Ploticus is script-driven, which makes it suitable for automated, unattended
uses, or for applications that will be run again and again. Ploticus might be
your choice for stylistic reasons or just because it suits the problem or
application. In general, ploticus is good at making graphs like you would see
in newspapers and news magazines, business publications, journals for medical
and social sciences, and so on.
You can also use Ploticus in combination with standard desktop tools, e.g.
generate data displays using ploticus then import SVG or PNG into PowerPoint,
Word, etc.)
Ploticus is not a function or mathematical plotting package like gnuplot, nor
would it be a good choice for applications where mathematical formulas or
scientific notations are to be rendered as an integral part of the data
display. Ploticus is also not intended as a "marketing" graphics package. Its
goal is to display data crisply without extra decoration and distracting
"dingbats" that cloud the picture. Thus there is little support for 3-D
effects, gradient backgrounds, and so on.
FreeBSD note: the binary is referred to as 'pl' in the source files, but
is installed as 'ploticus' so as to avoid conflicts with other ports.
The purpose of this project is to develop a free (open source),
platform independent alternative to Origin. QtiPlot is being actively
improved, all your suggestions to our "wish to" list and all your
contributions are most welcome!
Features:
* QtiPlot is fully scriptable via Python, which gives you the
possibility to use powerfull existing scientific tools, such as
SciPy
* OpenGL based 3D Plotting
* Publication quality 2D plots
* Easy export of plots to vector formats (EPS, PS, PDF) and
to other various image formats (BMP, JPG, PNG, TIFF etc ...)
* Powerful and versatile spreadsheets and calculations in column-logic
* Easy ASCII-Import/Export of single or multiple files
* Linear and non-linear y=f(x) curve fitting and estimation of
statistical errors of the fit-parameters
* Multi-peak fitting with Gaussian and Lorentzian peak profiles
* Data analysis: statistics, sorting, FFT, data smoothing
(Savitzky-Golay, FFT smoothing, and moving window average), data
filtering (low/high/band pass and band block filters),
convolution/deconvolution, correlation, interpolation, numerical
integration/differentiation, etc...
* Matrices optimized for 3D plotting
* Templates support: all the settings for plots (2D/3D), tables
and matrixes can be saved to ASCII files and restored later on for
a fast editing process
* Project files based on folders, a powerful project explorer with
extensive built-in features: drag and drop, searching facilities,
etc...
PPM2FLI can read directly PPM,PGM,PBM and FBM files. If necessary it
performs a quantization. The filters of the NETPBM, PBMPLUS and FBM package
can be used as read filters. Together with one of this packages
a large number of image formats can be handled.
UNFLICK writes images in PPM or FBM format.
In contrast to FBM2FLI no additional package is required to build
PPM2FLI and UNFLICK. So it can be used without any of the above mentioned
packages, if another source of PPM,PGM,PBM or FBM images is available.
For example, PS images can be animated using ghostscript.
The current version is call `beta' because some parts are relative new
and not totally tested. I made tests on SUN sparc-stations (various versions
of SUN-OS), on PC running LINUX and under MSDOS using the DJGPP DOS-extender.
In all cases the GCC compiler was used. Under MSDOS I used a modified
makefile. Anyway, in some environments changes in the makefile are necessary.
transcode is a text-console utility for video stream processing,
running on a platform that supports shared libraries and threads.
Decoding and encoding is done by loading modules that are responsible
for feeding transcode with raw video/audio streams (import modules)
and encoding the frames (export modules).
It supports elementary video and audio frame transformations,
including de-interlacing or fast resizing of video frames and loading
of external filters. A number of modules are included to enable
import of DVDs on-the-fly, MPEG elementary (ES) or program streams
(VOB), MPEG video, Digital Video (DV), YUV4MPEG streams, NuppelVideo
file format and raw or compressed (pass-through) video frames and
export modules for writing DivX;-), OpenDivX, DivX 4.xx or uncompressed
AVI files with MPEG, AC3 (pass-through) or PCM audio. Additional
export modules to write single frames (PPM) or YUV4MPEG streams are
available, as well as an interface import module to the avifile
library. Its modular concept is intended to provide flexibility
and easy user extensibility to include other video/audio codecs or
file types.
CenterIM is a fork of CenterICQ.
CenterIM is a text mode menu- and window-driven IM interface that supports the
ICQ2000, Yahoo!, MSN, AIM, Gadu-Gadu and IRC protocols as well as posting to
LiveJournal aggregating RSS feeds.
It allows you to send, receive, and forward messages, URLs, SMSes, contacts,
and email express messages. It also lets you set your own and fetch others'
away messages, and define external handlers for incoming events. You can mass
message-send, search for users, view users' details, maintain your contact
list directly from the program, view the message history, register a new UIN
and update your details, be informed upon receipt of email messages,
automatically set away after the defined period of inactivity, and have your
own ignore, visible, and invisible lists. It can also associate events with
sounds, make log of events, and allows arrangement of contacts into groups.
WARNING: This is the development version of centerim. There's no proof that
it will build and/or run properly on your system. But we will be happy to
get some feedback if you experience any problems.
For testing purposes, all available protocols are enabled in this port.
