Tsito plays XiangQi (Chinese Chess) against the user or it referees two
players. It can be used on the console (or an xterm) or can communicate through
pipes to a GUI frontend. If used in a console it uses ASCII characters to
display the board on the screen.
'tsito', stands for "The Secret Inside The Orange".
XJig is a puzzle, that tries to replicate a jigsaw puzzle on the
screen as close as possible. Gif-images can be loaded and sliced
into pieces and as in every jigsaw puzzle, the goal is to
set the parts together again.
Masterball is a puzzle similar in nature to the famous Rubik's Cube.
The original puzzle has 8 sectors on a sphere (longitudinal cuts),
with each sector divided into 4 segments (latitudinal cuts).
By building from the source and editing its Imakefile before the
``build'' phase, you may be able to use Motif or LessTif with this port.
Plee The Bear will be a 2D platform jump and run game, as fun as
the best platform games of the 90's (the golden age of this kind
of games). You're a bear, trying to catch his son, which ran away
after he ate all your honey.
Gwenview is a fast and easy to use image viewer for KDE.
Features:
- Supports simple image manipulations: rotate, mirror, flip, and resize.
- Supports basic file management actions such as copy, move, delete,
and others.
- Functions both as a standalone application and an embedded viewer
in the Konqueror web browser.
- Can be extended using KIPI plugins.
LPROF is the only open source ICC profiler with a graphical user
interface. It can be used to create ICC version 2 compliant profiles
for cameras, scanners and monitors. As such it fills a necessary
niche in the emerging open source color management effort.
Quick Image Viewer (qiv) is a very small and pretty fast GDK/Imlib2 image
viewer. It has such nifty features as: zoom, maxpect, scaledown,
screensaver, flip, delete, brightness / contrast / gamma correction, and
can also be used to set your X11 background. All from a commandline.
This is primarily a library for reading portable bitmap (PBM),
portable graymap (PGM), and portable pixmap (PPM) files. These image
formats are only the barest step up from raw data, and have a very
simple format which is the key to be "portable". Writing out images in
these formats is very easy.
deegree's Web Coverage Service (WCS) is able to read coverages from
different storage formats and deliver it to any client that is able to
perform an according HTTP GET or POST request. At the moment supported
formats are limited to several raster data formats; but in general a
coverage has not to be a raster dataset at all.
It's a Ruby script that loads the application classes and analyzes its
properties (attributes, methods) and relationships (inheritance, model
associations like has_many, etc.) The output is a graph description in
the DOT language, suitable to be handled with tools like Graphviz.