LMMS aims to be a free alternative to popular (but commercial and
closed-source) programs like FruityLoops, Cubase and Logic giving you the
ability of producing music with your computer by creating cool loops,
synthesizing and mixing sounds, arranging samples, having more fun with your
MIDI keyboard and much more...
LMMS combines the features of a tracker/sequencer program (pattern/channel/
sample/song/effect management) and those of powerful synthesizers and samplers
in a modern, user-friendly and easy to use graphical user interface.
Esmska is a cross-platform application for sending GSM SMS over the Internet.
It uses publicly available web gateways and sends messages through them. This
way it can be much more comfortable than using a web browser or a mobile phone.
Features:
* Send SMS through various gateways (local or international, free or paid)
* Supports all common operating systems (Linux, Windows, Mac OS, etc.)
* Free, under open-source licence GNU AGPL3+
* Import contacts from vCard files or third-party programs (DreamCom)
* Send SMS to multiple recipients at once
* History of sent messages
* Pluggable gateway system - easy to provide support for more gateways
directly by users
* Extensive possibilities of changing appearance
* Many other planned features
buzhug is a fast, pure-Python database engine, using a syntax that Python
programmers should find very intuitive.
The data is stored and accessed on disk (it is not an in-memory database);
the implementation has been designed to make all operations, and especially
selection, as fast as possible with an interpreted language.
The database is implemented as a Python iterator, yielding objects whose
attributes are the fields defined when the base is created ; therefore,
requests can be expressed as list comprehensions or generator expressions,
instead of SQL queries.
his module contains a function to return an iterator (see the Iterator
module) that returns the rows of a database query, one at a time.
This is marginally more useful than simply calling prepare and execute,
and then repeatedly calling fetchrow_hashref; since this one function
bundles up the calls to all three of those DBI methods.
But the real usefulness of this interface is that it can be chained
together with other Iterator functions. The "idb_rows" iterator has the
same interface as any other interface, making it interchangeable with
iterators of any other source (for example, files), and usable with the
iterator manipulation functions in the Iterator::Util module.
A better alternative to the native transaction signals of Django.
Sometimes you need to fire off an action related to the current database
transaction, but only if the transaction successfully commits. Examples:
a Celery task, an email notification, or a cache invalidation.
Doing this correctly while accounting for savepoints that might be
individually rolled back, closed/dropped connections, and idiosyncrasies of
various databases, is non-trivial. Transaction signals just make it easier
to do it wrong.
django-transaction-hooks does the heavy lifting so you don't have to.
gnome-blog lets you post to bloggerAPI and MetaWeblog compatible blogs
including blogger.com, blogspot.com, advogato.org, pyblosxom, moveable-type.
Features:
* Operates as a panel object ("applet") or a standalone application
* Clean interface doesn't get in the way of what you're writing
* WYSIWYG styled text support
* Entries can be written gradually over the course of a day, popping
gnome blog open and closed as you have thoughts to jot down and
then posting at the end of the day
* Supports many different kinds of blogs
Bennu is a high level open source game development suite which
focuses on modularity and portability, making it a perfect choice
for cross-platform game development.
Although officialy it is only supported on Windows, Linux and GP2X
Wiz (on the right), Bennu can run on multiple other platforms,
including *BSD, MacOSX and other consoles such as the Wii, Dingoo
A320, GP2X, or the classic Xbox.
This makes it really fun to code in Bennu: the game can be played
on you computer AND your console!
Bennu is a high level open source game development suite which
focuses on modularity and portability, making it a perfect choice
for cross-platform game development.
Although officialy it is only supported on Windows, Linux and GP2X
Wiz (on the right), Bennu can run on multiple other platforms,
including *BSD, MacOSX and other consoles such as the Wii, Dingoo
A320, GP2X, or the classic Xbox.
This makes it really fun to code in Bennu: the game can be played
on you computer AND your console!
BSDBuild is a simple, self-contained and portable build system derived from the
traditional 4.4BSD share/mk files. BSDBuild uses BSD-style makefiles, but
without BSD make extensions (it uses standard Bourne script fragments instead),
so the build system is portable to most operating systems and make flavors.
Because BSDBuild is implemented as a library, Makefiles never need to be
recompiled (unless a separate build is requested). BSDBuild can also generate
pure Bourne ./configure scripts, which function similarly to GNU-style
configure scripts (as far as end-users are concerned), but are compiled using
Perl modules instead of macro packages.
An extension Library
This is mostly to fill in some gaps in the standard and Unix
libraries, either for completeness or because they're things I find
myself needing a lot of the time, and a few modules that aren't worthy
of being their own releases. Enjoy. Most of this used to be part of an
old library (stew) that I broke up into a couple of smaller ones. This
one /was/ extlib, now annexlib. Its companion is mathlib.
See supplied documentation for additional info.