This is an uptimes.net client. See http://www.uptimes.net/ for a
description. Note that after installing this port, you MUST edit
the yaunc.conf file and set the hid, username and password.
Uptime Client is a little program that keeps track of your uptime and
sends it to a server where you can compare it to many other hosts and
browse through various statistical information.
Database of all known ID's used in USB devices: ID's of vendors, devices,
subsystems and device classes
This package contains implementations of UTF-aware wc, fmt,
expand, and unexpand.
"Vifm is a ncurses based file manager with vi like keybindings. If you
use vi, vifm gives you complete keyboard control over your files without
having to learn a new set of commands."
Features:
- two file list windows
- bookmarks
- user-defined association of file types/extensions with multiple
applications per extension
- visual mode for selecting files
- user-defined commands
Approximate matching searching utilities to search for manpages and files.
This package holds THREE little search utilities:
* whichman -- search utility for man pages and it works
much like the well known Unix command "where".
* ftff -- a fault tolerant file finder
ftff works like the whichman above but searches the directory
tree. This is a case in-sensitive and fault tolerant way of
'find . -name xxxx -print'
* ftwhich -- a fault tolerant "which" command
ftwhich finds files (programs) which are in one of the directories in
your PATH and uses a fault tolerant search algorithm.
The window utility implements a window environment on ASCII terminals.
It was once distributed as part of the base system. This version includes
several code fixes such as removal of 'register' keyword.
wmScoreBoard is a Window Maker Dock App that shows the current (or
final) score to a game that a specified team is playing in. The
app currently gets its scores from Excite.
A dockapp calendar with monthly view and interface to iCalendar based
calendars like Ximian Evolution or Mozilla calendar.
Find paths between two keys in the OpenPGP Web of Trust, and get statistics
about a key or the whole web.
Observe:
* We only search the largest strongly connected set.
* No attempt is made to verify the signatures. For you to be able to trust
a path, you must verify all signatures yourself.
* Even if there exists a path between you and another key, you have to
trust the other people in at least one path in the graph to trust the key.
Keys can be specified as normal key IDs (0x12345678 or 12345678), or a number
of space-separated case-insensitive search terms (i.e. "rms@gnu.org" or
"@gnu Stallman").