lynx is a program which allows a user to access World-Wide Web servers
and other information servers. It uses only ascii representation so
that it can be used from ascii-terminals and dialin-lines.
mod_auth_tkt is a lightweight single-sign-on authentication module for
apache, supporting versions 1.3.x, 2.0.x, and 2.2.x. It uses secure
cookie-based tickets to implement a single-signon framework that works
across multiple apache instances and servers.
mod_log_config-st is a patched version of mod_log_config by Sonke
Tesch. It's fully backward-compatible and it adds logic to give
other log writers a more detailed view of the data to be logged.
This add-on module allows the apache web server to use a PostgreSQL
database for user and/or group authentication. For large user lists this
can offer a significate speed up over apache's standard flat file
format.
PmWiki is a WikiWikiWeb system developed by Patrick Michaud in the PHP
scripting language. PmWiki has been primarily designed as a tool to
support easy, collaborative authoring and maintenance of web sites.
NetSurf is a lightweight cross-platform Web browser. It supports the
HTML 4 and CSS standards and provides a small, fast, and comprehensive
Web browsing solution. NetSurf was originally written for RISC OS.
PHP Screw is a PHP script encryption tool. When you are developing a
commercial package using PHP, the script can be distributed as encrypted
up until just before execution, preserving your intellectual property.
mod_domaintree is a hostname to filesystem mapper for Apache2. It
maps host names like www.example.com to a filesystem tree like
$prefix/com/example/www/$suffix. It can optionally strip the www
prefix of host names.
mod_fastcgi is a cgi-module for Apache
FastCGI is a language independent, scalable, open extension to CGI that
provides high performance without the limitations of server specific APIs.
See the docs for more details.
Gecko Media Player is a browser plugin that uses GNOME MPlayer
to play media in a browser. It should work with all browsers
on Unix-ish systems (Linux, BSD, Solaris) and use the NS4 API
(Mozilla, Firefox, Opera, etc.).