GSview is a graphical interface for Ghostscript. (Ghostscript is an
interpreter for the PostScript page description language used by
laser printers.) For documents following the Adobe PostScript Document
Structuring Conventions, GSview allows selected pages to be viewed or
printed. Features include:
* Display and print PostScript and PDF files.
* View pages in arbitrary order (Next, Previous, Goto).
* Page size and Orientation are automatically selected from DSC
comments or can be selected using the menu.
* Print selected pages using Ghostscript.
* Convert pages to bitmap, PDF or PostScript.
* Selectable display resolution, depth, alpha.
* Single button zoom.
* Extract selected pages to another file.
* Copy display bitmap to clipboard, and save clipboard bitmap as BMP file.
* Add bitmap or user preview to EPS file (Interchange, TIFF or Windows
Metafile)
* Graphically select and show bounding box for EPS file.
* Extract bitmap preview or PostScript from DOS EPS file.
* Extract text or search for text.
* Can read gzip and bzip2 compressed PostScript and PDF files.
* On-line help.
* English, Catalan, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Russian,
Slovak, Spanish and Swedish languages.
U-Boot loader for Utilite and Utilite Pro
Install the cm-fx6-firmware file onto the boot disk using:
dd if=cm-fx6-firmware of=/dev/whatever bs=1k skip=1 seek=1 oflag=dsync
The U-Boot built by this port expects the first 1MB of the boot media to
be reserved for the U-Boot executable and saved environment. The firmware
file begins at an offset of 1K from the start of the boot disk. The U-Boot
environment area begins at an offset of 512K.
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled to support ubldr.
* A single U-Boot image supports Utilite and Utilite Pro.
* When the selected board has multiple SD or MMC devices available, the
mmc0 device in U-Boot (and thus the disk0 device in loader(8)) will be
whichever device U-Boot was loaded from by the ROM bootloader routines.
The sources for this port are based on stock U-Boot 2015.07 with patches
provided by CompuLab at:
http://www.compulab.co.il/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/u-boot-2015.07.tar.bz2
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
QLandkarte GT is the ultimate outdoor aficionado's tool. It supports GPS maps in
GeoTiff format as well as Garmin's img vector map format. Additional it is the
PC side front end to QLandkarte M, a moving map application for mobile devices.
And it fills the gap Garmin leaves in refusing to support Linux. QLandkarte GT
is the proof that writing portable applications for Unix, Windows and OSX is
feasible with a minimum of overhead. No excuses!
QLandkarte GT does replace the original QLandkarte with a much more flexible
architecture. It's not limited to a map format or device. Thus if you think your
Magellan GPS or other should be supported, join the team.
Additionally it is a front end to the GDAL tools, to make georeferencing scanned
maps feasible for the normal user. Compared to similar tools like QGis, it's
target users are more on the consumer side than on the scientific one.
QLandkarte GT might not let you select every possible feature of the GDAL tools,
but it will simplify their use to the demands of most users.
PhyML is a software that estimates maximum likelihood phylogenies from
alignments of nucleotide or amino acid sequences. It provides a wide
range of options that were designed to facilitate standard phylogenetic
analyses. The main strengths of PhyML lies in the large number of
substitution models coupled to various options to search the space of
phylogenetic tree topologies, going from very fast and efficient methods
to slower but generally more accurate approaches. It also implements two
methods to evaluate branch supports in a sound statistical framework
(the non-parametric bootstrap and the approximate likelihood ratio
test). PhyML was designed to process moderate to large data sets. In
theory, alignments with up to 4,000 sequences 2,000,000 character-long
can analyzed. In practice however, the amount of memory required to
process a data set is proportional of the product of the number of
sequences by their length. Hence, a large number of sequences can only
be processed provided that they are short. Also, PhyML can handle long
sequences provided that they are not numerous. With most standard
personal computers, the "comfort zone" for PhyML generally lies around 3
to 500 sequences less than 2,000 character long.
GnuCap is the GNU Circuit Analysis Package.
The primary component is a general purpose circuit simulator. It
performs nonlinear dc and transient analyses, fourier analysis, and ac
analysis. It is fully interactive and command driven. It can also be
run in batch mode or as a server. Spice compatible models for the
MOSFET (level 1-7) and diode are included in this release.
GnuCap is not based on Spice, but some of the models have been derived
from the Berkeley models.
Unlike Spice, the engine is designed to do true mixed-mode simulation.
Most of the code is in place for future support of event driven analog
simulation, and true multi-rate simulation.
If you are tired of Spice and want a second opinion, you want to play
with the circuit and want a simulator that is interactive, you want to
study the source code and want something easier to follow than Spice,
or you are a researcher working on modeling and want automated model
generation tools to make your job easier, try GnuCap.
