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Postal 0.67
Postal is a SMTP and POP benchmark suite. more>>
Postal suite currently consists of two programs, Postal and Rabid. Postal (the mad postman) is a program that will deliver mail as fast as possible via the SMTP protocol to test mail server performance.
Rabid (the mad Biff) will eat mail via the POP protocol as fast as possible and measure POP server performance. All messages sent via Postal have MD5 checksums appended, and Rabid will check the MD5 to ensure that the messages are not being corrupted.
It works by taking a list of user names and applying random transformations to them to get the FROM and TO addresses, this is because if each email address takes 30 bytes of storage then 1,000,000 accounts would take 30M of RAM. 3,000,000 accounts would take 90M of RAM which would be more than the memory in my test machine (this would cause thrashing and make the benchmark invalid), and it would take ages to load all that data from the hard drive. Using 100,000 accounts and applying a transformation to map them to 30M accounts is a much more efficient use of resources.
When sending the mail the subject and body will be random data. A header field X-Postal will be used so that procmail can easily filter out such email just in case you accidentally put your own email address as one of the test addresses. ;)
For Debian the best thing to do is to do "apt-get install postal", if you dont want to use the version supplied with your version of Debian you can build a Debian package in the usual manner.
Change to the directory containing the unpacked source and use the command:
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -tc -us
That will create a .deb in the parent directory.
For Red Hat etc there is a portslave.spec file to allow for building with
the "rpm -b" command.
For Solaris use the command "make -C sun" to build a package in /var/spool/pkg
(make sure you have write access to that directory).
For other Unix setup "./configure ; make install" should do an install.
Enhancements:
- The license was changed to GPLv3.
<<lessRabid (the mad Biff) will eat mail via the POP protocol as fast as possible and measure POP server performance. All messages sent via Postal have MD5 checksums appended, and Rabid will check the MD5 to ensure that the messages are not being corrupted.
It works by taking a list of user names and applying random transformations to them to get the FROM and TO addresses, this is because if each email address takes 30 bytes of storage then 1,000,000 accounts would take 30M of RAM. 3,000,000 accounts would take 90M of RAM which would be more than the memory in my test machine (this would cause thrashing and make the benchmark invalid), and it would take ages to load all that data from the hard drive. Using 100,000 accounts and applying a transformation to map them to 30M accounts is a much more efficient use of resources.
When sending the mail the subject and body will be random data. A header field X-Postal will be used so that procmail can easily filter out such email just in case you accidentally put your own email address as one of the test addresses. ;)
For Debian the best thing to do is to do "apt-get install postal", if you dont want to use the version supplied with your version of Debian you can build a Debian package in the usual manner.
Change to the directory containing the unpacked source and use the command:
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -tc -us
That will create a .deb in the parent directory.
For Red Hat etc there is a portslave.spec file to allow for building with
the "rpm -b" command.
For Solaris use the command "make -C sun" to build a package in /var/spool/pkg
(make sure you have write access to that directory).
For other Unix setup "./configure ; make install" should do an install.
Enhancements:
- The license was changed to GPLv3.
Download (0.083MB)
Added: 2007-07-02 License: GPL v3 Price:
1223 downloads
Score Rated 0.3
Score Rated is a rated scoring script that uses the rating as a factor in the scoring process. more>>
Score Rated is a rated scoring script which uses the rating as a factor in the scoring process. Higher ratings leds to higher score. The rating is factored in each play.
I make no promises but the script hasnt messed up my system yet.
Usage:
You must use ratings for this script to have any point. Run the script, and it will be used to calculate scores for your tracks from then on. The script can be tweek by editing the file.
Known flaws:
Script reads rating when the song starts playing. Changes made after that is not considered. To make sure a new rating is used you could stop and restart the script or pause and play the song.
I will be looking in this for a future version. Suggestions are welcome.
<<lessI make no promises but the script hasnt messed up my system yet.
