17 projects tagged "Apache 2.0"
Glassomium is a window manager for multi-touch devices (table top surfaces, kiosks) based on Web technologies. Every part of the UI and every application is built using HTML/CSS/Javascript, which allows developers to quickly get applications running without having to learn yet another complicated API or language. The project supports the TUIO protocol, which is becoming a standard in the field of multi-touch devices and works on both Windows and Linux.
CSS Import Resolver resolves the @import url(...); statements in input CSS files (by replacing the @import statement with the actual content of the linked CSS) and creates a huge CSS output (written to STDOUT by default). Including the combined CSS in your Web pages will improve the performance of a site by avoiding additional HTTP roundtrips.
wro4j is a project that will help you to easily improve your Web application page loading time. It can help you to keep your static resources (JavaScript and CSS) well organized, merge and minify them at run-time (using a simple filter) or build-time (using a Maven plugin), and has several features you may find useful when dealing with Web resources.
CI-Eye is a powerful continuous integration build radiator requiring no installation and almost no set-up. CI-Eye talks to many different CI servers through their REST APIs (so no plug-ins are required). Currently, support is offered for Hudson, Jenkins, and TeamCity. CI-Eye runs as a standalone Web application.
VisualFox-FX is an animation and visual effect library for Google Web Toolkit that leverages CSS3. VisualFox-FX supports JavaScript, CSS3, and hybrid mode (mixing JavaScript and CSS3 animation). VisualFox-FX uses the concept of a channel, which provides an extra layer of flexibility (allowing you to daisy-chain your animation). VisualFox-FX works directly with Element instead of Widget for added flexibility.
Google Calendar Chrome Extension adds a button to your browser toolbar that displays a preview of your calendar while you're navigating. (works on any page). If you're on certain sites where it detects the presence of events, the icon changes to a green "+". Clicking that icon lets you add the event to your Google Calendar, and shows you a Map (if there's a location it could detect.) Supported sites include Facebook, Evite, and any site that uses the hCalendar microformat or derivative microformats such as hResume.