Netatalk is an OpenSource software package, that can be used to turn an
inexpensive *NIX machine into an extremely high-performance and reliable
file server for Macintosh computers.
Using Netatalk's AFP 3.2 compliant file-server leads to significantly higher
transmission speeds compared with Macs accessing a server via SaMBa/NFS
while providing clients with the best possible user experience (full support
for Macintosh metadata, flawlessly supporting mixed environments of classic
MacOS and MacOS X clients)
Due to Netatalk speaking AppleTalk, the print-server task can provide
printing clients with full AppleTalk support as well as the server itself
with printing capabilities for AppleTalk-only printers. Starting with
version 2.0, Netatalk seamlessly interacts with CUPS on the server.
After all, Netatalk can be used to act as an AppleTalk router, providing
both segmentation and zone names in Macintosh networks.
Spectrwm (previously known as scrotwm) is a small dynamic tiling window
manager for X11. It tries to stay out of the way so that valuable screen
real estate can be used for much more important stuff. It has sane
defaults and does not require one to learn a language to do any
configuration. It was written by hackers for hackers and it strives to be
small, compact and fast.
It was largely inspired by xmonad and dwm. Both are fine products but suffer
from things like: crazy-unportable-language-syndrome, silly defaults,
asymmetrical window layout, "how hard can it be?" and good old NIH.
Nevertheless dwm was a phenomenal resource and many good ideas and code was
borrowed from it. On the other hand xmonad has great defaults, key bindings
and xinerama support but is crippled by not being written in C.
Do you ever wish you could cut two or more separate pieces of text
at once from a window? Do you ever need to save the output from one
command for reuse in several subsequent tasks? Do you ever find
yourself wanting some easy means of globally exporting data, e.g.
to a parent shell, to another xterm or application, or to another
machine or user? If you answer yes to any of these questions, then
xcb is for you.
Xcb provides access to the cut buffers built into every X server.
It allows the buffers to be manipulated either via the command line,
or with the mouse in a point and click manner. The buffers can be
used as holding pens to store and retrieve arbitrary data fragments,
so any number of different pieces of data can be saved and recalled later.
The program is designed primarily for use with textual data.
XMascot displays a moving mascot on your X11 screen. XMascot has the
following options:
- Moving pretty mascot moving
- Stretch stretch it as you like
- Talking mascot talks with extract command and data
- Alarm mascot may make some actions at defined time
- BIFF mascot may let you know arriving a mail
XMascot supports these image formats:
- MAG (*.mag) 16 colors and 256 colors
- TIFF (*.tif) 16 colors and 256 colors, in raw or lzw
- PPM (*.ppm) 256 level color, in raw
- PGM (*.pgm) 256 level gray scale, in raw
- PBM (*.pbm) 2 level monochrome, in raw
- PNM (*.pnm) PPM, PGM, or PBM
XMascot distinguishes images from their suffix and can load other image
formats when corresponding *topnm, *topgm, or *topbm commands are found
in your system.
The Netwide Assembler (NASM) is an x86 and amd64 (x86-64) assembler designed
for portability and modularity. It will output flat-form binary files, a.out
(Linux and *BSD), COFF, ELF32, ELF64, Mach-O, Microsoft OMF (OBJ), Win32,
Win64, as86 (Minix/Linux bin86 v0.3), LADsoft IEEE-695, Intel hex, Motorola
S-record, and a home-grown format called RDOFF. NASM syntax is similar to
Intel's, but is less complex. It supports Pentium, P6, MMX, 3DNow!, SSE,
SSE2, SSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, XOP/FMA4/CVT16 (rev 3.03), and x64 opcodes, among
others. It has strong support for macro conventions.
The port also includes NDISASM, a binary file disassembler which uses the
same instruction set as NASM.
John Walker's moontool for the X11 desktop. It shows a real-time picture
of the moon phases and displays some related astronomical data about the
moon and the sun. -- This version of the program uses the Motif toolkit.
pyspatialite is an interface to the SQLite 3.x embedded relational database
engine with spatialite extensions.
It is almost fully compliant with the Python database API version 2.0 also
exposes the unique features of SQLite and spatialite.
FSF gcc-4.10.x for Atmel AVR cross-development
Included is the basic C++ compiler, although this is only of limited
use without a libstdc++.
Supported debugging formats: -gdwarf-2 [default], -gstabs
Dontspace is a solitaire game for X11. It's modeled after
the game ``Free Space'' distributed with Microsoft Windows NT.
Dontspace emphasizes a clean user interface and point-based
scoring.
OpenXcom is an open-source clone of the popular
UFO: Enemy Unknown (X-Com: UFO Defense in USA) videogame by
Microprose, licensed under the GPL and written in C++ / SDL.