A heap is a partially sorted structure where it's always easy to extract the
smallest element. If the collection of elements is changing dynamically, a heap
has less overhead than keeping the collection fully sorted.
The order in which equal elements get extracted is unspecified.
The main order relations supported by this module are "<" (numeric compare) and
"lt" (string compare).
The internals of the module do nothing with the elements inserted except
inspecting the key. This means that if you for example store a blessed object,
that's what you will get back on extract. It's also ok to keep references to the
elements around and make changes to them while they are in the heap as long as
you don't change the key.
Heap::Simple itself is just a loader for the code that will actually implement
the functionality mentioned above. You will need to install something like
Heap::Simple::XS or Heap::Simple::Perl to be able to actually do anything.
This is a second go at a module to simplify installing die() and warn()
handlers, and to make such handlers easier to write and control.
For most people, this just means that if use Religion; then you'll get
noticeably better error reporting from warn() and die(). This is especially
useful if you are using eval().
Religion provides four classes, WarnHandler, DieHandler, WarnPreHandler, and
DiePreHandler, that when you construct them return closures that can be
stored in variables that in turn get invoked by $SIG{__DIE__} and
$SIG{__WARN__}. Note that if Religion is in use, you should not modify
$SIG{__DIE__} or $SIG{__WARN__}, unless you are careful about invoking
chaining to the old handler.
Religion also provides a TraceBack function, which is used by a DieHandler
after you die() to give a better handle on the current scope of your
situation, and provide information about where you were, which might
influence where you want to go next, either returning back to where
World of Padman (WoP) is an open source first-person shooter computer game
available in both English and German. Originally it was a modification for
the Quake III Arena titled PadMod, created in the year 2004.
After the source code for the Quake III Arena was released, the game became
standalone. The idea is based on the Padman comic strip for the magazine
PlayStation Games, created by the professional cartoon artist Andreas "ENTE"
Endres, who is also the man who made many of the maps included with the game
in 1998.
The current version runs on an enhanced version of the ioquake3 engine, which
is based on the Quake III Arena engine. Most of the maps in the game are
lilliput style, and have a commercial-quality level of graphic complexity.
Because it was originally a mod for Quake III Arena, most of the gameplay is
similar. However, there is no Capture the Flag mode in World of Padman.
World of Padman fully supports bots with a variety of skill levels in both
online and offline play for all of the game types included. A single-player
mode has not yet been implemented. Players can also record audio and video
as they play. The game fully supports modifications, and custom maps can be
created.
atheme-services is a set of Services for IRC networks that allows
users to manage their channels in a secure and efficient way and
allows operators to manage various things about their networks. Unlike
it's predecessor, Shrike, services has a completely reworked form of
channel management that feels somewhat like eggdrop and is somewhat
more useful.
Services currently works with many irc daemons. More details are
available in the config file.
Internally, atheme-services shares more similarities with ircd than it
does with IRCServices. Anope/Epona, Cygnus, OperStats, Hybserv, Theia,
etc are all based on IRCServices and as such have very old legacy code
that none of the authors, except Church truly understand. Atheme was
written completely from scratch with the more complex concepts taken
from various modern ircd packages, including ircu, ircd-ratbox, hybrid
and bahamut.
atheme-services is not a drop-in replacement for Anope or Andy
Church's IRC Services. It is designed with an entirely different set
of goals and as such should not be migrated to with the expectation
that it will behave exactly like what was previously implemented.
Atheme is designed to act as a directory server, with alternative ways
of getting to the data implemented as well as the IRC presence.
Radiator is a highly configurable and flexible Radius server that supports
authentication by a huge range of authentication methods such as Flat files,
DBM files, Unix password files, SQL databases, remote Radius servers
(proxying), external programs, NT User Manager, Active Directory, LDAP, PAM,
iPASS, GRIC, NIS+, Tacacs+, a wide range of ISP billing packages such as
Emerald, Platypus, Rodopi, Hawk-i, Interbiller98, Freeside etc, your legacy
user database etc, etc.
Radiator now supports more 802.1x secure wireless and LAN authentication
methods than any other Radius server giving a wide choice of 802.1x network
clients.
Radiator also includes many features not found in other Radius servers such
as double-login prevention, username rewriting, full vendor-specific
attributes, time-of-day blocking and a GUI for running user tests. Full list
of technical features.
Runs on all Unix, Linux, Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000, Mac OS-9 and Mac OS-X, VMS.
Due to license restrictions, this package must be purchased and manually
downloaded from the Open System Consultants web site.