10 projects tagged "Apache 2.0"
Antville is high performance, feature rich weblog hosting software based on Helma Object Publisher, an Open Source Web application server entirely written in Java. Antville itself is written in JavaScript and scales very well up to tens of thousands of weblogs on an ordinary machine. It is easy to use while offering a lot of advanced features which make it capable of hosting other types of websites as well. It features per-site language and timezone definitions, import and export of layout templates, import and export of stories (.xml), tags, polls, file uploads, user rights management, Blogger, MetaWeblog, and MovableType API support, virtual site hosting, feeds (full content or just stories, comments, per tag), and disk quotas. The AntClick package contains everything you need to run Antville on your own computer (Web server, application server, embedded database). It is already configured; just unpack the file, and you're done.
BitNami ocPortal Stack Native Installer is an easy-to-install distribution of the ocPortal application. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Apache, MySQL, PHP, and phpMyAdmin so users can get an ocPortal installation up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, and Unix operating systems are supported. ocPortal is a CMS with many Web 2.0 features for sophisticated sites. It supports many types of content (galleries, news/newsletters, etc.) and integrating rich media and advertising into them. Community features include forums, member blogs, chat rooms, wiki, and content commenting/rating. ocPortal lets you decide exactly how your site will look and behave. Features are plentiful, well integrated, and optional. Out-of-the-box, your site will meet the highest accessibility and professional standards.
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.
Google Sitemap Generator is a tool installed on your Web server to generate sitemaps automatically. Unlike many other third-party sitemap generation tools, Google Sitemap Generator takes a different approach: it will monitor your Web server traffic and detect updates to your Web site automatically.
LabKey Server is open source software that helps scientists manage, analyze, and share complex datasets. It supports tandem mass spectrometry, flow cytometry, assays for neutralizing antibodies, Luminex, observational studies, and secure, Web-based collaboration. The software is modular, configurable, and customizable. It can be installed in your institution on any modern hardware and operating system. It is designed to integrate with your existing systems, instruments, and work flows, and to be readily adapted by skilled programmers to novel methods of inquiry. The project is under active development by a team of professional software engineers and a community of active contributors. New versions are released about four times per year.
NodeJS Stack is an easy-to-install distribution of the NodeJS application. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Apache so users can get a NodeJS installation up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows operating systems are supported. Node.js is a platform built on Chrome's JavaScript runtime for easily building fast, scalable network applications. Node.js uses an event-driven, non-blocking I/O model that makes it lightweight and efficient, perfect for data-intensive real-time applications that run across distributed devices.
Build systems fail to scale to large projects when rebuilding a small portion requires stat-ing every project file. Prebake is a build system that uses a long-lived service to hook into the file-system and watch for changes so it can avoid unnecessary I/O for incremental builds. It also solves common problems with Ant and Make: missing dependencies and build cruft from deleted source files. It does away with missing dependencies by doing away with explicit dependencies altogether. Build dependencies are inferred by intersecting globs; if one product takes *.c and produces *.o, and another takes *.o and produces *.lib, then the latter depends on the former. Prebake also gets the benefits of both a declarative build syntax (a la make) and the flexibility of hand coded shell scripts. It uses tightly sandboxed JavaScript and "mobile functions" to get the flexibility of a scripting language with the hard controls on side effects that allow for repeatable builds. In practice, the JS in build files looks declarative, like JSON, but the dynamism is there when you need it.