fsck, hdparm, mc, mkreiserfs-3.5, parted, reiserfsck, tune2fs
Notes:
SCSI: SCSI support is not enabled in the kernel, if you wish to use scsi devices with PAUD, you can make a custom kernel and put it on the disk with the rootdisk. The docs section on the PAUD project page will show you how.
ntfs: Many people have asked about NTFS support, specifically the ntfsresize program. I cant fit this on the floppy, but an optional expansion floppy solution will be available shortly.
ReiserFS: mkreiserfs-3.5 can only make reiserfs filesystems version 3.5, if you want to make reiserfs version 3.6, use parted. All other reiserfs functions in parted, including resize, work for both versions. Run reiserfsck --fix-fixable after modifying any paritions from parted, to fix any potential problems.
Ext3: parted cannot create ext3 filesystems, although there is a simple way to do it in PAUD. First create an ext2 partition from parted, then create a journal to convert it to ext3 with tune2fs -j.
hdparm/DMA: DMA isnt enabled by default, hdparm fixes this problem by allowing you to enable DMA using the -d1 option. Using the hdparm disk speed test, i saw an increase in speed from 4.6 mb/sec (default) to 25.2 mb/sec (dma enabled).
mc: mc is a great way of transferring files between filesystems (for Windows/DOS users) or for editing files if you need to. It can also be useful if you ever need to use PAUD for rescue purposes.
mounting: If you get an error when mounting that a filesystem cannot be found on the device, a different filesystem may have been found. Type mount to see if it was actually mounted or not.
Enhancements:
- The kernel was updated to 2.4.20 to support hard drives that are greater than 137GB.
<<lessThe latest version of PAUD (1.0.4) has glibc-2.2.5, kernel 2.4.20, support for up to 4 virtual consoles. Kernel has DMA support (click here for more info on DMA) , SCSI support is not available out-of-the-box but it can be easily implemented.
The kernel has filesystem support for FAT/VFAT, EXT2, EXT3, ReiserFS 3.5, and ReiserFS 3.6 filesystems. Parted supports creating, resizing, copying, and destroying of these filesystem types (please read notes for reiserfs and ext3).
This is a list of all the commands, some of these commands are internal commands of busybox:
busybox commands:
[, ash, basename, busybox, cat, chgrp, chmod, chown, chroot, chvt, clear, cp, cut, date, dd, df, dirname, dmesg, du, echo, env, false, find, free, grep, gunzip, gzip, halt, head, id, init, kill, killall, klogd, linuxrc, ln, logger, ls, lsmod, mkdir, mknod, mkswap, modprobe, more, mount, mv, pidof, poweroff, ps, pwd, reboot, reset, rm, rmdir, sed, sh, sleep, sort, swapoff, swapon, sync, syslogd, tail, tar, test, touch, true, tty, umount, uname, uniq, uptime, wc, which, whoami, xargs, yes, zcat
Other commands:
e2fsck, hdparm, mc, mkreiserfs-3.5, parted, reiserfsck, tune2fs
Notes:
SCSI: SCSI support is not enabled in the kernel, if you wish to use scsi devices with PAUD, you can make a custom kernel and put it on the disk with the rootdisk. The docs section on the PAUD project page will show you how.
ntfs: Many people have asked about NTFS support, specifically the ntfsresize program. I cant fit this on the floppy, but an optional expansion floppy solution will be available shortly.
ReiserFS: mkreiserfs-3.5 can only make reiserfs filesystems version 3.5, if you want to make reiserfs version 3.6, use parted. All other reiserfs functions in parted, including resize, work for both versions. Run reiserfsck --fix-fixable after modifying any paritions from parted, to fix any potential problems.
Ext3: parted cannot create ext3 filesystems, although there is a simple way to do it in PAUD. First create an ext2 partition from parted, then create a journal to convert it to ext3 with tune2fs -j.
hdparm/DMA: DMA isnt enabled by default, hdparm fixes this problem by allowing you to enable DMA using the -d1 option. Using the hdparm disk speed test, i saw an increase in speed from 4.6 mb/sec (default) to 25.2 mb/sec (dma enabled).
mc: mc is a great way of transferring files between filesystems (for Windows/DOS users) or for editing files if you need to. It can also be useful if you ever need to use PAUD for rescue purposes.
mounting: If you get an error when mounting that a filesystem cannot be found on the device, a different filesystem may have been found. Type mount to see if it was actually mounted or not.
Enhancements:
- The kernel was updated to 2.4.20 to support hard drives that are greater than 137GB.
