0 A.D. (pronounced "zero ey-dee") is a free, open-source, cross-platform
real-time strategy (RTS) game of ancient warfare. In short, it is
a historically-based war/economy game that allows players to relive
or rewrite the history of Western civilizations, focusing on the
years between 500 B.C. and 500 A.D. The project is highly ambitious,
involving state-of-the-art 3D graphics, detailed artwork, sound,
and a flexible and powerful custom-built game engine.
The game has been in development by Wildfire Games (WFG), a group
of volunteer, hobbyist game developers, since 2001. The code and
data are available under the GPL license, and the art, sound and
documentation are available under CC-BY-SA. In short, we consider
0 A.D. an educational celebration of game development and ancient
history.
ftpfind - find directory&file on a ftp server
usage: /usr/local/bin/ftpfind URL [-proxy proxy_server] \
[-login login_name] [-password password] \
[-regexp pattern] [-type d|f|l] [-ls] [-print] \
[-delete|-get [directory] [-new] [-resume] \
|-put [directory] [-new] \
|-chmod 0???]
Ruby-bdb1 is an interface to Berkeley DB revision 1.85 and 1.86.
This library includes support for the following access methods:
* B+tree
* Hashing
* Fixed and Variable-Length Records
And the following interfaces:
* Hash like interface - BDB1::Btree and BDB1::Hash
* Array like interface - BDB1::Recnum(Recno)
This module provides an object oriented perl interface to the Internet
Route Registry. The interface uses the RIPE/RPSL Tool Query Language as
defined in Appendix B of the IRRd User Guide. The guide can be found at
http://www.irrd.net/, however an understanding of the query language is
not required to use this module.
Kover is an easy to use WYSIWYG CD cover printer with CDDB support.
Some features:
o CDDB support via freedb.org
o supports proxies with authentification (basic)
o image embedding in inlet and booklet
o should read files saved with Easy CD Pro 2.0
o saves CDDB queries locally
o do CDDB query without the CD
o files created with K3B can be imported
This is sophossavi, the perl interface module to Sophos Anti virus.
With thanks to the original author Paul B. Henson.
Sophos AntiVirus from
http://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-trials/shared-download-components/anti-virus-for-unix-and-netware.aspx
needs to be installed to be able to build this.
The String::Koremutake module converts to and from Koremutake Memorable
Random Strings.
The term "Memorable Random String" was thought up by Sean B. Palmer as a
name for those strings like dopynl, glargen, glonknic, spoopwiddle, and
kebble etc. that don't have any conventional sense, but can be used as
random identifiers, especially in URIs to keep them persistent. See
http://infomesh.net/2001/07/MeRS/
Koremutake is a MeRS algorithm which is used by Shorl
(http://shorl.com/koremutake.php). As they explain: "It is, in plain
language, a way to express any large number as a sequence of syllables.
The general idea is that word-sounding pieces of information are a lot
easier to remember than a sequence of digits."
The heart of the package is 'libcw'. This is a library which, when built,
offers the following basic CW services to a caller program:
o Morse code character translation tables, and lookup functions
o Morse code low-level timing calculations
o A 'sidetone' generation and queueing system, using either the system sound
card, the console speaker, or both
o Optional keying control for an external device, say a transmitter, or an
oscillator
o CW character and string send routines, tied in with the character lookup
o CW receive routines, also tied in to the character lookup
o Adaptive speed tracking of received CW
o An iambic keyer, with both Curtis 8044 types A and B timing
o Straight key emulation
SVMlight is an implementation of Vapnik's Support Vector Machine
[Vapnik, 1995] for the problem of pattern recognition, for the problem
of regression, and for the problem of learning a ranking function. The
optimization algorithms used in SVMlight are described in [Joachims,
2002a ]. [Joachims, 1999a]. The algorithm has scalable memory
requirements and can handle problems with many thousands of support
vectors efficiently.
The software also provides methods for assessing the generalization
performance efficiently. It includes two efficient estimation methods
for both error rate and precision/recall. XiAlpha-estimates [Joachims,
2002a, Joachims, 2000b] can be computed at essentially no
computational expense, but they are conservatively biased. Almost
unbiased estimates provides leave-one-out testing. SVMlight exploits
that the results of most leave-one-outs (often more than 99%) are
predetermined and need not be computed [Joachims, 2002a].
TECkit (Text Encoding Conversion toolkit) is a toolkit for converting data
between 8-bit legacy encodings and Unicode. It can also be used for
transliteration of Unicode between different scripts.
TECkit uses a mapping description language (mapping byte encodings to Unicode).
Mapping rules can be extended by (1) the use of character sequences rather than
single characters on either side; (2) by the addition of contextual constraints
(environments) determining when a rule should apply; (3) and by the use of
character classes, optional and repeatable elements, grouping and alternation
to express more complex patterns to be matched and processed.
TECkit is particularly useful with XeTeX (Unicode-aware derivate of TeX).
The following binaries are provided:
teckit_compile mapping compiler that allows binary mapping tables (.tec)
to be built from TECkit description files (.map)
sfconv a tool for converting Standard Format (SF) files
txtconv a utility to apply TECkit mappings to plain-text files
http://scripts.sil.org/TECkitDownloads#5b6cf869