Frodo is a freeware C64 emulator for BeOS, Unix, MacOS, AmigaOS, Win32
and RiscOS systems and the world's first C64 emulator not bearing a
"64" in its name. :-) (No, it has absolutely nothing to do with
frodo.hiof.no, that's a pure coincidence.)
Frodo was developed to reproduce the graphics of games and demos
better than the existing C64 emulators. Therefore Frodo has relatively
high system requirements: It should only be run on systems with at
least a PowerPC/Pentium/68060. But on the other hand, Frodo can
display raster effects correctly that only result in a flickering mess
with other emulators.
Frodo comes in three flavours: The "normal" Frodo with a line-based
emulation, the improved line-based emulation "Frodo PC", and the
single-cycle emulation Frodo SC that is slower but far more
compatible.
In addition to a precise 6510/VIC emulation, Frodo features a
processor-level 1541 emulation that is even able to handle about 95%
of all fast loaders. There is also a faster 1541 emulation for four
drives in .d64/x64 disk images, .t64/LYNX archives, or directories of
the host system.
This is an Oriented Object module that calculates a future value by using
existing values. The new value is calculated by using linear regression.
In scroll, you're a bookworm that's stuck on a scroll. You have to dodge
between words and use spells to make your way down the page as the scroll
is read. Go too slow and you'll get wound up in the scroll and crushed.
The JRefEntry DTD is a customization of the DocBook RefEntry
model. The purpose of this customization is to mirror the order and
nature of structured comment tags in JavaDoc documentation.
Aften is an audio encoder which generates compressed audio streams based
on ATSC A/52 specification. This type of audio is also known as AC-3 or
Dolby(R) Digital and is one of the audio codecs used in DVD-Video
content.
This Input Handler verifies that it is dealing with a reasonable date.
Reasonably means anything that Date::Manip thinks is sensible, so you
could use any of (for example): "December 12, 2001" "12th December, 2001"
"2001-12-12" "next Tuesday" "third Wednesday in March"
See Date::Manip for much more information on what date formats are
acceptable.
The resulting date will be a Date::Simple object. Date::Simple for more
information on this.
Muni finds the Unicode value of the 7773 Chinese characters listed in Matthews'
Chinese-English Dictionary.
You enter the character number found in the dictionary, and it will give
you the corresponding Unicode mapping, or tell you when no such mapping has
been defined.
Rather than just entering the number, you can type in a query, for example:
% muni
: What is Unicode mapping for "Yung", listed in Matthews' Dictionary
: as character 7589?
- Matthews(7589) = U+6C38
: Thank you. How about 3268, Matthews' number for "Kang"?
- Matthews(3268) = U+525B
: Thank you, Mr. Computer.
: ^D
%
This is a library created by Dmitry Kazakov out of necessity, which was
released under the GMGPL and provides Ada implementations of:
- smart pointers - B-trees
- directed graphs - stacks
- sets - tables
- maps - string editing
- unbounded arrays - expression analyzers
- lock-free data structures
- synchronization primitives (events, race condition free pulse events,
arrays of events, reentrant mutexes, deadlock-free arrays of mutexes)
- pseudo-random non-repeating numbers
- symmetric encoding and decoding
- IEEE 754 representations support
- multiple connections server/client designing tools.
Tables management and strings editing are described in separate documents;
see Tables and Strings edit. The library is kept conform to the Ada 95,
Ada 2005, Ada 2012 language standards.
Release notes for version 0.6.7-epsilon
=======================================
This version is the "almost-there" version of STonX 0.6.7 (which is going
to be the last "release" version before the major changes in the current
development versions are released.
Some information about the problems with different TOS versions and STonX:
==========================================================================
(1) Can't run programs from the Unix filesystem interface
(2) not thoroughly tested or tested by someone else
(3) untested
(4) set TOS_1 to 1 in options.h before compiling
(5) A: and B: can't be used because they're implicitly considered Floppy disk
drives and always accessed using the FDC
TOS 1.00: (1)(2)(4)(5)
TOS 1.02: (1)(2)(4)(5)
TOS 1.04: (2)(4)
TOS 1.06: (3)
TOS 1.62: (3)
TOS 2.05: tested, should be OK
TOS 2.06: tested, should be OK
Kismet is an 802.11 layer2 wireless network detector, sniffer, and intrusion
detection system. Kismet will work with any wireless card which supports
raw monitoring (rfmon) mode, and can sniff 802.11a, 802.11b, and 802.11g
traffic.
Kismet identifies networks by passively collecting packets. In addition
to standard networks, it can detect (and given time, decloak) hidden
networks, and infer the presence of nonbeaconing networks via data traffic.
Capture sources that are known to be supported: Atheros, Prism2, WSP100,
Drone, wtapfile, pcapfile. Kismet also supports radiotap headers and
should work with current FreeBSD systems.