twinkle 1.1
Twinkle 1.1
Twinkle is a soft phone for your voice over IP communcations using the SIP protocol. more>> <<less
TinyMCE 2.1.1.1
TinyMCE is a platform-independent, Web-based, Javascript HTML WYSIWYG editor. more>>
It has the ability to convert HTML TEXTAREA fields or other HTML elements to editor instances. TinyMCE is so easy to integrate with your existing system.
Main features:
- Easy to integrate, takes only two lines of code.
- Theme and template support.
- Plugin support.
- Easy to extend with custom code.
- Customizable HTML/XHTML 1.0 output. Block invalid elements and force attributes.
- International language support (Language packs) currenly English, Swedish, Italian, German, Czech, Hungarian, Dutch, Finnish, Danish and Arabic and much more.
- Multiple browser support, currently Mozilla, MSIE and FireFox.
Enhancements:
- Fixed bug where dot notaion for some callback options didnt work.
- Fixed bug where valid_child_elements option didnt work.
- Fixed bug where form trigger wasnt executed when keyboard was used to submit form.
TkDgen 1.1.1
TkDgen project is a Tcl/Tk GUI front-end to the DGen emulator. more>>
TkDgen is a Tcl/Tk GUI front-end for DGen, an emulator of the Genesis video game console. It displays a list of available ROMs, and it can display a game screenshot when a ROM is selected in the list.
It also helps you manage tips, graphic files, and hex codes for individual ROMs.
Peinture 1.1.1
Peinture is a small arcade network game. more>>
This game is based on a 3D display system which is portable, simple, and efficient.
The network protocol allows real time playing over a LAN or the Internet
Main features:
- Rectangular game area, n player in real time, each one a color.
- A player can paint squares with his color in order to dominate the ground.
- A player must avoid squares from other players colors.
- Several available game mode and objectives.
- simpe 3D display based on X11 (maximum compatibility)
- solo or network real time game
- coded in C++ with a minimum number of librairies
Enhancements:
- Added: background selection, new maps, many debugs (cut/paste, fonts, ..)
SATAN 1.1.1
SATAN is a Port Scanner with a Web Interface. more>>
In order get things up and running,
- You need a UNIX system to run SATAN. In order to unpack the SATAN archive,
compress -d<<less
iTest 1.1.1
iTest project is a simple programme which allows you to take advantage of the best of computerized examination. more>>
iTest consists of two programmes:
- The Database Editor - question/answer database and exam server
- The Test Writer - the programme installed on each client computer
iTest makes it easy to:
- Create and organise a database of questions and answers
- Set up a server and a printer
- Connect a client computer for each student, which generates a test according to your server settings
Supported platforms:
- Linux/Unix
- Apple Mac OS X
- Microsoft Windows
Available in:
- English
- Russian
- Slovak
- Turkish
Enhancements:
Database Editor & Test Writer
- added Turkish translation
- if available, translation to the system language loaded by default
- NEW ENCODING: UTF-8 adds support for more languages and special characters
- iTest 1.1.1 can still open old CP 1250 databases from older versions of iTest
- older versions of iTest cannot open the new UTF-8 databases from iTest 1.1.1
- upgraded from Qt 4.2.2 to Qt 4.3.0
Database Editor
- printing: support for the & sign
tipxd 1.1.1
tipxd is an IPX tunneling daemon which snoops on a local network for IPX 802.3 traffic. more>>
By default, tipxd looks for the configuration file /etc/tipxd.conf, unless this is overidden with the -f option. This file is a very simple record format. Each record has a texttt{BEGIN} and texttt{END} statement, and tags which can occur between them to assign values for that record.
TARIFA 1.1.1
TARIFA aims to provide the atomic keyword to C/C++ for better support of concurrency programming. more>>
Instead of using lock-based designs with all their problems (deadlocks, difficult design, lack of reusability), the "atomic" keyword provides transparent access to an underlying Software Transactional Memory which is responsible for all synchronization work.
Enhancements:
- This release contains a fixed and somewhat faster STM backend, several bugfixes in the instrumentation, improved tests, a general code clean-up, and a dummy STM backend for testing purposes.
WMALMS 1.1.1
wmalms monitors data obtained from a sensor chip: temperature, fan speed, and voltage. more>>
It can be used as a dockable/swallowed applet with Window Maker, BlackBox and clones (incl. FluxBox), or any window manager that supports swallowing, including gnome, kde(kpanel)-1, fvwm and clones.
Alternatively, you can run wmalms as a normal window with any window manager
wmalms is designed to suit any hardware supported by lm_sensors.
It provides a wide range of customized features, including window appearance, order and representation of sensor data, refresh frequency, alarm mode, etc.
I started developing wmalms, after I tried several other sensor monitors, and neither worked for me.
MovieSlave 1.1.1
MovieSlave is a very simple cross-platform (Windows, Linux) movie manager. more>>
MovieSlave project can automatically fetch movie details (tagline, runtime, rate, year, plot, director) from the IMDb.
