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What is it?
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nmh (new MH) is an electronic mail handling system - a MUA (Mail
User Agent) package for end-users to handle their e-mail. It was
originally based on the package MH-6.8.3, and is intended to be a
(mostly) compatible drop-in replacement for MH.
nmh consists of a collection of fairly simple single-purpose programs
to send, receive, save, retrieve, and manipulate e-mail messages. Since
nmh is not a single comprehensive program, you may freely intersperse
nmh commands with other shells commands, or write custom scripts which
utilize these commands in flexible ways.
JACK is a low latency audio server, written for POSIX-conformant operating
systems. It can connect a number of different applications to an audio
device, as well as allowing them to share audio between themselves. Its
clients can run in their own processes (i.e. as normal applications), or
can they can run within the JACK server (i.e. as a "plugin").
JACK was designed from the ground up for professional audio work, and its
design focuses on two key areas: synchronous execution of all clients, and
low latency operation.
The bedtools utilities are a suite of tools for performing a wide range of
genomics analysis tasks. The most widely-used of these tools enable genome
arithmetic, i.e., set theory on the genome. For example, with bedtools one
can intersect, merge, count, complement, and shuffle genomic intervals from
multiple files in common genomic formats such as BAM, BED, GFF/GTF, and VCF.
Although each individual utility is designed to do a relatively simple task,
e.g., intersect two interval files, more sophisticated analyses can be
conducted by stringing together multiple bedtools operations on the command
line or in shell scripts.
spampd is a program used within an e-mail delivery system to scan messages for
possible Unsolicited Commercial E-mail (UCE, aka spam) content.
It uses an excellent program called SpamAssassin (SA) to do the actual message
scanning. spampd acts as a transparent SMTP/LMTP proxy between two mail servers,
and during the transaction it passes the mail through SA. If SA decides the
mail could be spam, then spampd will ask SA to add some headers and a report to
the message indicating it's spam and why. spampd is written in Perl and should
theoretically run on any platform supported by Perl and SpamAssassin.
lmmon displays information gathered from a motherboard
power management controller (e.g. LM78/79). Displayed values
include fan speeds, motherboard temperature, and various
voltages. By default it cycles once per second using a curses-
based display.
Currently, the /dev/smb0 interface is only supported in FreeBSD
3.3-STABLE (after 01 November 1999), 4.x, and 5.x; however, the
/dev/io interface may work with many motherboards in FreeBSD
3.x and some non-LM78/79 motherboards.
In addition, lmmon supports simple text output that can be easily
used by external programs (e.g. UCD SNMP Daemon) for monitoring.
This is an implementation of an infix reader macro. It should run in any
valid Common Lisp and has been tested in Allegro CL 4.1, Lucid CL 4.0.1,
MCL 2.0 and CMU CL. It allows the user to type arithmetic expressions in
the traditional way (e.g., 1+2) when writing Lisp programs instead of
using the normal Lisp syntax (e.g., (+ 1 2)). It is not intended to be a
full replacement for the normal Lisp syntax.
This package is compiled with SBCL.
Written by Mark Kantrowitz, School of Computer Science,
Carnegie Mellon University, March 1993.
This is an implementation of an infix reader macro. It should run in any
valid Common Lisp and has been tested in Allegro CL 4.1, Lucid CL 4.0.1,
MCL 2.0 and CMU CL. It allows the user to type arithmetic expressions in
the traditional way (e.g., 1+2) when writing Lisp programs instead of
using the normal Lisp syntax (e.g., (+ 1 2)). It is not intended to be a
full replacement for the normal Lisp syntax.
It is known to be compatible with CMUCL, CLISP, MCL, and SBCL.
Written by Mark Kantrowitz, School of Computer Science,
Carnegie Mellon University, March 1993.
sbd is a Netcat-clone, designed to be portable and offer strong
encryption. It runs on Unix-like operating systems and on Microsoft
Win32. sbd features AES-CBC-128 + HMAC-SHA1 encryption (by Christophe
Devine), program execution (-e option), choosing source port, continuous
reconnection with delay, and some other nice features. Only TCP/IP
communication is supported. Source code and binaries are distributed
under the GNU General Public License.
sbd can be used for any number of network-related things, e.g.:
* Secure file transfer
* Remote administration
* Simple (but secure) peer-to-peer chat
* Pen-test tool (crypto avoids NIDS detection and telnet-style
traffic recording)
Bastardize provides an magical object into which text can be charged
and then returned in various, slighty modified ways.
Among others, bastardize has the following methods:
rdct converts english to hyperreductionist english
(ex. "english" becomes "")
pig pig latin
(ex. "hi there" becomes "ihay erethay")
k3wlt0k a k3wlt0kizer developed originally by Fmh
rot13 implements rot13 "encryption" in perl
(ex. "foo bar" becomes "sbb one")
rev reverses the arrangement of characters
censor attempts to censor text which might be innaproriate
n20e performs numerical abbreviations
(ex. "numerical_abbreviation" becomes "n20e")
devd-notifer - a simple daemon notifying the user about devd(8) events
with libnotify
devd-notifier parses all devd(8) messages from /var/run/devd.pipe with
a configurable regular expression and notifies the user about creating
and destroying of device nodes.