An online presence and instant messaging server. The Jabber transport
(jserver) is a daemon for Jabber clients to connect and communicate with.
PR: 17982
Submitted by: Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
Originally, the etherx daemon routed XML streams among agents.
Now the etherx daemon has morphed into a library that allows any agent
to become the daemon if the daemon is not found.
You can learn more about Etherx at
WWW: http://etherx.jabber.org/
PR: 17981
Submitted by: Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
Currently, libjabber provides Jabber transports with various library functions.
For general information about Jabber, including a quick introduction
to Jabber concepts, see the FAQ at
WWW: http://docs.jabber.org/
PR: 17980
Submitted by: Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
Establishes an RFC-2003 style IP encapsulation tunnel using a tun(4)
kernel interface combined with divert sockets and IP firewall rules,
implemented in a user-space daemon. No kernel mods are required,
except enabling divert sockets, IPfirewalls, and a number of tun
interfaces.
PR: 17415
Submitted by: Yu-Shun Wang <yushunwa@isi.edu>
Jext is a powerful 100% pure Java text editor. Jext has been mainly designed
for programmers. Thus, Jext provides a lot of useful functions for coders:
syntax colorizing (Perl, XML/HTML, Java, JavaScript), auto indent, methods
seeker for Java, source code formatting and much more...
PR: 17111
Submitted by: Maxim Sobolev <sobomax@altavista.net>
Moneydance is a personal finance management application written
in Java. Features include transaction auto-completion, reporting,
graphing, check printing, scheduled transactions, and much more.
PR: 17018
Submitted by: Sean Reilly <sreilly@seanreilly.com>
Locale::Maketext is a base class providing a framework for software
localization and inheritance-based lexicons, as described in "The
Perl Journal" issue #13.
PR: 17382
Submitted by: Frank Mayhar <frank@exit.com>
WordNet is a powerful lexical reference system that combines aspects of
dictionaries and thesauri with current psycholinguistic theories of
human lexical memory. It is produced by the Cognitive Science Laboratory
at Princeton University, under the direction of Professor George Miller.
PR: 17016
Submitted by: Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.algebra.com>