Usage:
You must use ratings for this script to have any point. Run the script, and it will be used to calculate scores for your tracks from then on. The script can be tweek by editing the file.
Known flaws:
Script reads rating when the song starts playing. Changes made after that is not considered. To make sure a new rating is used you could stop and restart the script or pause and play the song.
I will be looking in this for a future version. Suggestions are welcome.
Download (0.030MB)
Added: 2007-03-05 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
966 downloads
IP Tables State 2.2.0
IP Tables State implements the state top feature from IP Filter for IP Tables. more>>
Having worked with IP Filter on Solaris for a few years now, when I work on IP Tables in Linux I come to miss State Top. So I decided to write a version for IP Tables. IPTState is a state top along with a "single run" mode to quickly display states once. IP Tables State has customizable sorting (including reverse), customizable refresh rates, etc. etc. See the README, the man page and the -h option for details.
IPTState is now in the Debian, Redhat, Fedora Core, Mandrake, Gentoo, FloppyFW, and Devil Linux distributions as well as the pkgsrc project.
<<lessIPTState is now in the Debian, Redhat, Fedora Core, Mandrake, Gentoo, FloppyFW, and Devil Linux distributions as well as the pkgsrc project.
Download (0.027MB)
Added: 2007-03-19 License: zlib/libpng License Price:
949 downloads
BPF Rate Estimator 1.0
BPF Rate Estimator estimates the traffic rate made by a BPF Expression. more>>
BPF Rate Estimator estimates the traffic rate made by a BPF Expression.
Installation:
./configure [options]
make
make install
Usage: bpfrate [-i interface] bpf_expr
Calculate trafic rate made by an "bpf expression"
-i interface - interface to listen on (default eth0)
bpf_expr - bpf expression to apply - see tcpdump and pcap (default none)
-h - display this help
<<lessInstallation:
./configure [options]
make
make install
Usage: bpfrate [-i interface] bpf_expr
Calculate trafic rate made by an "bpf expression"
-i interface - interface to listen on (default eth0)
bpf_expr - bpf expression to apply - see tcpdump and pcap (default none)
-h - display this help
Download (0.078MB)
Added: 2006-12-18 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1045 downloads
Payroll Perl Modules 1.3
Business::Payroll is a series of Perl Modules that provides an API for working with multiple countries federal, state taxes. more>>
Business::Payroll is a series of Perl Modules that provides an API for working with multiple countries federal, state and local taxes.
Payroll Perl Modules project also supports calculating mileage reimbursement values and can handle adjustment entries.
The Business::Payroll module starts with an xml document in the Input format and if everything is successfull, outputs the results in the Output XML format.
Currently only the US is supported and MO is the only supported state. We are not supporting any cities in MO yet. Federal Income, FICA, Medicare and Mileage Rates are all being calculated. We take into account the number of allowances people can claim and the fact that you can withhold more for federal and state.
Federal Income tables are only available for any date >= 07/01/2001.
See the payroll_test.pl script and input.xml file for a sample implementation.
Use process_payroll (in the /usr/bin directory after an rpm install, otherwise in the payroll-x.y directory) to actually process payroll files for real.
process_payroll will take the specified raw xml file and process it. If no errors occured, then you get the result on stdout. If you specify 2 file names the result will go into the second file. You can specify - (for the first file) and it will know to work with stdin. I.e. you can pipe the file to be processed. Ex. cat input.xml | process_payroll - would process input.xml from the stdin and then output the result to stdout.
Enhancements:
- This release has been updated to cover the 2006 tax changes.
<<lessPayroll Perl Modules project also supports calculating mileage reimbursement values and can handle adjustment entries.
The Business::Payroll module starts with an xml document in the Input format and if everything is successfull, outputs the results in the Output XML format.
Currently only the US is supported and MO is the only supported state. We are not supporting any cities in MO yet. Federal Income, FICA, Medicare and Mileage Rates are all being calculated. We take into account the number of allowances people can claim and the fact that you can withhold more for federal and state.
