FractInt is an IBM PC program to generate fractals, and was written by
the Stone Soup Group.
The Unix port was done by Ken Shirriff and modified by Scott D. Boyd.
The GNOME On-Screen Keyboard (GOK) is an accessibility interface
that gives you control of your system without needing a keyboard.
The GOK makes available a hierarchical button system that enables
keyboardless entry of common accelerators, and contains a
clickable keyboard that sports suggested autocompletion of many
common words, and even some commands. The GOK will provide an
alternative interface to common commands and functions within
applications that utilize the AT SPI.
The GOK is designed to be usable by many alternative input
methods, i.e. not a common keyboard and mouse combination.
KTTS -- KDE Text-to-Speech -- is a subsystem within the KDE desktop
for conversion of text to audible speech. KTTS is currently under
development and aims to become the standard subsystem for all KDE
applications to provide speech output.
Kaccessible implements a QAccessibleBridgePlugin to provide
accessibility services like focus tracking and a screenreader.
This port contains a set of KDE-based applications for
accessibility needs.
Localized messages and documentation for libreoffice
This is bzip2, a advanced block-sorting file compressor. It is
believed to be free from any patents.
The rar archiver adds and extracts files to and from an archive. The
archive is usually a regular file, whose ends in the ".rar" suffix.
The archive could be a medium like a floppy diskette, tape or any other
storage device.
Gzip (GNU zip) is a compression utility designed to be a replacement
for compress. Its main advantages over compress are much better
compression and freedom from patented algorithms.