without arbitrary limits, (other than memory and processor speed) that
runs under, and interacts with, the UNIX Operating system.
PR: 16641
Submitted by: Abel Chow <abel@Island.DHS.ORG>
pick precise colors. It was inspired as a replacement for
xcolorsel that offers a wider band of colors to pick from.
PR: 16852
Submitted by: Will Andrews <andrews@technologist.com>
rather large patchset improving pcemu. I therefore also decided to
bump the version number from 1.01a to 1.01b, David Hedley apparently
abandoned all work on pcemu anyway.
The exact details of Arne's patches can be studied in the PR, it's
something like 50 lines of explanation i don't want to quote in full
here. In short, he submitted a number of improvements and a fix for
the hard disk emulation in pcemu's BIOS. After a review, i decided to
leave the patches verbatim.
In addition and while i was at it, i added something i always ment to
do: the option to dynamically add floppy disks (and now also hard
disks) from within the .pcemurc file, so there's no need to recompile
if you just wanna get access to your floppy from within pcemu.
Comment it out again once you're done.
PR: ports/5788
Submitted by: <arnej@math.ntnu.no> Arne Henrik Juul
everything that anybody could need in a program printout without
the need for large numbers of switches or pipelines. Trueprint can
currently handle C, C++, Java, Perl, Verilog, shell (including ksh), Pascal,
pseudo C, report files (trueprint report files), listing files, text files.
PR: 16775
Submitted by: Dmitry Sivachenko <dima@Chg.RU>
(it was previously in ports/comms)
OpenH323 is an H323 Video Conferencing Program, which can send and
receive both audio and video with other H323 programs including
Microsoft NetMeeting.
It uses PWLib, the Portable Windows Library and PTLib Portable Toolkit Library
from Equivalence Ltd Pty
Note: at this time I've been unable to send audio, although
audio can be received.
For video, a Bt848/878 grabber (using the bktr driver) or a Matrox Meteor
can be used.
Obtained from: http://www.openh323.org
HTML page. That's all it does. It has no relationship whatsoever to
encryption, copy protection, movies, software freedom, oppressive industry
cartels, Web site witch hunts, or any other bad things that could get you
in trouble.
Suggested by: peter