The goal of the game is to reach the highest possible score. You get a limited
number of pipes on each level and need to combine them to lead the water from
the house at the top of the screen to the storage tank at the bottom. For each
pipe water goes through, you get 20 points and if you fill the cross-pipe both
ways, you get 60 points. At end of each level, you are awarded depending on the
skill level:
* Beginner: 100 points
* Toolman: 100 points + number of pipes remaining
* Master plumber: 100 points + 2 x number of pipes remaining
Some of the levels also have obstacles where you cannot place pipes. The game
is playable with joystick/joypad: just move it and press buttons when you go to
Options -> Configure controls
A command-line tool to download picturs and control still digital cameras
based on Sierra Imaging chipset and compatibles
(Olympus, Nikon, Epson, Agfa and some others).
This is a library and a command-line frontend to manipulate digital still
cameras based on Fujitsu chipset and Sierra Imaging firmware. The
program is known to work with Agfa, Epson, Olympus, Sanyo and Nikon (at
least CoolPix 900, 950 and 8x0 but not CoolPix 600!) cameras.
The cameras typically come with software for Windows and for Mac, and no
description of the protocol. With this tool, they are managable from a
UNIX box. Bruce D. Lightner <lightner@lightner.net> has added support
for Win32 and DOS platforms. Note that the program does not have any
GUI, it is plain command-line even on Windows.
Geomview and OOGL are part of an ongoing effort at the Geometry Center
to provide interactive 3D graphics software which is particularly
appropriate for displaying the kinds of objects and doing the kinds of
operations of interest in mathematics research and education. You can
compute an OOGL data file of a mathematical object that would be
difficult or impossible to build a model of in the real world. In
geomview, besides examining an object in ordinary Euclidean 3-space,
you can look at objects in hyperbolic 3-space and Euclidean 4-space.
The hyperbolic model is the projective one, where geodesics are
straight lines and isometries are represented as 4x4 projective
matrices. While geomview is tailored for mathematical visualization,
it is written to be extensible and can serve as a general-purpose
tool. Its functionality can be extended in an almost unlimited fashion
by external modules.
OpenRM Scene Graph is set of tools and utilities that implement a
high performance, flexible and extendible scene graph API. Underneath
OpenRM, OpenGL(tm) is used as the graphics platform for rendering,
so OpenRM is highly portable and can deliver blazing rendering speeds.
OpenRM can be used on any platform that has OpenGL, and has been
built and tested on:
x86 Linux (s/w via Mesa, h/w using vendor drivers, e.g., nVidia)
Irix
Solaris
FreeBSD
Win32 (95/98/NT/2K/ME).
OpenRM is a derivative work of RM Scene Graph (tm), a commercial
scene graph product from R3vis Corporation. Late in 1999, R3vis announced
the release of OpenRM into the Open Source community, with the
OpenRM debut occuring on 1 March 2000. R3vis continues to maintain
and develop RM Scene Graph, which contains additional features not
present in OpenRM.
ExifTool is a highly customizable Perl script and module for reading and
writing meta information in images.
ExifTool reads EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP, GeoTIFF, ICC Profile and Photoshop
IRB and ID3 meta information from JPG, JP2, TIFF, GIF, BMP, PICT, QTIF,
PNG, MNG, JNG, MIFF, PPM, PGM, PBM, XMP, EPS, PS, AI, PDF, PSD, DCM,
ACR, THM, CRW, CR2, MRW, NEF, PEF, ORF, RAF, RAW, SRF, MOS, X3F and DNG
images, MP3 and WAV audio files, and AVI, MOV and MP4 videos. ExifTool
also extracts information from the maker notes of many digital cameras
by various manufacturers including Canon, Casio, FujiFilm, JVC/Victor,
Kodak, Leaf, Minolta/Konica-Minolta, Nikon, Olympus/Epson,
Panasonic/Leica, Pentax/Asahi, Ricoh, Sanyo and Sigma/Foveon.
ExifTool writes EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP and MakerNotes meta information to
JPEG, TIFF, GIF, CRW, THM, CR2, NEF, PEF and DNG images.