Federal Income tables are only available for any date >= 07/01/2001.
See the payroll_test.pl script and input.xml file for a sample implementation.
Use process_payroll (in the /usr/bin directory after an rpm install, otherwise in the payroll-x.y directory) to actually process payroll files for real.
process_payroll will take the specified raw xml file and process it. If no errors occured, then you get the result on stdout. If you specify 2 file names the result will go into the second file. You can specify - (for the first file) and it will know to work with stdin. I.e. you can pipe the file to be processed. Ex. cat input.xml | process_payroll - would process input.xml from the stdin and then output the result to stdout.
Enhancements:
- This release has been updated to cover the 2006 tax changes.
Download (0.058MB)
Added: 2006-01-05 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1390 downloads
KPlaylistCreator 0.8
KPlaylistCreator is a jukebox for KDE. more>>
KPlaylistCreator is a jukebox for KDE.
Main features:
- Multi playlists edition, KDE "IDEAL" interface
- Scan for mp3 and Ogg Vorbis files, located in various directories
- Creates a unique tree view : Genre / Artist / Album / Song title
- User rates mechanism
- User playlists manager
- Wizzard playlist creator
- Edit tags for both mp3 (ID3 V2) and ogg vorbis files
- Check directories for new and missing files automatically
- Send playlists to a directory, to XMMS or to K3B (cd burner )
- Built in player
- Displays and set the album art of mp3 files
- Create playlists from a virtual library
- Popup windows to indicate a new played song to the user
Enhancements:
- The library TagLib is needed to compile the KPlaylistCreator source archive.
<<lessMain features:
- Multi playlists edition, KDE "IDEAL" interface
- Scan for mp3 and Ogg Vorbis files, located in various directories
- Creates a unique tree view : Genre / Artist / Album / Song title
- User rates mechanism
- User playlists manager
- Wizzard playlist creator
- Edit tags for both mp3 (ID3 V2) and ogg vorbis files
- Check directories for new and missing files automatically
- Send playlists to a directory, to XMMS or to K3B (cd burner )
- Built in player
- Displays and set the album art of mp3 files
- Create playlists from a virtual library
- Popup windows to indicate a new played song to the user
Enhancements:
- The library TagLib is needed to compile the KPlaylistCreator source archive.
Download (0.92MB)
Added: 2005-08-18 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1527 downloads
HTML Tidy
HTML Tidy cleans up HTML source and formats it nicely. more>>
HTML TIDY is a free utility to fix mistakes made while editing HTML and to automatically tidy up sloppy editing into nicely layed out markup. It also works great on the atrociously hard to read markup generated by specialized HTML editors and conversion tools, and can help you identify where you need to pay further attention on making your pages more accessible to people with disabilities.
When editing HTML its easy to make mistakes. Wouldnt it be nice if there was a simple way to fix these mistakes automatically and tidy up sloppy editing into nicely layed out markup? Well now there is! Dave Raggetts HTML TIDY is a free utility for doing just that. It also works great on the atrociously hard to read markup generated by specialized HTML editors and conversion tools, and can help you identify where you need to pay further attention on making your pages more accessible to people with disabilities.
Tidy is able to fix up a wide range of problems and to bring to your attention things that you need to work on yourself. Each item found is listed with the line number and column so that you can see where the problem lies in your markup. Tidy wont generate a cleaned up version when there are problems that it cant be sure of how to handle. These are logged as "errors" rather than "warnings".
Dave Raggett has now passed the baton for maintaining Tidy to a group of volunteers working together as part of the open source community at Source Forge. The source code continues to be available under an open source license, and you are encouraged to pass on bug reports and enhancement requests at http://tidy.sourceforge.net.
If you find HTML Tidy useful and you would like to say thanks, then please send me a (paper) postcard or other souvenir from the area in which you live along with a few words on what you are using Tidy for. It will be fun to map out where Tidy users are to be found! My postal address is given at the end of this file.
