A library to communicate with TI calculators.
'usbmuxd' stands for "USB multiplexing daemon". This daemon is in
charge of multiplexing connections over USB to an iPhone or iPod
Touch. To users, it means you can sync your music, contacts, photos,
etc. over USB. To developers, it means you can connect to any
listening localhost socket on the device.
This package contains the usbmuxd communication interface library.
LinPsk is a program for operating on digital modes running on Linux.
LinPsk supports BPSK , QPSK and RTTY at the moment.
Main features are:
the simultaneuos decoding of up to four channels.
The different digital modes may be mixed
You can define a trigger on each channel to be notified if a text of your choice is detected.
You can log each received channel at a file.
For easy qso'ing you can define macros and for larger texts to be send you can use two files.
You can view the signal as spectrum or in a waterfall display. Both are scalable in the frequency domain.
At the Moment RTTY only supports 45 baud and 1.5 stopbits.
LIRC is a package that allows you to decode and send infra-red signals
of many (but not all) commonly used remote controls.
The most important part of LIRC is the lircd daemon that will decode
IR signals received by the device drivers and provide the information
on a socket. It will also accept commands for IR signals to be sent if
the hardware supports this. The second daemon program called lircmd
will connect to lircd and translate the decoded IR signals to mouse
movements. You can e.g. configure X to use your remote control as an
input device.
The user space applications will allow you to control your computer
with your remote control. You can send X events to applications, start
programs and much more on just one button press. The possible
applications are obvious: Infra-red mouse, remote control for your TV
tuner card or CD-ROM, shutdown by remote, program your VCR and/or
satellite tuner with your computer, etc.
Mgetty is a "smart" getty replacement, designed to be used with Hayes
compatible data and data/fax modems.
Mgetty knows about modem initialization, manual modem answering (so your
modem doesn't answer if the machine isn't ready), UUCP locking (so you can
use the same device for dial-in and dial-out).
Mgetty provides very extensive logging facilities.
Sendfax sends the named g3 fax files to the fax machine at "phone number".
The g3 files can be created with pbmtog3(1) or GNU's GhostScript with the
"digifax" driver.
Amateur Radio program for cleaning NASA format keplerian element files.
Open source library for working with the National Marine Electronics
Association (NMEA) protocol.
Features:
* Analysis NMEA sentences and granting GPS data in C structures
* Generate NMEA sentences
* Supported sentences: GPGGA, GPGSA, GPGSV, GPRMC, GPVTG
* Multilevel architecture of algorithms
* Additional functions of geographical mathematics and work with navigation
data
Esmska is a cross-platform application for sending GSM SMS over the Internet.
It uses publicly available web gateways and sends messages through them. This
way it can be much more comfortable than using a web browser or a mobile phone.
Features:
* Send SMS through various gateways (local or international, free or paid)
* Supports all common operating systems (Linux, Windows, Mac OS, etc.)
* Free, under open-source licence GNU AGPL3+
* Import contacts from vCard files or third-party programs (DreamCom)
* Send SMS to multiple recipients at once
* History of sent messages
* Pluggable gateway system - easy to provide support for more gateways
directly by users
* Extensive possibilities of changing appearance
* Many other planned features
OWFS -- 1-Wire file system.
OWFS is an easy way to use the powerful 1-wire system of Dallas/Maxim.
OWFS is a simple and flexible program to monitor and control the physical
environment. You can write scripts to read temperature, flash lights, write
to an LCD, log and graph, ...
This module encapsulates the access to the serial port. It provides
backends for Python running on Windows, Linux, BSD (possibly any POSIX
compliant system), Jython, and IronPython (.NET and Mono). The module
named "serial" automatically selects the appropriate backend.