374 projects tagged "Scheduling"
Achievo is a Web-based project management and tracking tool for small- to medium-sized companies, aiming to become a fully featured ERP-like system in the future. Features include a time registration module, scheduler, project management, todo's, and several statistical tools. Achievo is multi-language, fully customizable, and uses a modular system to allow future extensions.
Calcium provides interactive calendars you can use through your browser. Features include: dynamic calendar merging (events from one calendar can be included in another), multiple views and formats, repeating events, email support, extensive color and font customization, support for full HTML in the event text and calendar headers and footers, popup text associated with any event, searching and filtering, multi-language support, a flexible security model, and more. Calcium is very easy to use, and fully supported by an established company. It runs anywhere that supports Perl CGIs; no non-standard Perl modules are necessary. Full 2-way synchronization with Palm Pilots or MS Outlook is available; iCalendar "subscriptions" are supported too.
Calendars for the Web provides a server based calendar and scheduling application. It allows unlimited users to share unlimted events per calendar. Calendars for the Web comes with a full-featured browser based interface, is completely customizable (sixteen different calendar view types), fully documented, and supports online administration.
Celebrat is a very easy-to-use, non-interactive, text-mode calendar application. It reads a data file in ASCII format, and prints on stdout a human-language summary of what events will take place up to ten days from now. It also includes a small daemon which announces events that are due by putting a message on every registered terminal, or by integrating the announcement in the bottom line of GNU screen sessions.
Ciao is a complete Prolog system subsuming ISO-Prolog with a novel modular design which allows both restricting and extending the language. Ciao extensions currently include feature terms (records), higher-order, functions, constraints, objects, persistent predicates, a good base for distributed execution (agents), and concurrency. Libraries also support WWW programming, sockets, and external interfaces (C, Java, TCL/Tk, relational databases, etc.). An Emacs-based environment, a stand-alone compiler, and a toplevel shell are also provided.