The W3C public email list devoted to HTML Tidy is: . To subscribe send an email to html-tidy-request@w3.org with the word subscribe in the subject line (include the word unsubscribe if you want to unsubscribe). The archive for this list is accessible online. If you would like to contact the developers, or you just want to submit an enhancement request or a bug report, please visit http://tidy.sourceforge.net.
Tidy can now perform wonders on HTML saved from Microsoft Word 2000! Word bulks out HTML files with stuff for round-tripping presentation between HTML and Word. If you are more concerned about using HTML on the Web, check out Tidys "Word-2000" config option! Of course Tidy does a good job on Word97 files as well!
Main features:
- Missing or mismatched end tags are detected and corrected
- End tags in the wrong order are corrected
- Fixes problems with heading emphasis
- Recovers from mixed up tags
- Getting the
in the right place
- Adding the missing "/" in end tags for anchors
- Perfecting lists by putting in tags missed out
- Missing quotes around attribute values are added
- Unknown/Proprietary attributes are reported
- Proprietary elements are recognized and reported as such
- Tags lacking a terminating > are spotted
<<lessWhen editing HTML its easy to make mistakes. Wouldnt it be nice if there was a simple way to fix these mistakes automatically and tidy up sloppy editing into nicely layed out markup? Well now there is! Dave Raggetts HTML TIDY is a free utility for doing just that. It also works great on the atrociously hard to read markup generated by specialized HTML editors and conversion tools, and can help you identify where you need to pay further attention on making your pages more accessible to people with disabilities.
Tidy is able to fix up a wide range of problems and to bring to your attention things that you need to work on yourself. Each item found is listed with the line number and column so that you can see where the problem lies in your markup. Tidy wont generate a cleaned up version when there are problems that it cant be sure of how to handle. These are logged as "errors" rather than "warnings".
Dave Raggett has now passed the baton for maintaining Tidy to a group of volunteers working together as part of the open source community at Source Forge. The source code continues to be available under an open source license, and you are encouraged to pass on bug reports and enhancement requests at http://tidy.sourceforge.net.
If you find HTML Tidy useful and you would like to say thanks, then please send me a (paper) postcard or other souvenir from the area in which you live along with a few words on what you are using Tidy for. It will be fun to map out where Tidy users are to be found! My postal address is given at the end of this file.
The W3C public email list devoted to HTML Tidy is: . To subscribe send an email to html-tidy-request@w3.org with the word subscribe in the subject line (include the word unsubscribe if you want to unsubscribe). The archive for this list is accessible online. If you would like to contact the developers, or you just want to submit an enhancement request or a bug report, please visit http://tidy.sourceforge.net.
Tidy can now perform wonders on HTML saved from Microsoft Word 2000! Word bulks out HTML files with stuff for round-tripping presentation between HTML and Word. If you are more concerned about using HTML on the Web, check out Tidys "Word-2000" config option! Of course Tidy does a good job on Word97 files as well!
Main features:
- Missing or mismatched end tags are detected and corrected
- End tags in the wrong order are corrected
- Fixes problems with heading emphasis
- Recovers from mixed up tags
- Getting the
in the right place
- Adding the missing "/" in end tags for anchors
- Perfecting lists by putting in tags missed out
- Missing quotes around attribute values are added
- Unknown/Proprietary attributes are reported
- Proprietary elements are recognized and reported as such
- Tags lacking a terminating > are spotted
Download (0.22MB)
Added: 2005-05-05 License: MIT/X Consortium License Price:
2216 downloads
Postal 2: Share the Pain DEMO 1407
Postal 2: Share the Pain DEMO is a FPS game for Linux. more>> <<less
Download (167.3MB)
Added: 2006-03-17 License: Freeware Price:
1015 downloads
Destiney Rated Images Script 0.5.1
Destiney Rated Images Script provides an image rating script. more>>
Destiney Rated Images Script provides an image rating script.
