Wake-on-LAN (or WOL), which—as the name suggests—turns on your PC through your local network. Wake-on-LAN is a breeze to set up and use on your local network, and with a little legwork you can set it up so you can wake your computer away from your hom
The intention for this project is a very simple API to call different kinds of services (provider/technology). Crispy's aims is to provide a single point of entry for remote invocation for a wide number of transports: eg. RMI, EJB, JAX-RPC or XML-RPC. It works by using properties to configure a service manager, which is then used to invoke the remote API. Crispy is a simple Java codebase with an API that sits between your client code and the services your code must access. It provides a layer of abstraction to decouple client code from access to a service, as well as its location and underlying implementation. The special on this idea is, that these calls are simple Java object calls (remote or local calls are transparent).
rsvndump is a command line tool that is able to dump a Subversion repository that resides on a remote server. All data is dumped in the format that can be read an written by svnadmin dump, so the data which is produced can easily be importerd into a new Subversion repository.
Actually, a remote dump can be done using svnsync and svnadmin dump on the locally synced repository. However, if the remote server does not run Subversion 1.5 or later, svnsync is unable to dump subdirectories of a repository only. This can be solved by syncing the whole repository and using svndumpfilter afterwards, but data of other subdirectories needs to be transferred over the network for no reason. And if you don't have access to the repository root, the whole thing will not work.
Long story short: If you want to dump a subdirectory of a remote repository which runs a version of Subversion prior to 1.5, this is the right tool for you. If not, please consider using svnsync.
rsvndump is written in C and built on top of the Subversion API, so it can offer all functionality needed to access a Subversion repository, including SSL authentication. And it's GPLed.
Opticks is an expandable remote sensing and imagery analysis software platform that is free and open source. If you've used other commercial tools like: ERDAS IMAGINE, RemoteView, ENVI, or SOCET GXP, then you need to give Opticks a try. Unlike other competing tools, you can add capability to Opticks by creating an extension. Opticks provides the most advanced extension capability of any other remote sensing tool on the market.
mRemoteNG is a fork of mRemote, an open source, tabbed, multi-protocol, remote connections manager. mRemoteNG adds bug fixes and new features to mRemote. It allows you to view all of your remote connections in a simple yet powerful tabbed interface. mRemoteNG supports the following protocols: * RDP (Remote Desktop/Terminal Server) * VNC (Virtual Network Computing) * ICA (Citrix Independent Computing Architecture) * SSH (Secure Shell) * Telnet (TELecommunication NETwork) * HTTP/HTTPS (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) * rlogin * Raw Socket Connections mRemoteNG is now available. Download it now!
CloneCloud uses nearby computers or data centers to speed up your smart phone applications, bringing the power of the cloud computing to your finger tips. Currently, we are exploring polymorphic execution that makes it possible to execute applications of resource-starved devices such as smart-phones by opportunistically off-loading computation to available cloud resources in nearby datacenters.
M. Andreasen, H. Nielsen, S. Schrøder, und J. Stage. CHI '07: Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, Seite 1405--1414. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
A. Bruun, P. Gull, L. Hofmeister, und J. Stage. Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, Seite 1619--1628. Boston, MA, USA, ACM, (2009)
C. Chion, L. Da Costa, und J. Landry. GECCO 2006: Proceedings of the 8th annual conference
on Genetic and evolutionary computation, 1, Seite 783--790. Seattle, Washington, USA, ACM Press, (8-12 July 2006)