Download (1.4MB)
Added: 2005-12-25 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1407 downloads
color wrapper 1.0.14
color wrapper is a non-intrusive real-time ANSI color wrapper for Unix-based programs. more>>
color wrapper is a non-intrusive real-time ANSI color wrapper for common unix-based commands on GNU/linux. cw is designed to simulate the environment of the commands being executed, so that if a person types du, df, ping, etc. in their shell it will automatically color the output in real-time according to a definition file containing the color format desired.
color wrapper has support for wildcard match coloring, tokenized coloring, headers/footers, case scenario coloring, command line dependent definition coloring, and includes over 50 pre-made definition files.
cw works by having an augmented PATH environmental variable which has a path to the cw definition directory prepended to it, this is usually set as "export ATH=/usr/local/lib/cw:$PATH" (in bash). in this cw definition directory you will see file(s) under the very same name of the program they are designed to color. these files appear as the common executable binaries you may be used to using, but they are just text files that contain instructions for cw to use, including the path to the "real" binary.
Enhancements:
- Fixed bug that could crash cw, introduced in the previous version.
<<lesscolor wrapper has support for wildcard match coloring, tokenized coloring, headers/footers, case scenario coloring, command line dependent definition coloring, and includes over 50 pre-made definition files.
cw works by having an augmented PATH environmental variable which has a path to the cw definition directory prepended to it, this is usually set as "export ATH=/usr/local/lib/cw:$PATH" (in bash). in this cw definition directory you will see file(s) under the very same name of the program they are designed to color. these files appear as the common executable binaries you may be used to using, but they are just text files that contain instructions for cw to use, including the path to the "real" binary.
Enhancements:
- Fixed bug that could crash cw, introduced in the previous version.
Download (0.80MB)
Added: 2005-09-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1488 downloads
TreeDiskUsage 0.0-18
TreeDiskUsage (TDU) is a Web based disk usage analyse tool. more>>
TreeDiskUsage (TDU) is a Web based disk usage analyse tool.
It is divided into two parts, the scanner and the viewer.
The scanner is a derived work from gnu du (coreutils) and builds a database file with its output.
The viewer is a php script and can be view it with any AJAX-able browser.
Main features:
- Scan at one PC, view somewhere else
- Scan many, view at one place
<<lessIt is divided into two parts, the scanner and the viewer.
The scanner is a derived work from gnu du (coreutils) and builds a database file with its output.
The viewer is a php script and can be view it with any AJAX-able browser.
Main features:
- Scan at one PC, view somewhere else
- Scan many, view at one place
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2007-03-20 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
949 downloads
dpkg-du 0.1
dpkg-du is a quick little script to produce a dump of the installed size of Debian packages in du format. more>>
dpkg-du is a quick little script to produce a dump of the installed size of Debian packages in du format. For example, dpkg-du|sort -n|tail -10 will show the 10 biggest packages on your system.
Usage:
Theres no flags. Just dump it in /usr/local/bin or such a place, and run dpkg-du. Enjoy. It should work on any Debian box with awk installed, or any Debian derivative, such as Ubuntu.
<<lessUsage:
Theres no flags. Just dump it in /usr/local/bin or such a place, and run dpkg-du. Enjoy. It should work on any Debian box with awk installed, or any Debian derivative, such as Ubuntu.
Download (0.002MB)
Added: 2007-04-23 License: BSD License Price:
922 downloads
NCurses Disk Usage 1.3
NCurses Disk Usage provides a fast and easy interface to your harddrive. more>>
As the name already suggests, ncdu is an NCurses version of the famous old du unix command.
NCurses Disk Usage provides a fast and easy interface to your harddrive. Where is your disk space going? Why is your home directory that large? ncdu can answer those questions for you in just a matter of seconds!
<<lessNCurses Disk Usage provides a fast and easy interface to your harddrive. Where is your disk space going? Why is your home directory that large? ncdu can answer those questions for you in just a matter of seconds!
Download (0.089MB)
Added: 2007-08-06 License: MIT/X Consortium License Price:
813 downloads
Acme::Time::Baby 2.106
Acme::Time::Baby - tell time little children can understand. more>>
Acme::Time::Baby - tell time little children can understand.
SYNOPSIS
use Acme::Time::Baby;
print babytime; # Prints current time.
use Acme::Time::Baby language => du;
print babytime "10:15"; # Prints a quarter past ten in a way
# little Dutch children can understand.
Using this module gives you the function babytime, which will return the time in the form The big hand is on the ten and the little hand is on the three. If no argument to babytime is given, the current time is used, otherwise a time of the form hh:mm can be passed. Both 12 and 24 hour clocks are supported.