Destiney Rated Images script is continuation of the free phpRated script. Rated Images is a Web application written in PHP for use with MySQL.
Rated Images allows visitors to your site to list their pictures and have them rated by other members who may visit.
Rated Images allows visitors to send other members private messages, as well as leave comments.
Members may rate other members on a scale of 1-10. Members may also participate in the mix/match section.
Viewing and reviewing members can be accomplished a number of ways, and many options are available to encourage member interaction.
Main features:
- Automated image rating system.
- Mix/Match system for pairing user images together
- Admin can e-mail users using html or plain text emails. Emails include member unsubscribe link.
- Built-in database maintenance and optimization for ratings.
- Document caching for performance gains.
- Web Forums, members-only or anonymous.
- Weblogs, members-only
- Weblog Comments, members-only or anonymous.
- Image Comments, members-only or anonymous.
- Full user search page.
- Admin interface with static IP security lockdown.
- Capable of creating member and site statistics graphs using JPGraph software (not included, but free for download http://www.aditus.nu/jpgraph/jpdownload.php)
- Image watermarking for site title and image rating (requires GD support in your PHP).
- Database based image storage with dynamic image resizing.
<<lessDestiney Rated Images script is continuation of the free phpRated script. Rated Images is a Web application written in PHP for use with MySQL.
Rated Images allows visitors to your site to list their pictures and have them rated by other members who may visit.
Rated Images allows visitors to send other members private messages, as well as leave comments.
Members may rate other members on a scale of 1-10. Members may also participate in the mix/match section.
Viewing and reviewing members can be accomplished a number of ways, and many options are available to encourage member interaction.
Main features:
- Automated image rating system.
- Mix/Match system for pairing user images together
- Admin can e-mail users using html or plain text emails. Emails include member unsubscribe link.
- Built-in database maintenance and optimization for ratings.
- Document caching for performance gains.
- Web Forums, members-only or anonymous.
- Weblogs, members-only
- Weblog Comments, members-only or anonymous.
- Image Comments, members-only or anonymous.
- Full user search page.
- Admin interface with static IP security lockdown.
- Capable of creating member and site statistics graphs using JPGraph software (not included, but free for download http://www.aditus.nu/jpgraph/jpdownload.php)
- Image watermarking for site title and image rating (requires GD support in your PHP).
- Database based image storage with dynamic image resizing.
Download (0.20MB)
Added: 2007-02-06 License: BSD License Price:
990 downloads
Sort::Radix 0.04
Sort::Radix is a Perl module with multiple passes distribution sort algorithm. more>>
Sort::Radix is a Perl module with multiple passes distribution sort algorithm.
SYNOPSIS
use Sort::Radix;
@array = qw(flow loop pool Wolf root sort tour);
radix_sort(@array);
print "@arrayn";
This is an implementation based on Jarkkos Wolf book (Mastering Algorithms with Perl, pp. 145-147).
By definition: radix sort is a multiple pass distribution sort algorithm that distributes each item to a bucket according to part of the items key beginning with the least significant part of the key. After each pass, items are collected from the buckets, keeping the items in order, then redistribute according to the next most significant part of the key.
Radix sort is nice as it take N * M passes, where N is the length of the keys. It is very useful for sorting large volumes of keys of the same length, such as postal codes.
The algorithm will only works when the strings to be sorted are of the same length. Variable length strings therefore have to be padded with zeroes (x00) to equalize the length.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Sort::Radix;
@array = qw(flow loop pool Wolf root sort tour);
radix_sort(@array);
print "@arrayn";
This is an implementation based on Jarkkos Wolf book (Mastering Algorithms with Perl, pp. 145-147).
By definition: radix sort is a multiple pass distribution sort algorithm that distributes each item to a bucket according to part of the items key beginning with the least significant part of the key. After each pass, items are collected from the buckets, keeping the items in order, then redistribute according to the next most significant part of the key.
