1380 projects tagged "German"
File Juicer is a tool that extracts images, video, audio, or text from files which you can not open in any other way. It extracts JPEG, PNG, GIF, PDF, BMP, WMF, EMF, PICT, TIFF, Flash, Zip, HTML, WAV, AVI, MOV, MP4, MPG, MP3, AIFF, AU, WMV, or text from files containing data in those formats. It is useful if you have old files that cannot be opened with current applications, for emails with attachments you cannot open, for corrupt files or databases, for damaged or accidentally erased digital camera flash cards, and self extracting .exe files designed for Windows. It also extracts ZIP, SWF, RAR, and CAB files from some EXE files.
The MM3-WebAssistant Proxy Offline Browser archives Web pages that have been visited with your browser to be used online and offline. When offline, each page is available with its original URL, so the user sees no difference between surfing in the Internet or the archive. You can even use your bookmarks offline. The archive can be used efficiently by marking and highlighting words. This proxy also allows mobile users to access Internet information when they don't have Internet access.
Emilda is an Integrated Library System that features an OPAC, circulation and administration functions, Z39.50 capabilities, and 100% MARC compatibility. MARC compatibility is achieved using the Zebra server from Indexdata in conjunction with MySQL. Emilda is mainly written in PHP, but Perl scripts exist for MARC manipulation and shell interaction.
OOSearch is a full text search program for OpenOffice.org files. It opens all OpenOffice.org files in a specified directory or volume and searches for a given keyword. The found files can be opened via OOSearch directly. Supported file formats are OpenOffice.org 1.0 texts (.sxw), spreadsheets (.sxc), presentations (.sxi), and drawings (.sxd). The OpenDocuments formats of the upcoming OpenOffice.org 2.0 are also supported. These are OpenDocument texts (.odt), spreadsheets (.ods), presentations (.odp), and drawings (.odg).
X-Plane is a flight simulator that reads in the geometric shape of any aircraft and then figures out how that aircraft will fly. It does this via an engineering process called "blade element theory", which involves breaking the aircraft down into many small elements and then finding the forces on each little element many times per second. These forces are then converted into accelerations, which are then integrated to velocities and positions. This gives X-Plane the most realistic flight model available for personal computers.