S10sh is a USB/serial userspace driver for the Canon PowerShot digital cameras.
Using S10sh you can download, upload and explore the images captured with your
PowerShot camera. The interface is quite similar to DOS's command.com.
S10sh supports the following PowerShot models:
G1 (works with USB, not reported if works with the serial interface)
G3 (from local patches, perhaps needs further testing/debug)
S10 (serial and USB)
S20 (serial and USB)
S100 aka Digital Ixus (USB only, since it lacks the serial interface)
A20 (needs testing)
A50 (serial only, supported with problems)
Pro70 (serial only, supported with problems)
Other models are reported to work as well: Elph S400, Digital Ixus V3, S30,
A60, EOS-10D.
With the release of libusb 0.1.3b (http://sourceforge.net/projects/libusb/),
S10sh gained USB support under FreeBSD.
The original author's web page is http://www.kyuzz.org/antirez/s10sh.html
A SANE scanner backend for various Epson scanners.
This backend supports many more devices than the sane-epson included
in graphics/sane-backends, including new multifunction devices such
as the SX400.
SANE ("Scanner Access Now Easy") is a universal scanner interface.
The value of such a universal interface is that it allows writing
just one driver per image acquisition device rather than one driver
for each device and application. So, if you have three applications
and four devices, traditionally you'd have had to write 12 different
programs. With SANE, this number is reduced to seven: the three
applications plus the four drivers. Of course, the savings get even
bigger as more and more drivers and/or applications are added.
sane-frontends contains frontends to SANE including xscanimage and
xcam. Xscanimage is a GTK-based application for scanning images that
can also be used as a GIMP-plugin, and Xcam is used to get images
from cameras supported by SANE.
Yukon is a set of libraries and applications that are designed to
capture realtime videos of OpenGL applications (games). The original
design idea is based on Anandtech's FrameGetter, but was extended
to suit today's high-performance computers.
From its README:
This is ``simage'', a library with image format loaders and front-ends
to common import libraries. simage is meant for use with applications
which reads image files as textures.
Deegree's WMS is able to render vector data as well as raster data
from different storage formats and deliver it to any client that is
able to perform a HTTP GET or POST request.
This software provides support for the Tag Image File Format (TIFF),
a widely used format for storing image data.
Included in this software distribution is a library, libtiff, for
reading and writing TIFF, a small collection of tools for doing
simple manipulations of TIFF images on UNIX systems, and documentation
on the library and tools. A small assortment of TIFF-related software
for UNIX that has been contributed by others is also included.
The library is capable of dealing with images that are written to
follow the 5.0 or 6.0 TIFF spec. There is also considerable support
for some of the more esoteric portions of the 6.0 TIFF spec.
Unless NOPORTDOCS is defined, the html documentations is also
installed locally in /usr/local/share/doc/tiff.
LICENSE: Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell for any purpose
unpaper is a post-processing tool for scanned sheets of paper,
especially for book-pages scanned from previously created photocopies.
unpaper tries to remove dark edges, corrects the rotation ("deskew"),
and aligns the centering of pages.
XPaint is a color image editing tool which features most standard paint
program options. It allows for the editing of multiple images simultaneously
and supports various formats, including PPM, XBM, TIFF, etc.
Yukon is a set of libraries and applications that are designed to
capture realtime videos of OpenGL applications (games). The original
design idea is based on Anandtech's FrameGetter, but was extended
to suit today's high-performance computers.