Radix sort is nice as it take N * M passes, where N is the length of the keys. It is very useful for sorting large volumes of keys of the same length, such as postal codes.
The algorithm will only works when the strings to be sorted are of the same length. Variable length strings therefore have to be padded with zeroes (x00) to equalize the length.
Download (0.003MB)
Added: 2007-05-22 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
885 downloads
Khalkhi framework 0.2.2
Khalkhi framework was formerly known as Contacts framework. more>>
Khalkhi framework was formerly known as Contacts framework.
Khalkhi (say [?al?i]) is a plugin-based framework for (the properties of) entries in the KDE Addressbook and services upon them. It consists of two libs, libkhalkhicore and libkhalkhigui, and a control center module.
The framework models an addressbook entry, like a person or organization, as a list of property types, with no, one or more items of a type for each entry. There are three types of services for a property (e.g. email address):
- action service (e.g. send email)
- data action service (e.g. send file per email, like from dragndrop)
- status service (e.g. number of unread emails in assigned folder)
The tarball includes a lot of services for the most common properties:
- birthday: copy date; has birthday
- im address: chat with; send message; send file; online status
- email address: send email; copy address; send files/urls;
open assigned folders in KMail; unread emails in assigned KMail folder
- homepage: open; copy url;
- blog feed url: copy
- phone number: make call; send fax; send SMS; copy number;
- postal address: open in Google Maps; copy address
- note: copy note
Examples for programs using the framework are a cards server and a Kicker applet, which are available as seperate packages:
http://www.kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=54451
http://www.kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=54452
Please see also http://frinring.wordpress.com/2006/07/05/framework-for-contacts-and-services-slowly-getting-shapes/
Developers, you are welcome to try to create own services! Have a look at the folder "services/example"
If you want to build directly from KDEs repository:
svn co svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/trunk/playground/pim/ -N
cd pim
svn up khalkhi
svn up khalkhiapplet
svn up khalkhicards
svn co svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/KDE/3.5/kde-common/admin
make -f Makefile.cvs
./configure
make
su -c "make install"
Enhancements:
- rename to Khalkhi
- adding namespace Khalkhi
- streamlining API terms and file names
- add ABI flag to plugins
- add eventsrc for status changes
<<lessKhalkhi (say [?al?i]) is a plugin-based framework for (the properties of) entries in the KDE Addressbook and services upon them. It consists of two libs, libkhalkhicore and libkhalkhigui, and a control center module.
The framework models an addressbook entry, like a person or organization, as a list of property types, with no, one or more items of a type for each entry. There are three types of services for a property (e.g. email address):
- action service (e.g. send email)
- data action service (e.g. send file per email, like from dragndrop)
- status service (e.g. number of unread emails in assigned folder)
The tarball includes a lot of services for the most common properties:
- birthday: copy date; has birthday
- im address: chat with; send message; send file; online status
- email address: send email; copy address; send files/urls;
open assigned folders in KMail; unread emails in assigned KMail folder
- homepage: open; copy url;
- blog feed url: copy
- phone number: make call; send fax; send SMS; copy number;
- postal address: open in Google Maps; copy address
- note: copy note
Examples for programs using the framework are a cards server and a Kicker applet, which are available as seperate packages:
http://www.kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=54451
http://www.kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=54452
Please see also http://frinring.wordpress.com/2006/07/05/framework-for-contacts-and-services-slowly-getting-shapes/
Developers, you are welcome to try to create own services! Have a look at the folder "services/example"
If you want to build directly from KDEs repository:
svn co svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/trunk/playground/pim/ -N
cd pim
svn up khalkhi
svn up khalkhiapplet
svn up khalkhicards
svn co svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/KDE/3.5/kde-common/admin
make -f Makefile.cvs
./configure
make
su -c "make install"
Enhancements:
- rename to Khalkhi
- adding namespace Khalkhi
- streamlining API terms and file names
- add ABI flag to plugins
- add eventsrc for status changes
Download (0.57MB)
Added: 2007-05-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
879 downloads
Statistical Traffic Analysis Kit 1.0b2
Statistical Traffic Analysis Kit is a set of command-line traffic analysis tools. more>>
Statistical Traffic Analysis Kit is a set of command-line traffic analysis tools, designed to help a network administrator to see what is happening at a router at the moment.
