The diction Install diction package contains a tool called style, which analyses the surface characteristics of the writing style of a document. It prints various readability grades, length of words, sentences and paragraphs. It can further locate sentences with certain characteristics.
CTparental is a free and open-source parental control tool used to control computer usage or internet browsing. It comes with a simple and easy-to-use web interface powered by a Lighttpd web server. The idea of CTparental tool comes from other tools such as, iptables, dnsmasq, and inguardian privoxy.
QEMU is quick; it's a hypervisor that allows you to run virtual machines with complete operating systems that operate like any other program on your desktop.
KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux on x86 hardware containing virtualization extensions (Intel VT or AMD-V). It consists of a loadable kernel module, kvm.ko, that provides the core virtualization infrastructure and a processor specific module, kvm-intel.ko or kvm-amd.ko.
Explains how to install and use Gixy tool to analyze Nginx configuration to prevent security misconfiguration and automate flaw detection on Linux or Unix-like system.
Caret-Navigation, Suchen/Ersetzen, Test-Preview/Undo, Vim-Powers, ... – Renamer-Vim-Plugin von John Orr | s.a. man rename | alias edir="vim -c 'Renamer'"
Remote terminal application that allows roaming, supports intermittent connectivity, and provides intelligent local echo and line editing of user keystrokes.
Mosh is a replacement for SSH. It's more robust and responsive, especially over Wi-Fi, cellular, and long-distance links.
Mosh is free software, available for GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, and Mac OS X.
"...an open source software application designed to significantly reduce the amount of spam (Internet junk-mail) you receive." whitelists, blacklists, challenge/response, tagged addresses, ...
"...a toolset for a wide range of organizations and people that want to improve their safety and security on the Internet. Using Tor can help you anonymize web browsing and publishing, instant messaging, IRC, SSH, ..."
Settings>Preferences>Advanced>Browse on double click & in der Artikelliste: Minimal display mode & einfacher Klick auf Artikeltitel, um Inhalt zu lesen die kleinen Zahlen neben Feed und Guide sind anklickbar (=Mark as read)
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/3529 http://wiki.43folders.com/index.php/Remind_FAQ Termine wie z.B. "jeder letzte Mittwoch im Monat" sind damit einfach
leichtgewichtiger, tabellarisch-aufteilender Fenster-Manager für Linux u. Tastaturfreunde; Nach etwas Kosmetik (Styles, Keybindings, ...) ist der sehr brauchbar - gerade auch im Mehrbildschirmbetrieb; reduziert Aufmerksamkeit fürs Window-Management
The website of Laurence Anthony. Associate Professor at Waseda University Japan developer of AntConc, a freeware concordancer software program for Windows, Linux, and Macintosh OS X
dupeGuru is a tool to find duplicate files on your computer. It can scan either filenames or contents. The filename scan features a fuzzy matching algorithm that can find duplicate filenames even when they are not exactly the same. dupeGuru runs on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.
dupeGuru is efficient. Find your duplicate files in minutes, thanks to its quick fuzzy matching algorithm. dupeGuru not only finds filenames that are the same, but it also finds similar filenames.
dupeGuru is customizable. You can tweak its matching engine to find exactly the kind of duplicates you want to find. The Preference page of the help file lists all the scanning engine settings you can change.
dupeGuru is safe. Its engine has been especially designed with safety in mind. Its reference directory system as well as its grouping system prevent you from deleting files you didn't mean to delete.
Do whatever you want with your duplicates. Not only can you delete duplicates files dupeGuru finds, but you can also move or copy them elsewhere. There are also multiple ways to filter and sort your results to easily weed out false duplicates (for low threshold scans).
Supported languages: English, French.
Requirements
Mac OS X: 10.5 and up (Leopard, Snow Leopard or Lion). PowerPC or Intel. (Last version to support Tiger: v2.8.2)
Windows: 2k/XP/Vista/Win7.
Linux: Ubuntu 10.04
Dolt - a high-performance drop-in libtool replacement About Dolt Dolt provides a drop-in replacement for libtool that significantly decreases compile times on the platforms it supports. Rather than the libtool approach of running a large script for every compile that repeatedly figures out how to build libraries on the platform, dolt figures out those details at configure time and writes out a minimal doltcompile script containing only the commands needed to build a library on the current platform. If you use automake, autoconf, and libtool, then using dolt just requires two steps: 1. add DOLT after the call to LT_INIT, AC_PATH_LIBTOOL, or AM_PATH_LIBTOOL in your configure.ac or configure.in script, and 2. append dolt.m4 to your project's acinclude.m4. For any platform Dolt does not support, it will transparently fall back to libtool.
A next-generation package manager called Nix provides a simple distribution-independent method for deploying a binary or source package on different flavours of Linux. Even better, Nix does not interfere with existing package managers. Nix allows different versions of software to live side by side, and permits sane rollbacks of software upgrades. Nix is a useful system administration tool for heterogeneous environments and developers who write software supported on different libraries, compilers, or interpreters. Why provide yet another package manager? Because current package managers fall short in the upgrade cycle. Everyone gets burnt by software dependencies, at some point. In particular, with a major release of any given distribution, many people choose not to upgrade until it is time to do a fresh install. With Nix, upgrades are always safe: they don't overwrite previously installed packages. This means previous versions will continue to work, and you can easily roll back.
Referencer is a Gnome application to organise documents or references, and ultimately generate a BibTeX bibliography file. Referencer includes a number of features to make this process easier: * Smart web links Referencer uses documents' metadata to provide handy links to the document's web location — no need to maintain your own bookmarks. * Import from BibTeX, Reference Manager and EndNote No need to start from scratch — Referencer will import your existing bibliography files using the BibUtils library. * Tagging No need to organise your documents into rigid directory trees — with Referencer you can use tags to categorise your documents. * Automatic arXiv, PubMed and CrossRef metadata retrieval If you show Referencer a PDF which has an arXiv ID or DOI code, Referencer will retrieve the metadata for this document over the internet. * Python plugin support Referencer can be extended using the versatile Python scripting language. * Localisation