xrootconsole is a small utility which displays its input in a transparent
text box on X's root window. It will read from any file listed on the
command line or, by default, from stdin. It is most useful when it reads
from a FIFO; this allows you to redirect multiple commands to the FIFO
and monitor their output.
The sbxkb program is modernized replacement for classic xxkb. It is not
as configurable, but avoids few very annoying bugs of xxkb (i.e. it just
works). Comes with 224 national flag icons.
Composes and mails a complaint about inappropriate commercial use of
usenet/e-mail. Sends complaint his/her provider by default, but
destination is configurable. Can be used with as few as three keystrokes.
A third-party forwarding service called Abuse.net is used for
complaints to the offender's provider. This ensures that the best
known complaint address is used. The first time you use Abuse.net,
you will receive a message asking you to register. See www.abuse.net.
This was created in the belief that a single, concise message is the
most appropriate way to complain. Mail bombing (e-mailing megabytes
of useless data) and public flaming (replying on usenet, causing your
complaint to be duplicated on every machine in the network) are
discouraged.
This is an SNMP message encoding and decoding library, providing very
low-level facilities; you pretty much need to read the SNMP RFCs to use
it. It is, however, very fast (it's more than an order of magnitude
faster than Net::SNMP, and it can send a request and parse a response in
only slightly more time than the snmpd from net-snmp takes to parse the
request and send a response), and it's relatively complete --- the
interface is flexible enough that you can use it to write SNMP
management applications, SNMP agents, and test suites for SNMP
implementations.
The package also includes NSNMP::Simple, which lets you get or set a
single OID via SNMP with a single line of code. It's easier to use, and
roughly an order of magnitude faster, than Net::SNMP.
Ghostscript is the well-known PostScript interpreter which is available for
all common and most esoteric platforms and supports many different printers
and some displays.
This is distributed with the GNU General Public License, which allows
free use, and free copying and redistribution under certain conditions
(including, in some cases, commercial distribution).
This port includes add-on packages (not part of the official gs release)
o HP8XX driver for HP DeskJet 880C/882C/895C
- http://www.gelhaus.net/hp880c/
o DJ970 driver for HP DeskJet 970CXi
- http://www.harsch.net/Ghostscript/ghostscript.html
o PCL3 driver for HP DeskJet series
- http://home.vrweb.de/martin.lottermoser/pcl3.html
o Gimp-Print driver for Canon/Epson/Lexmark/HP printers
- http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net/
o Special drivers for verious printer models
- Alps, Canon, Epson, NEC, Lexmark, Ricoh,...
o Additional contributed uniprint driver profiles for
- Epson Stylus Color 740 and Epson LQ-1170
ez-ipupdate is a small utility for updating your host name
if you are using any of the following dynamic DNS services:
http://gnudip.cheapnet.net (GNUDip)
http://www.dhs.org
http://www.dyn.ca (GNUDip)
http://www.dyndns.org
http://www.dyns.cx
http://www.easydns.com
http://www.ez-ip.net
http://www.hn.org
http://www.justlinux.com
http://www.ods.org
http://www.tzo.com
http://www.zoneedit.com
It is pure C and works on Linux, *BSD and Solaris.
The key features are: support for multiple service types, daemon
mode that monitors your IP address and only sends updates when
your IP address changes.
Spamcalc takes a hostname or a list of hostnames and determines a dns spam
score for each hostname. This value is an indication for the spam-ness of the
hostname. The higher the score, the higher the chance that the hostname is
actually a dns spam hostname.
Hostnames that are considered dns spam are hostnames with (a part of) a
sentence in them (master.of.the.world.net), swearwords
(shittywhore.armaster.roadkill.net) and other forms of unwanted textual data
(666666666666666666666666666666666.sixtysix.org, 0-1-2-3-4-5.blah.com).
This perl module provides support for the https protocol
under LWP, so that a LWP::UserAgent can make https GET &
HEAD & POST requests. Please see perldoc LWP for more
information on POST requests.
The Crypt::SSLeay package contains Net::SSL, which is
automatically loaded by LWP::Protocol::https on https
requests, and provides the necessary SSL glue for that
module to work via these deprecated modules:
Crypt::SSLeay::CTX
Crypt::SSLeay::Conn
Crypt::SSLeay::X509
Work on Crypt::SSLeay has been continued only to provide
https support for the LWP - libwww perl libraries. If you
want access to the OpenSSL API via perl, check out Sampo's
Net::SSLeay.
Papi, the Python Accessibility Programming Interface, is a Python
wrapper around the GNOME ATK toolkit.
It allows a developer to make python objects and applications
easily accessibility aware without the need to install PyGTK and
the GNOME accessibility components. Instead it only depends on ATK
and - on the developers behalf - the ATK/AT-SPI bridge shipped with
AT-SPI.
Aspell Arabic dictionaries.