Unlike tcpdump (1), the stak set uses statistical and stream-oriented methods, and will rarely produce an output stream at a speed beyond human perception. The output is less accurate.
The kit consists of five different utilities, designed to perform the following tasks:
estimating overall traffic rates (stakrate),
determining network nodes generating the highest traffic (stakhosts)
monitoring the amount of traffic exchanged with particular autonomous
systems (stakasta),
extracting strings from packets (stakextract),
determining connections and flows generating the highest traffic
(stakstreams, experimental),
<<lessUnlike tcpdump (1), the stak set uses statistical and stream-oriented methods, and will rarely produce an output stream at a speed beyond human perception. The output is less accurate.
The kit consists of five different utilities, designed to perform the following tasks:
estimating overall traffic rates (stakrate),
determining network nodes generating the highest traffic (stakhosts)
monitoring the amount of traffic exchanged with particular autonomous
systems (stakasta),
extracting strings from packets (stakextract),
determining connections and flows generating the highest traffic
(stakstreams, experimental),
Download (0.068MB)
Added: 2006-06-29 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1219 downloads
rate it! 0.7
rate it! script helps you rate your music easily. more>>
rate it! script helps you rate your music easily, it works like that: each time track changes, the script checks whether the last track has been rated before, if not, it pops up a menu with ratings for you to pick from and then sets the rating for the last track accordingly.
Note that the ratings wont appear instantly on the amarok playlist entries , as the script updates the database directly and the existing playlist entries use cached information, so they dont get updated.
<<lessNote that the ratings wont appear instantly on the amarok playlist entries , as the script updates the database directly and the existing playlist entries use cached information, so they dont get updated.
Download (0.003MB)
Added: 2007-05-08 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
900 downloads
libsamplerate 0.1.2
libsamplerate is a Sample Rate Converter for audio. more>>
Secret Rabbit Code (aka libsamplerate) is a Sample Rate Converter for audio. One example of where such a thing would be useful is converting audio from the CD sample rate of 44.1kHz to the 48kHz sample rate used by DAT players.
SRC is capable of arbitrary and time varying conversions ; from downsampling by a factor of 256 to upsampling by the same factor. Arbitrary in this case means that the ratio of input and output sample rates can be an irrational number. The conversion ratio can also vary with time for speeding up and slowing down effects.
SRC provides a small set of converters to allow quality to be traded off against computation cost. The current best converter provides a signal-to-noise ratio of 97dB with -3dB passband extending from DC to 96% of the theoretical best bandwidth for a given pair of input and output sample rates.
Since the library has few dependencies beyond that provided by the standard C library, it should compile and work on just about any operating system. It is know to work on Linux, MacOSX, Win32 and Solaris. With some relatively minor hacking it should also be relatively easy to port it to embedded systems and digital signal processors.
In addition, the library comes with a comprehensive test suite which can validate the performance of the library on new platforms.
Enhancements:
- configure.ac Win32/Makefile.mingw.in
- Add preliminary support for compiling on Win32 using MinGW.
- configure.ac
- Bump version to 0.1.2.
- Add --enable-gcc-werror configure option.
- examples/sndfile-resample.c tests/src-evaluate.c
- Use ISO C standard function remove instead of unlink.
- Win32/Makefile.msvc
- Add the top level directory to the include path (for sndfile.h).
<<lessSRC is capable of arbitrary and time varying conversions ; from downsampling by a factor of 256 to upsampling by the same factor. Arbitrary in this case means that the ratio of input and output sample rates can be an irrational number. The conversion ratio can also vary with time for speeding up and slowing down effects.
