KMouseTool clicks the mouse whenever the mouse cursor pauses briefly.
It was designed to help those with repetitive strain injuries, for
whom pressing buttons hurts.
KMouth is a program which enables persons that cannot speak to let
their computer speak, e.g. mutal people or people who have lost
their voice. It has a text input field and speaks the sentences
that you enter. It also has support for user defined phrasebooks.
Bicom is a data compressor in the PPM family. It is freely available and
Open Source. Its most unique characteristic is that compression with
bicom is completely bijective -- any file is a possible bicom output that
can be decompressed, and then recompressed back to its original form. Of
course, any file is also a possible bicom input that can be compressed,
and then decompressed back to its original form. To support encryption
applications, bicom also includes a passphrase-protection option that
will automatically encrypt after compressing, or decrypt before
decompressing.
Take file, compress each block with 1 of 256 algorithms (including no
compression) and use algorithm on a per block basis.
DeuTex is a tool to work with WAD files for Doom, Heretic, Hexen, and Strife.
It can be used to extract the lumps from a WAD and save them as individual
files. Conversely, it can also build a WAD from separate files. When
extracting a lump to a file, it does not just copy the raw data, it converts
it to an appropriate format (such as PPM for graphics, Sun audio for samples,
etc.). Conversely, when it reads files for inclusion in PWADs, it does the
necessary conversions (for example, from PPM to Doom picture format). In
addition, DeuTex has functions such as merging WADs, etc. If you're doing
any WAD hacking beyond level editing, DeuTex is a must.
GNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive. The
archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII,
new ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1
tar. The tar format is provided for compatibility with the tar
program. By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for
compatibility with older cpio programs. When extracting from
archives, cpio automatically recognizes which kind of archive it
is reading and can read archives created on machines with a different
byte-order.
Note that this port will install these utilities with a 'g' prefix,
e.g. gcpio, but the texinfo documentation will refer to them without
the 'g' prefix.
The Free Software Foundation's "tar" tape archiver.
GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or disk archive,
and can restore individual files from the archive. It includes
multivolume support, the ability to archive sparse files, automatic
archive compression/decompression, remote archives and special
features that allow tar to be used for incremental and full backups.
This distribution also includes rmt, the remote tape server.
Note that this port will install these utilities with a 'g' prefix,
e.g. gtar, but the man pages and info documentation will refer to
them without the 'g' prefix.
Gzrecover attempts to skip over bad data in a gzip archive. It will try to to
skip over bad data and extract whatever files might be there.
The package com.ice.tar implements a tar archive io package.
This package allows you to create, and extract tar archives.
Since the package uses InputStream and OutputStream, it is possible
to combine this package with the java.util.zip package to handle
.tar.gz files.
The purpose of libmspack is to provide both compression and decompression
of some loosely related file formats used by Microsoft.