ExifTool is a highly customizable Perl script and module for reading and
writing meta information in images.
ExifTool reads EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP, GeoTIFF, ICC Profile and Photoshop
IRB and ID3 meta information from JPG, JP2, TIFF, GIF, BMP, PICT, QTIF,
PNG, MNG, JNG, MIFF, PPM, PGM, PBM, XMP, EPS, PS, AI, PDF, PSD, DCM,
ACR, THM, CRW, CR2, MRW, NEF, PEF, ORF, RAF, RAW, SRF, MOS, X3F and DNG
images, MP3 and WAV audio files, and AVI, MOV and MP4 videos. ExifTool
also extracts information from the maker notes of many digital cameras
by various manufacturers including Canon, Casio, FujiFilm, JVC/Victor,
Kodak, Leaf, Minolta/Konica-Minolta, Nikon, Olympus/Epson,
Panasonic/Leica, Pentax/Asahi, Ricoh, Sanyo and Sigma/Foveon.
ExifTool writes EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP and MakerNotes meta information to
JPEG, TIFF, GIF, CRW, THM, CR2, NEF, PEF and DNG images.
pyglet provides an object-oriented programming interface for
developing games and other visually-rich applications for Windows,
Mac OS X and Linux. Some of the features of pyglet are:
* No external dependencies or installation requirements. For most
application and game requirements, pyglet needs nothing else besides
Python, simplifying distribution and installation.
* Take advantage of multiple windows and multi-monitor desktops.
pyglet allows you to use as many windows as you need, and is fully
aware of multi-monitor setups for use with fullscreen games.
* Load images, sound, music and video in almost any format. pyglet
can optionally use AVbin to play back audio formats such as MP3,
OGG/Vorbis and WMA, and video formats such as DivX, MPEG-2, H.264,
WMV and Xvid.
pyglet is provided under the BSD open-source license, allowing you
to use it for both commerical and other open-source projects with
very little restriction.
This is a port of the ircd-ratbox IRC daemon.
ircd-ratbox is the primary ircd used on EFnet; it combines the stability
of an ircd required for a large production network together with a rich
set of features, making it also suitable for use on smaller networks.
Changes Include:
o Optional SSL support to enable encrypted connections between clients
and servers, as well as server to server links.
o Add support for SSL only channels, channel mode +S.
o sqlite3 for handling and storing k/x/d lines.
o Support for global CIDR limits.
o Added adminwall allowing admins to broadcast messages to each other.
o Creation of new library archive 'libratbox'.
o Support for forced nick changes (instead of collision kills).
o New ssld and bandb processes for SSL connections and ban checking;
these allow ratbox-3 to make better use of multi-processor systems.
dircproxy is an IRC proxy server designed for people who use IRC
from lots of different workstations or clients, but wish to remain
connected and see what they missed while they were away. You connect
to IRC through dircproxy, and it keeps you connected to the server,
even after you detach your client from it. While you're detached,
it logs channel and private messages as well as important events,
and when you re-attach it'll let you know what you missed.
This can be used to give you roughly the same functionality as
using ircII and screen together, except you can use whatever IRC
client you like, including X ones!
dircproxy has a whole host of features. Please read the file README in
the source distribution for a list.
XJDIC V2.3, XJDSERVER V2.3 -- (Copyright: J.W. Breen - 1998)
XJDIC is an electronic Japanese-English dictionary program designed to
operate in the X11 window environment. In particular, it must run in an
"xterm" environment which has Japanese language support such as provided
by "kterm" or internationalized xterm, aixterm, etc.
It is based on JDIC and JREADER which were developed to run under MS-DOS
on IBM PCs or clones.
XJDIC functions as:
(a) an English to Japanese dictionary (eiwa jiten), searching for and
displaying entries for key-words entered in English;
(b) a Japanese to English dictionary (waei jiten), searching for and
displaying entries for keywords or phrases entered in Japanese (kanji,
hiragana or katakana);
(c) a Japanese-English Character dictionary (kanei jiten), capable of
selecting kanji characters by JIS code, radical, stroke count, Nelson
Index number or reading, and displaying compounds containing that kanji.