SRC provides a small set of converters to allow quality to be traded off against computation cost. The current best converter provides a signal-to-noise ratio of 97dB with -3dB passband extending from DC to 96% of the theoretical best bandwidth for a given pair of input and output sample rates.
Since the library has few dependencies beyond that provided by the standard C library, it should compile and work on just about any operating system. It is know to work on Linux, MacOSX, Win32 and Solaris. With some relatively minor hacking it should also be relatively easy to port it to embedded systems and digital signal processors.
In addition, the library comes with a comprehensive test suite which can validate the performance of the library on new platforms.
Enhancements:
- configure.ac Win32/Makefile.mingw.in
- Add preliminary support for compiling on Win32 using MinGW.
- configure.ac
- Bump version to 0.1.2.
- Add --enable-gcc-werror configure option.
- examples/sndfile-resample.c tests/src-evaluate.c
- Use ISO C standard function remove instead of unlink.
- Win32/Makefile.msvc
- Add the top level directory to the include path (for sndfile.h).
Download (0.69MB)
Added: 2005-07-07 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1577 downloads
WebService::GoogleHack::Rate 0.15
WebService::GoogleHack::Rate is a Perl module that implements a simple relatedness measure and semantic orientation. more>>
WebService::GoogleHack::Rate is a Perl module that implements a simple relatedness measure and semantic orientation related type functions.
SYNOPSIS
use WebService::GoogleHack::Rate;
#GIVE PATH TO INPUT FILE HERE
my $INPUTFILE="";
#GIVE PATH TO TRACE FILE HERE
my $TRACEFILE="";
#create an object of type Rate
my $rate = WebService::GoogleHack::Rate->new();
$results=$rate->measureSemanticRelatedness1("dog", "cat");
#The PMI measure is stored in the variable $results, and it can also
#be accessed as $rate->{PMI};
$results=$rate->predictSemanticOrientation($INPUTFILE, "excellent", "bad",$TRACEFILE);
#The resutls can be accessed through
print $results->{prediction}."n";
$results->{PMI Measure}."n";
$rate->{prediction} &."n";
$rate->{PMI Measure}."n";
WebService::GoogleHack::Rate - This package uses Google to do some basic natural language processing. For example, given two words, say "knife" and "cut", the module has the ability to retrieve a semantic relatedness measure, commonly known as the PMI (Pointwise mututal information) measure. The larger the measure the more related the words are. The package can also predict the semantic orientation of a given paragraph of english text. A positive measure means that the paragraph has a positive meaning, and negative measure means the opposite.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use WebService::GoogleHack::Rate;
#GIVE PATH TO INPUT FILE HERE
my $INPUTFILE="";
#GIVE PATH TO TRACE FILE HERE
my $TRACEFILE="";
#create an object of type Rate
my $rate = WebService::GoogleHack::Rate->new();
$results=$rate->measureSemanticRelatedness1("dog", "cat");
#The PMI measure is stored in the variable $results, and it can also
#be accessed as $rate->{PMI};
$results=$rate->predictSemanticOrientation($INPUTFILE, "excellent", "bad",$TRACEFILE);
#The resutls can be accessed through
print $results->{prediction}."n";
$results->{PMI Measure}."n";
$rate->{prediction} &."n";
$rate->{PMI Measure}."n";
WebService::GoogleHack::Rate - This package uses Google to do some basic natural language processing. For example, given two words, say "knife" and "cut", the module has the ability to retrieve a semantic relatedness measure, commonly known as the PMI (Pointwise mututal information) measure. The larger the measure the more related the words are. The package can also predict the semantic orientation of a given paragraph of english text. A positive measure means that the paragraph has a positive meaning, and negative measure means the opposite.
Download (0.088MB)
Added: 2006-12-04 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1054 downloads
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