If you don't agree to these facts, you should probable use net-im/centerim
release version.
CenterIM is a fork of CenterICQ.
CenterIM is a text mode menu- and window-driven IM interface that supports the
ICQ2000, Yahoo!, MSN, AIM, Gadu-Gadu and IRC protocols as well as posting to
LiveJournal aggregating RSS feeds.
It allows you to send, receive, and forward messages, URLs, SMSes, contacts,
and email express messages. It also lets you set your own and fetch others'
away messages, and define external handlers for incoming events. You can mass
message-send, search for users, view users' details, maintain your contact
list directly from the program, view the message history, register a new UIN
and update your details, be informed upon receipt of email messages,
automatically set away after the defined period of inactivity, and have your
own ignore, visible, and invisible lists. It can also associate events with
sounds, make log of events, and allows arrangement of contacts into groups.
The development of CenterIM is currently quite active, but is still happy
to find more users helping with contributing bug reports, suggestions,
feedback and code.
If you're interested in joining our community, feel free to inform about our
mailing lists on the CenterIM homepage or on #centerim at the Freenode IRC.
OnionCat is a VPN-adapter which allows to connect two or more computers or
networks through VPN-tunnels. It is designed to use the anonymization networks
Tor or I2P as its transport, hence, it provides location-based anonymity while
still creating tunnel end points with private unique IP addresses.
OnionCat uses IPv6 as native layer 3 network protocol. The clients
connected by it appear as on a single logical IPv6 network as being connected
by a virtual switch. OnionCat automatically calculates and assigns unique IPv6
addresses to the tunnel end points which are derived from the hidden service
ID (onion ID) of the hidden service of the local Tor client, or the local I2P
server destination, respectively. This technique provides authentication
between the onion ID and the layer 3 address, hence, defeats IP spoofing
within the OnionCat VPN.
If necessary, OnionCat can of course transport IPv4 as well. Although it has
native IP support, the suggested way to do this is to configure an
IPv4-in-IPv6 tunnel.
3[APA3A] tiny proxy 3Proxy (pronounce it as "Zaraza tiny proxy") is really
tiny cross-platform (Win32&Unix) proxy servers set. It includes HTTP proxy
with HTTPS and FTP support, SOCKSv4/SOCKSv4.5/SOCKSv5 proxy, POP3 proxy,
TCP and UDP portmappers. You can use every proxy as a standalone program
(socks, proxy, tcppm, udppm, pop3p) or use combined program (3proxy).
Combined proxy additionally supports features like access control,
bandwidth limiting, limiting daily/weekly/monthly traffic amount, proxy
chaining, log rotation, sylog and ODBC logging, etc. It's created to be
small, simple (I'd like to say secure - but it's just a beta) and yet
functional. It may be compiled with Visual C or gcc. Native Win32 version
included in archive and supports installation as NT/2K/XP service.
Currently 3proxy is tested to work under Windows 98/NT/2000/2003/XP,
FreeBSD/i386, Linux/i386, Linux/Alpha. See Release Notes and Changes for
features list.
3proxy is FreeWare. It can be used under terms of GNU/GPL or under its own
license (please read License Agreement).
For licensing or commercial support please e-mail to 3proxy@3proxy.ru
Sippy B2BUA is a RFC3261-compliant Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
Back-to-back user agent (B2BUA) server software.
The B2BUA is a SIP call controlling component. Unlike a SIP proxy, which only
maintains transaction state, the B2BUA maintains complete call state and
participates in all call requests. For this reason it can perform number of
functions that are not possible to implement using SIP proxy, such as for
example accurate call accounting, pre-paid rating and billing, fail over call
routing etc. Unlike PBX-type solutions such as Asterisk for example, the B2BUA
doesn't perform any media relaying or processing, therefore it doesn't
introduce any additional packet loss, delay or jitter into the media path.
Features:
o Realtime calls control and call data records (CDRs) generation;
o Optional ability to use Sippy RTPproxy for media relaying;
o Optional ability to perform Cisco-compatible RADIUS AAA (Authentication,
Authorization and Accounting);
o RFC3261 compliance;
o RFC3326 support;
o IPv6 support;
o Seamless compatibility with majority of popular SIP software and hardware
on the market today;
o Robustness and Resilience.
BIBVIEW
(graphical interface for BibTeX program)
by Holger Martin, Peter Urban, Armin Liebl
liebla@informatik.tu-muenchen.de
The program "bibview" is a graphical interface for manipulating
BibTeX databases. It supports the user in making new entries,
searching for entries and moving entries from one BiB to another.
It is possible to work with more than one BiB simultaneously.
bibview is implemented with Xt and Athena Widgets.
There are six types of windows in bibview:
The main window contains menus for customizing bibview and
for working with BiBs on the file level.
The bibliography window (one for every open BiB) contains commands
for manipulating the BiB.
The list window (at most one for every open BiB) shows a list of
entries. It displays the fields author, title, type and year.
The card window (at most one for every entry) helps editing an entry.
It contains boxes for each field of the entry (according to the type).
The fields can be edited by putting the mouse cursor into the field.
Macros in fields and the symbol for concatenation ('#') are marked
with a preceding '@'.