This is an IPTV plugin for the Video Disk Recorder (VDR).
This plugin integrates multicast IPTV transport streams seamlessly into
VDR. You can use any IPTV channel like any other normal DVB channel for
live viewing, recording, etc. The plugin also features full section
filtering capabilities which allow for example EIT information to be
extracted from the incoming stream.
Currently the IPTV plugin has direct support for both multicast UDP/RTP
and unicast HTTP MPEG1/2 transport streams. Also a file input method is
supported, but a file delay must be selected individually to prevent
VDR's transfer buffer over/underflow. Therefore the file input should be
considered as a testing feature only.
IPTV plugin also features a support for external streaming applications.
With proper helper applications and configuration IPTV plugin is able to
display not only MPEG1/2 transport streams but also other formats like
MP3 radio streams, mms video streams and so on.
OWAMP is a command line client application and a policy daemon used
to determine one way latencies between hosts. It is an implementation
of the OWAMP protocol as defined by
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4656.txt. (When referring to the
protocol within this document, "OWAMP" will be in italicized. In
all other instances, "OWAMP" will be referring to this implementation.)
With roundtrip-based measurements, it is hard to isolate the direction
in which congestion is experienced. One-way measurements solve this
problem and make the direction of congestion immediately apparent.
Since traffic can be asymmetric at many sites that are primarily
producers or consumers of data, this allows for more informative
measurements. One-way measurements allow the user to better isolate
the effects of specific parts of a network on the treatment of
traffic.
OurNet-BBS is a cross-protocol distributed network, built as an
abstraction layer over telnet BBS-based systems used in Hong Kong,
China and Taiwan. It implements a flexible object model for different
BBS backends, along with an asymmetric authentication and remote
procedure call protocol.
This project aims to become a protocol agnostic middle-ware solution
for identity-based information storage & retrieval, much like the
Project Jabber's goal toward instant messaging, or Project JXTA's aim
toward distributed services.
If you are new to the telnet-bbs platform, please download a copy of
Melix BBS software (in English, Traditional Chinese and Simplified
Chinese) at http://melix.elixus.org/.
For some of its practical uses, search for OurNet::BBSApp on CPAN, and
the sample scripts in the eg/ directory in this module's distribution.
A simple implementation of the RC4 algorithm, developed by RSA
Security, Inc. Here is the description from RSA's website:
RC4 is a stream cipher designed by Rivest for RSA Data Security
(now RSA Security). It is a variable key-size stream cipher with
byte-oriented operations. The algorithm is based on the use of a
random permutation. Analysis shows that the period of the cipher
is overwhelmingly likely to be greater than 10100. Eight to sixteen
machine operations are required per output byte, and the cipher can
be expected to run very quickly in software. Independent analysts
have scrutinized the algorithm and it is considered secure.
Based substantially on the "RC4 in 3 lines of perl" found at
http://www.cypherspace.org
Seamus Venasse <svenasse@polaris.ca>
Emacs major mode to create HTML files from Emacs buffers (in colour!)
This major mode will output the contents of an Emacs buffer as a
HTML file, preserving the colour attributes of that buffer.
This is a pretty elegant solution to produce nice listings of your
code in Erlang, C++, SML, Ruby (or whatever esoteric language you can
dig out a major mode for) to display on web sites.
As an example watch the ELISP code of this major mode
http://fly.srk.fer.hr/~hniksic/emacs/htmlize.el.html
Because the colouring depends only on your major mode and perhaps
some individual settings (e.g. I prefer a dark background) you can
turn any Emacs buffer into HTML.
Libtextcat is a library with functions that implement the classification
technique described in Cavnar & Trenkle, "N-Gram-Based Text Categorization" [1].
It was primarily developed for language guessing, a task on which it is known to
perform with near-perfect accuracy.
The central idea of the Cavnar & Trenkle technique is to calculate a
"fingerprint" of a document with an unknown category, and compare this with the
fingerprints of a number of documents of which the categories are known. The
categories of the closest matches are output as the classification. A
fingerprint is a list of the most frequent n-grams occurring in a document,
ordered by frequency. Fingerprints are compared with a simple out-of-place
metric.
[1] The document that started it all: William B. Cavnar & John M. Trenkle (1994)
N-Gram-Based Text Categorization, <http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/68861.html>.
This package reads and writes any document that conforms to the PDF
specification generously provided by Adobe at
http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/pdf/index_reference.html
The file format is well-supported, with the exception of the
"linearized" or "optimized" output format, which this module can read
but not write. Many specific aspects of the document model are not
manipulable with this package (like fonts), but if the input document
is correctly written, then this module will preserve the model
integrity.
This library grants you some power over the PDF security model. Note
that applications editing PDF documents via this library MUST respect
the security preferences of the document. Any violation of this
respect is contrary to Adobe's intellectual property position, as
stated in the reference manual at the above URL.
CQL::Parser provides a mechanism to parse Common Query Language (CQL)
statements. The best description of CQL comes from the CQL homepage at the
Library of Congress http://www.loc.gov/z3950/agency/zing/cql/
CQL is a formal language for representing queries to information retrieval
systems such as web indexes, bibliographic catalogs and museum collection
information. The CQL design objective is that queries be human readable
and human writable, and that the language be intuitive while maintaining
the expressiveness of more complex languages.
A CQL statement can be as simple as a single keyword, or as complicated as
a set of compoenents indicating search indexes, relations, relational
modifiers, proximity clauses and boolean logic. CQL::Parser will parse CQL
statements and return the root node for a tree of nodes which describes
the CQL statement. This data structure can then be used by a client
application to analyze the statement, and possibly turn it into a query
for a local repository.
MKDoc is a web content management system written in Perl which focuses on
standards compliance, accessiblity and usability issues, and multi-lingual
websites.
At MKDoc Ltd we have decided to gradually break up our existing commercial
software into a collection of completely independent, well-documented,
well-tested open-source CPAN modules.
Ultimately we want MKDoc code to be a coherent collection of module
distributions, yet each distribution should be usable and useful in
itself.
MKDoc::XML is part of this effort.
You could help us and turn some of MKDoc's code into a CPAN module. You
can take a look at the existing code at http://download.mkdoc.org/.
If you are interested in some functionality which you would like to see as
a standalone CPAN module, send an email to
<mkdoc-modules@lists.webarch.co.uk>
Allows you to quickly change and apply a different locale from the
tools menu:
* Handy tool for all people involved with multilingual usage of Mozilla
applications.
* Switches the Mozilla User Interface language (general.useragent.locale
preference)
* Switches the accept_language preference, so complete websites will be
translated. (if the http accept language header is supported, e.g.
like Google does)
* Switches the Spell Checker Dictionary preference. (if supported by
your Mozilla application)
* Remembers the dictionary and content locale for each site and
automatically switches when you load that site. It also tries to detect
the language of sites itself, and if found automatically switches to
that language.
* Auto restarts the application in versions 1.4+ (only if needed)
* Includes country flag icons for 'all' countries by famfamfam.com.
* Displays the flag of the currently selected locale on your statusbar.
* Add 3 of your own custom defined locales.