h5utils is a set of utilities for visualization and conversion of
scientific data in the free, portable HDF5 format.
Besides providing a simple tool for batch visualization as PNG images,
h5utils also includes programs to convert HDF5 datasets into the formats
required by other free visualization software (e.g. plain text, Vis5d,
and VTK).
This module will tell you if a number, either in words or as digits,
is a cardinal or ordinal number.
This is useful if you e.g. want to distinguish these types of numbers
found with Lingua::EN::FindNumber and take different actions.
This module will attempt to load find and load a configuration file of
various types. Currently it supports YAML, JSON, XML, INI and Perl formats.
To support the distinction between development and production environments,
this module will also attemp to load a local config (e.g. myapp_local.yaml)
which will override any duplicate settings.
It is an analog clock displaying the system-time.
It leverages the new visual features offered by Xorg 6.9/7.0 in combination
with a compositing-manager (e.g. like xcompmgr), gtk+ 2.8.x, cairo 1.0.2 and
librsvg 2.13.93 to produce a time-display with pretty-pixels.
Dbmail is the name of a group of programs that enable the possibility of
storing and retrieving mail messages from a database (currently MySQL,
PostgreSQL or SQLite).
* Scalability.
Dbmail is as scalable as the database system that is used for the mail
storage. In theory millions of accounts can be managed using dbmail. One
could, for example, run 4 different servers with the pop3 daemon each
connecting to the same database (cluster) server.
* Manageability.
Dbmail is based upon a database. Dbmail can be managed by changing settings
in the database (f.e. using PHP/Perl/SQL), without needing shell access.
* Speed.
Dbmail uses very efficient, database specific queries for retrieving mail
information. This is much faster then parsing a filesystem.
* Security.
Dbmail has got nothing to do with the filesystem or interaction with other
programs in the Unix environment which need special permissions. Dbmail is
as secure as the database it's based upon.
* Flexibility.
Changes on a Dbmail system (adding of users, changing passwords etc.) are
effective immediately.
Dbmail is the name of a group of programs that enable the possibility of
storing and retrieving mail messages from a database (currently MySQL,
PostgreSQL or SQLite).
* Scalability.
Dbmail is as scalable as the database system that is used for the mail
storage. In theory millions of accounts can be managed using dbmail. One
could, for example, run 4 different servers with the pop3 daemon each
connecting to the same database (cluster) server.
* Manageability.
Dbmail is based upon a database. Dbmail can be managed by changing settings
in the database (f.e. using PHP/Perl/SQL), without needing shell access.
* Speed.
Dbmail uses very efficient, database specific queries for retrieving mail
information. This is much faster then parsing a filesystem.
* Security.
Dbmail has got nothing to do with the filesystem or interaction with other
programs in the Unix environment which need special permissions. Dbmail is
as secure as the database it's based upon.
* Flexibility.
Changes on a Dbmail system (adding of users, changing passwords etc.) are
effective immediately.
Nulib is a shell-based NuFX archive utility, based loosely on ARC for the
IBM PC and ar(1) under Unix. It allows you to perform certain operations
on the same archives used by ShrinkIt, e.g. view archive contents, add to
archive, extract from archive, and delete from archive. Additionally, it
will list and unpack files from Binary II archives.
This is a Fluid (R3) General MIDI soundfonts, for use with any modern MIDI
synthesizer: hardware (like the EMU10K1 sound card), or software (like e.g.
FluidSynth).
This package provides both the larger GM sound set and smaller GS sound set
of Roland Sound Canvas extensions.
ifp-line is a simple command-line tool to provide basic
functionality to manage files on iRiver music players
which are using the "manager firmware".
Using this tool, you can
o add/remove files on the player
o view information about the player, e.g. battery status
o flash your firmware using an .hex file
Velvet is a de novo genomic assembler specially designed for short read
sequencing technologies, such as Solexa or 454, developed by Daniel Zerbino
and Ewan Birney at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI).
Citation:
Velvet: algorithms for de novo short read assembly using de Bruijn graphs.
D.R. Zerbino and E. Birney. Genome Research 18: 821-829 (2008)