This is a port of asr10, which provides access to SCSI devices,
floppies and image files from Ensoniq EPS/EPS+/ASR samplers.
Includes:
asr10: for ftp-like access to drives and image files,
wav2asr: for a conversion of WAV-files to asr-inst-files.
Base64 is a command line utility which encodes/decodes arbitrary
binary information in the base64 format used by MIME-encoded
documents, such as electronic mail messages with embedded files
(RFC 1341 and successors).
Converts R object into JSON objects and vice-versa
BSD licensed charset/encoding converter library with more function than
libiconv. (Currently, only a few codecs are supported)
This is a port of btoa version 5.2, written by Paul Rutter, Joe
Orost & Stefan Parmark. btoa converts 4 binary characters to 5
ascii ones, causing a 25% expansion. (btoa is thus more efficient
than uuencode, which causes a 33% expansion.) Spaces will not be
used, which should make it safe to send files over e-mail or Usenet
without risking that blanks become tabs. Each resulting row of
text has a single-byte checksum for error detection. A diagnosis
file provides a list of errors found this way, which could then be
used to retransmit only the failing lines.
Patch 1 is an unofficial, non-platform-specific patch to version
5.2 of btoa. It allows for automatic decoding of btoa files if
the program is invoked as "atob" (no -a argument necessary). It
also outfits the Makefile to do clean and install.
These programs convert between textual and binary representations of numbers.
ascii2binary reads input consisting of textual representations of numbers
separated by whitespace and produces as output the binary equivalents. The type
and precision of the binary output is selected using command line flags.
binary2ascii reads input consisting of binary numbers and converts them to
their textual representation. Command line flags specify the type and size
of the binary numbers and provide control over the format of the output.
Unsigned integers may be written out in binary, octal, decimal, or hexadecimal.
Signed integers may be written out only in binary or decimal. Floating point
numbers may be written out only decimal, either in standard or scientific
notation. (If you want to examine the binary representation of floating point
numbers, just treat the input as a sequence of unsigned characters.)
The two programs are useful for generating test data, for inspecting binary
files, and for interfacing programs that generate textual output to programs
that require binary input and conversely. They can also be useful when it is
desired to reformat numbers.
BibTeXConv is a BibTeX file converter which allows one to export
BibTeX entries to other formats, including customly defined
text output. Furthermore, it provides the possibility to
check URLs (including MD5, size and MIME type computations)
and to verify ISBN and ISSN numbers.
Chmview is a simple program to decompose .chm-file to the
components. Originally it was written for MS Windows to work
in conjunction with Far filemanager.
This is a port of cmios9, which provides ftp-like access to
Fairlight OS9 + MDR-DOS + QDOS floppy/hard disk image files and devices.
Fairlight system Filesystem(s) Machine type
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CMI Series I QDOS Sampler
CMI Series II QDOS Sampler
CMI Series IIx QDOS Sampler
CMI Series III OS9 Sampler
MFX1 OS9 Sampler + Hard disk recorder
MFX2 OS9 + MDR-DOS Sampler + Hard disk recorder
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This is a code converter on TTY. It transparently filters a TTY
converting characters from one encoding to another.
e.g.
$ cocot -p euc-jp -t utf-8 screen -xRR wb