Alembic is an open computer graphics interchange framework. It distills
complex, animated scenes into a non-procedural, application-independent
set of baked geometric results. This "distillation" of scenes into baked
geometry is exactly analogous to the distillation of lighting and
rendering scenes into rendered image data.
Alembic is focused on efficiently storing the computed results of complex
procedural geometric constructions. It is very specifically NOT concerned
with storing the complex dependency graph of procedural tools used to
create the computed results.
mtPaint is a simple GTK+1/2 painting program designed for creating icons
and pixel based artwork. It can edit indexed palette or 24 bit RGB images
and offers basic painting and palette manipulation tools. It also has
several other more powerful features such as channels, layers and
animation. Due to its simplicity and lack of dependencies it runs well on
GNU/Linux, Windows and older PC hardware.
The NVIDIA Texture Tools is a collection of image processing and
texture manipulation tools, designed to be integrated in game tools
and asset conditioning pipelines.
The primary features of the library are mipmap and normal map
generation, format conversion and DXT compression.
DXT compression is based on Simon Brown's squish library. The library
also contains an alternative GPU-accelerated compressor that uses
CUDA and is one order of magnitude faster.
This module implements several resizing algorithms with a focus on low
overhead, speed and minimal features. Algorithms available are:
GD's copyResampled (floating-point)
GD's copyResampled fixed-point (useful on embedded devices/NAS devices)
GraphicsMagick's assortment of resize filters (floating-point)
GraphicsMagick's Triangle filter in fixed-point
Supported image formats include JPEG, GIF, PNG, and BMP for input, and
JPEG and PNG for output.
PECoMaTo stands for Picture-Embedded COntents MAnipulation TOol.
It is designed to display any kind of information embedded in picture files,
as well as checking, filtering, extracting, removing, adding, and fixing such
information. In other words, it's a metadata processor.
It supports the following file formats:
* JPEG/JFIF
* Adobe PSD and FFO
* raw IPTC
It knows about the following metadata formats:
* JFIF
* IPTC
* Exif
* Adobe
* Fotostation
Deegree's WPS is able to process Feature Collections based on arbitrary
processes. OGC's WPS (Schut & Whiteside 2005) specification describes
WPS as follows: "WPS defines a standardized interface that facilitates
the publishing of geospatial processes, and the discovery of and binding
to those processes by clients. "Processes" include any algorithm,
calculation or model that operates on spatially referenced data.
"Publishing" means making available machine-readable binding
information as well as human-readable metadata that allows service
discovery and use."
Entangle is an application which uses GTK+3 and libgphoto2 to provide a
graphical interface for tethered photography with digital cameras.
It includes control over camera shooting and configuration settings and
"hands off" shooting directly from the controlling computer:
- Trigger the shutter from the computer
- Live preview of scene before shooting
- Automatic download and display of photos as they are shot
- Control of all camera settings from computer
The "z" library implements the commonly required image processing
basics of scaling, colorspace conversion, and depth conversion. A
simple API enables conversion between any supported formats to operate
with minimal knowledge from the programmer. All library routines were
designed from the ground-up with flexibility, thread-safety, and
correctness as first priorities. Allocation, buffering, and I/O are
cleanly separated from processing, allowing the programmer to adapt
"z" to many scenarios.
KPhotoAlbum is a tool for annotating, searching and viewing images
and videos. The annotation is done by telling KPhotoAlbum who is
on the images, where the images were taken and (optionally) adding
descriptions.
KPhotoAlbum is highly optimized for easy annotation of images, so
that it is possible to use it with thousands of images. When the
images have been annotated, you may browse them based on the
annotations (person, location, keywords).
Visprint makes fractal fingerprint png images based on the contents of any
file. The image will be different for almost every file with even slightly
different contents. Visprint uses the IFS fractal generation process,
pioneered by Michael Barnsley. It is a way to create images which are
self-similar to infinite depths. In other words, the picture is made up of
smaller versions of itself.