When using the module, various options can be given. The following options can be passed:
language LANG
The language the time should be told in. The following languages are currently supported:
en English (this is the default)
br Brazilian Portuguese.
ceb Cebuano (Filipine dialect)
de German.
de_ch Swiss German.
du Dutch.
es Spanish.
fr French.
it Italian.
no Norwegian.
se Swedish.
swedish chef Swedish Chef (from the Muppets).
warez l44+.
If no language argument is given, English is used.
Note that some languages use accented letters. The returned sentences are correct for an ISO 8859-1 platform.
format STRING
This is the format used to represent the time. It will be passed to sprintf, and it should have two %s formatting codes. The other two arguments to sprintf are the position of the minute hand (the big hand) and the hour hand (the little hand). If you have perl 5.8 or above, you could use %2$s and %1$s to reverse the order.
number ARRAYREF
An array with the names of the numbers one to twelve, to be used in the formatted time.
noimport EXPR
By default, the sub babytime will be exported to the calling package. If for some reason the calling package does not want to import the sub, there are two ways to prevent this. Either use use Acme::Time::Baby (), which will prevent Acme::Time::Baby::import to be called, or pass noimport followed by a true value as arguments to the use statement.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Acme::Time::Baby;
print babytime; # Prints current time.
use Acme::Time::Baby language => du;
print babytime "10:15"; # Prints a quarter past ten in a way
# little Dutch children can understand.
Using this module gives you the function babytime, which will return the time in the form The big hand is on the ten and the little hand is on the three. If no argument to babytime is given, the current time is used, otherwise a time of the form hh:mm can be passed. Both 12 and 24 hour clocks are supported.
When using the module, various options can be given. The following options can be passed:
language LANG
The language the time should be told in. The following languages are currently supported:
en English (this is the default)
br Brazilian Portuguese.
ceb Cebuano (Filipine dialect)
de German.
de_ch Swiss German.
du Dutch.
es Spanish.
fr French.
it Italian.
no Norwegian.
se Swedish.
swedish chef Swedish Chef (from the Muppets).
warez l44+.
If no language argument is given, English is used.
Note that some languages use accented letters. The returned sentences are correct for an ISO 8859-1 platform.
format STRING
This is the format used to represent the time. It will be passed to sprintf, and it should have two %s formatting codes. The other two arguments to sprintf are the position of the minute hand (the big hand) and the hour hand (the little hand). If you have perl 5.8 or above, you could use %2$s and %1$s to reverse the order.
number ARRAYREF
An array with the names of the numbers one to twelve, to be used in the formatted time.
noimport EXPR
By default, the sub babytime will be exported to the calling package. If for some reason the calling package does not want to import the sub, there are two ways to prevent this. Either use use Acme::Time::Baby (), which will prevent Acme::Time::Baby::import to be called, or pass noimport followed by a true value as arguments to the use statement.
Download (0.008MB)
Added: 2007-02-14 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
982 downloads
KTrafficAnalyzer 0.3.8-1
KTrafficAnalyzer is meant to provide visual feedback of your current network traffic, similar to tools like DU-Meter. more>>
KTrafficAnalyzer is meant to provide visual feedback of your current network traffic, similar to tools like DU-Meter. In addition it provides statistics with total down- and upload sums.
Of course feedback is more than welcome. There is still more than enough room for improvements. Also checkout the TODO file what Im already planning - maybe you have ideas what I can add or what ight be useful too!
Enhancements:
- Re-Designed some more settings dialogs to look better and make more space for fonts.
- Added Double-buffering
- Changed the interface-icon in the settings dialog to use the "hwinfo" icon
- Adjusted the Makefile to automatically build on Ubuntu systems
<<lessOf course feedback is more than welcome. There is still more than enough room for improvements. Also checkout the TODO file what Im already planning - maybe you have ideas what I can add or what ight be useful too!
Enhancements:
- Re-Designed some more settings dialogs to look better and make more space for fonts.
- Added Double-buffering
- Changed the interface-icon in the settings dialog to use the "hwinfo" icon
- Adjusted the Makefile to automatically build on Ubuntu systems
Download (0.032MB)
Added: 2007-06-25 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
861 downloads
Secleted [ 0 ] software to compare
- Page: 1 of 2
- 1
- 2
Copyright Notice:
Software piracy is theft, Using crack, password, serial numbers, registration codes, key generators is illegal and prevent future software development. The above rammstein du hast search only lists software in full, demo and trial versions for free download. Download links are directly from our mirror sites or publisher sites, torrent files or links from rapidshare.com, yousendit.com or megaupload.com are not allowed