gcombust is a GTK+ frontend for mkisofs and cdrecord.
At this moment every release of gcombust isn't always very well tested; it
would probably be wise to test it with the -dummy option at first to check that
I haven't made any stupid errors. Also, it prints the command it's executing to
stdout so you can look at it and maybe spot errors.
I love to receive feedback/comments/ideas/bugreports at:
jmunsin@iki.fi (jmunsin@abo.fi)
NOTE: If you decide to do a NLS translation of gcombust, it might be a good
idea to mail me about it to make sure no one else is doing one for the
same language.
geomWatch is a program for monitoring the well-being of GEOM providers and ZFS
pools. It checks the state of each configured provider and pool at a configured
interval, and, if it notices that a component has been lost, or encounters a
problem during the check, it will send an e-mail with details of the matter--
such as what components were lost and which remain, or, in the event of a
problem, what the problem was--to an arbitrary number of recipients, so that
corrective action can be taken (for example, replacing a failed disk).
-Boris Kochergin <spawk@acm.poly.edu>
GKrellM-gkfreq is a plugin to GKrellM that displays the current CPU
frequencies.
gkleds is a GKrellM plugin which monitors the CapsLock, NumLock and
ScrollLock keys and reports their current status via on-screen LEDs.
This is useful for people who have keyboards without LEDs (typically
cordless keyboards).
GKrellFire is a plugin for GKrellM - it shows the system load as a flame.
Flynn is a guy who suffers from your activity, i.e. the applications
consuming precious processor time. Hurt him plenty!
This is a GkrellM2 plugin that displays a variable number of user-defined,
automatically scaled icons. The icons may be used either for notification
or as application launchers.
gksu is a Gtk+ frontend to /bin/su. It supports login shells and preserving
environment when acting as a su frontend. It is useful to menu items or other
graphical programs that need to ask a user's password to run another program
as another user.
This is a GNOME program to manage devices and device drivers. It's
inspired by hal-device-manager, from the HAL project, but rewritten in
C for efficiency and an outlook to actually make it manage devices
rather than just show information.
GNOME Power Manager is a GNOME session daemon that acts as a policy agent
on top of HAL (the Hardware Abstraction Layer). GNOME Power Manager listens
for HAL events and responds with user-configurable reactions.
Currently it supports laptop batteries and AC adapters. Its goal is to be
architecture neutral and free of polling and other hacks.