Heme is intended to be fast and portable console hex editor for Unix-like
systems. It has undo support (number of undo operations is only limited by
available memory), ability to fill a range of addresses with the specified
byte, ability to search for a single byte or character string. Offsets can
be given in hexadecimal, octal, or decimal forms. There are two editing
modes: hex (binary) and ASCII (text).
Heme uses standard curses library for screen and input handling, and offers
colors support (they can be set in the configuration file).
Lazarus is the class libraries for Free Pascal that emulate Delphi.
Free Pascal is a GPL'ed compiler that runs on Linux, Win32, OS/2, 68K
and more. Free Pascal is designed to be able to understand and compile
Delphi syntax, which is of course OOP.
Lazarus is the part of the missing puzzle that will allow you to
develop Delphi-like programs in all of the above platforms. Unlike Java
which strives to be a write once run anywhere, Lazarus and Free Pascal
strives for write once compile anywhere.
Morla is a RDF editor written in C. It is based on the libnxml and librdf
libraries. With Morla you can manage more RDF documents simultaneously,
visualize graphs and use templates for quick writing.
With Morla you can import RDFS documents and use their contents to write new
RDF triples. Templates are also RDF documents and they make Morla easily
personalizable and expandable.
You can also use Morla as a RDF navigator, wandering among the net knots of
the RDF documents present on Internet exactly as we are used to do with normal
browsers.
Ted is a text editor running under X11 on Unix/Linux systems.
Features
--------
* Wysiwyg rich text editing.
* Ted uses Microsoft RTF as its native file format.
* In line bitmap, jpeg, gif, ppm, png and xpm pictures.
* Postscript printing.
* Cut/Copy/Paste, text and images.
* Find/Replace using regular expressions.
* Ruler: Paragraph indentation, Indentation of first line, Tabs.
* Footnotes and endnotes.
* Tables: Insert Table, Row, Column. Changing the column width of tables
with their ruler.
* Symbols and accented characters are fully supported.
* Hyperlinks.
* Saving a document in HTML format.
* Save to *.pdf using /usr/local/bin/rtf2pdf.sh
* Numbered or bulleted lists
Title: CPM
Description:
Cpm lets UNIX users read and write standard cp/m 8" floppy disks and
provides a cp/m like user interface for manipulating cp/m files.
History:
The program has been developed in 1983. Helge was kind enough to change
the original copyright to a BSD-like one, so i've been able to port the
program to FreeBSD and distribute it freely.
Ported & maintained by: J"org Wunsch <joerg@FreeBSD.org>, 1994
Frequently asked question:
No, FreeBSD's floppy-disk driver does not (yet) understand FM diskettes.
The Open Virtual Machine Tools (open-vm-tools) are the open source
implementation of VMware Tools. They are a set of guest operating
system virtualization components that enhance performance and user
experience of virtual machines. As virtualization technology rapidly
becomes mainstream, each virtualization solution provider implements
their own set of tools and utilities to supplement the guest virtual
machine. However, most of the implementations are proprietary and
are tied to a specific virtualization platform.
This port replaces the vmware guest ports and the binary only vmware
tools ports in the ports tree.
Joytran is a joystick to keyboard/mouse events translator written in C.
The project has several advantages over similar software:
- Portable to a wide variety of platforms, since it is based on SDL and the X11
XTest Extension (Developed on FreeBSD)
- It is easy to use the joystick in places where it is not usually supported
- Supports keyboard and mouse emulation
- Supports multiple joysticks
- Handles the presence of non-joystick devices, such as USB mice/trackballs
that masquerade as joysticks gracefully
- Easy switching between profiles
- Lightweight, with few dependencies
- Comprehensive feature set (if there are features missing that are important
to you, I will at least consider implementing them)
- Freely available (MIT License)
MIPS32 Simulator -- "1/25th the performance at none of the cost"
Spim/Xspim simulates MIPS32 assembly code, providing a gdb and xgdb
like interface to the classical MIPS RISC CPU. The virtual machine
it provides can be either the one presented by the MIPS assembler or the
one of the bare hardware. The simulator can also be built to simulate the
pipeline architecture of the MIPS machine (both the control and floating
point pipelines). When built for this, it also simulates and displays
an instruction and data cache.
This simulator is useful in CS and EE classes, including providing a
target machine for compilers courses, lower division assembly language
programming, microprocessor design courses, etc...
Interface to HTTP gateway for PayPal's Payflow Pro service, as described on
the PayPal developer site at https://www.x.com/docs/DOC-1642
See also the developer area:
https://www.x.com/community/ppx/xspaces/web_checkout/payflow?view=documents
This module is intended to be a drop-in replacement for PFProAPI (a couple of
minor changes to your code are necessary to use this module instead of
PFProAPI). The major difference is that it is pure Perl, and not architecture
dependent (ie, you can use this on your 64-bit FreeBSD platform.)
Grisbi is a personnal accounting application, written with Gnome and Gtk,
and is released under the GPL licence.
Its aim is to provide you with the most simple and intuitive software for
basic use, although it can be very powerful if you spend a little time on the
setup.
Grisbi is an application written by french developpers, so it perfectly
respects french accounting rules. Grisbi can manage multiple accounts,
currencies and users. It manages third parties, expenditures and receipts
categories, and also budgetary lines, financial years, and other information
that make Grisbi adapted for associations (except those that require double
entry accounting).