From its clean user interface you can easily add, edit, delete and search for any title without being lost in useless options.
Snowlog 1.1.1
Snowlog is a webserver access log browser/analyzer. more>>
Installation:
make
make install (as root)
KpovModeler 1.1.1
KPovModeler is a modeling and composition program for creating POV-Ray scenes in KDE. more>>
For most of the modelers, POV-Ray is nothing but a rendering engine and they bring a lot of limitations to the innate possibilities of POV-Ray scripted language. This is not the case for KPovModeler which allows you to use all the features of POV-Ray through the translation of POV-Ray language into a graphical tree.
Almost all options of POV-Rays script language can be used within KPovModeler. "Almost" because variables, loop instructions, macros and some operators cant directly be, unfortunately.
On the other hand, KPovModeler allows you to include a part of a script with the "Raw POV-Ray" tool; such a raw code will only be taken into account by POV-Ray during the rendering stage.
Main features:
- Management of the scene through a graphical tree.
- Object modification with control points in a graphical view or direct manipulation of object attributes in a dialog
- Nonblocking scene rendering with OpenGL as wire frame views
- Freely configurable view layout with dock widgets
- Copy/paste and drag/drop of (a subset of) povray(!) code into and out of the object tree
- Undo and redo
- Scene rendering and texture preview with povray inside the program
- Support for almost all povray objects
- Support for all textures
- Prototypes (declarations) and references
- All projection modes of the camera
For modeling an object, it is not required to know POV-Rays script language. On the other hand, for creating textures refering to POV-Rays documentation will be difficult to avoid.
But to ease the work, it is possible to simply cut-and-paste a script from POV-Ray into KPovModeler. KPovModeler will then, if the script only makes use of known primitives, convert the pasted text and include it into the current scene.
In other words, if you dont know how to create an object or an effect with KPovModeler, you could always copy its example from POV-Rays documentation and experiment with it within KPovModeler.

DataWorkshop 1.1.1
DataWorkshop is an editor to view and modify binary data. more>>
DataWorkshop 1.1.1 with its functionality will help you a lot. It is actually an editor to view and modify binary data. The editor provides different views which can be used to edit, analyze and export the binary data.
A simple hex view can be used to simulate a standard hexeditor but more complex dynamic views are possible to comfortable edit binary structure like executables or captured network traffic. DataWorkshop editor provides powerful search and diff functionality and user defined transformations.
Views can be filtered using the XPath query language (e.g. selecting several IP packets in a network traffic capture file). Also, views can be exported as in various formats for further processing. This can be used to convert old binary formats into modern xml tagged data.
Keep in mind the limitations:
- Too slow when editing large files (> 100MB) or using complex views
- Maximal data size 2 147 483 647 bytes (~ 2 GB)
Major features:
- Mulitplatform (Windows, Linux, MacOS)
- User defined view definitions which are compiled into complex data views
- Data view can can be exported as xml
- Data view can be queried using XPath syntax to generate a new data view (e.g. selecting several IP packages according to their flags)
- Configurable data encodings used to edit and view data (e.g Hex, Decimal, IEEE 754 Reals, USAscii, EBCDIC, TimeInMillis etc.)
- Configurable data transformation (e.g. Rot13 Encoder / Decoder)
- Diff tool with bit granularity
- Find and replace with bit granularity
- Data clipboard for cut, copy and paste
- Undo/Redo
- XML based storage for persistent data
- Data conversion between different formats (e.g little endian big endian, hexdump binary data)
- Read and write from sockets
Enhancements: 12 July 2004
- Open Source release
Requirements:
- Java 1.4
- 1.0 Ghz Processor with 256MB Ram
CTShaper 1.1.1
CTShaper is a shell-script that helps setting up a traffic shaper. more>>
Have you ever noticed how your SSH/gaming sessions become sluggish when you start downloading something, or how your downloads slow down when you start uploading?
Have you ever been annoyed by other peoples downloads forcing you to wait ages while an email is being sent? Or making your web navigation painfully slow?
Well, if your outgoing link is managed by a Linux router/gateway, then you could benefit from using CTShaper.
CTShaper reduces link latency by preventing packet queues from getting too long on your side (your ADSL or Cable modem) and on your ISPs side (their routers). Long packet queues is what makes your uploads interfere with your downloads, and your downloads interfere with your SSH or gaming sessions.
Additionally, CTShaper sets up four traffic queues with different priorities and configurable flow rates (to have minimum bandwidth guarantees for each class). By default, only traffic with ToS (Type of Service) information gets prioritized (which could be enough, if lots of software had support for it, which they dont), but you can use your firewall (iptables, or an iptables frontend like FireHOL) to "mark" traffic.
The traffic shaper will then prioritize (outgoing) traffic based on those "marks". You can, for instance, give priority to SMTP and HTTP traffic. This will only affect outgoing HTTP and SMTP traffic, but thats enough to make your emails go out faster, and your web navigation more responsive.