So ... you're a lonely hewmaan living on the lower decks, crawling the
Jeffries tubes or poking around holodec computers.
You just don't have the lobes for business.
Here's your opportunity:
For only 5 strips of latnium, learn from THE BUSINESSMEN of
Alpha-Quadrant, as written by Grand Negus Gint himself:
The Ferengi Rules of Acquisition
mime-types-data provides a registry for information about MIME media type
definitions. It can be used with the Ruby mime-types library or other software
to determine defined filename extensions for MIME types, or to use filename
extensions to look up the likely MIME type definitions.
The Single UNIX Specification Version 4, technically identical to IEEE
Std 1003.1, 2013 Edition or The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7
is a technical standard. It includes IEEE Std 1003.1-2008/Cor 1-2013,
the Technical Corrigendum 1 addressing problems discovered since the
approval of the 2008 edition.
This port permits to install and register the HTML personal copy
that the user must download in .tar.bz2 format by himself.
GNU Teseq is a tool for translating files that contain control
characters and terminal control sequences, into human-understandable
text. It is intended to aid in debugging problems in terminal
emulators, software that makes use of special terminal features, and
interactions between the two.
Teseq is primarily targeted at individuals who possess a basic
understanding of terminal control sequences, especially CSI sequences;
however, by default Teseq will try to identify and describe the
sequences that it encounters, and the behavior they might produce in a
terminal.
Teseq describes control functions as they are interpreted by
VT100-compatible terminals, and/or terminals compliant with the ECMA-48 /
ISO/IEC 6429 standard. Teseq does _not_ support describing control
functions according to terminal-specific definitions in a database such
as termcap or terminfo, though future versions may include limited
support for that (*note Future Enhancements::). Therefore, the
descriptions Teseq uses for control functions may not necessarily match
their actual interpretation by whatever terminal device the characters
were actually intended for
tkRunIt is a run dialog box for X which allows you to execute
commandline without using an xterm. tkRunIt was inspired by Xrun
but is designed to be completely navigable from the keyboard and
to allow extreme customizablility as I often find that personal
workspace tools/shortcuts are seldom workflow compatible across
users.
Saaghar is a cross-platform Persian poetry software.
It uses "ganjoor.net" database as its database.
It has lots of features:
* Tabbed UI
* Tabbed and dockable search widgets
* Advanced Search
* Search for Rhymes
* Print and Print Preview
* Export, It supports exporting to "PDF", "HTML", "TeX", "CSV" and "TXT"
* Copy and Multi-selection
* Icons Theme
* Customisable interface
* Portable Mode
VDMFEC implements Block ECC using a Forward Error Correction (FEC)
code based on Vandermonde (VDM) matrices in GF(2^8) due to Luigi
Rizzo.
Its primary application is intended to be in recovering data from
unreliable media such as diskettes. Another example is wrapping
'zfs send' streams before dumping onto tape.
The home page for FEC is http://www.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/fec.html
Tired of debugging your regular expressions? Do you want to quickly build
efficient regexps?
Visual REGEXP is for you!
This software will let you design your regexps by letting you type the
expression and visualize its effect on a sample of your choice.
PNS is a public domain Petri net simulation tool for Unix systems. It requires
the X Window System.
Examples:
---------
- simple.net
3-2 Reduction
- add.net
x = x + y
- sub1.net
x >= y : x = x - y
x < y : y = y - x
- sub2.net
x = x - y
NEGATIVE = 1 <=> x-y < 0
- mult.net
z = x * y
- phil.net
Dining Philosophers Problem
TV-Browser gets the daily TV program from the internet and shows it clearly
aranged - like a printed TV guide. An internet connection is only necessary
during the data update.
Currently, TV-Browser supports more than 1000 TV and radio channels from
Australia, Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Repulic, Denmark, France, Germany,
Great Britain, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland and the USA.