7 projects tagged "Ubuntu"
DelVJ is a live video mixer VJing program for realtime video 3D composition and algorithmic video remixing of multiple sources such as multitrack video inputs from Firewire cameras, video media files, Puredata video channels, images, and text and RSS news feeds. It can send these sources to multiple outputs such as recording to hard disk and streaming to the Internet, local net, and screens. DelVJ can be controlled through OSC, and has interfaces for the Web and GTK. DelVJ allows multiple users to work on collaborative live video mixing projects for events, live broadcasts, artistic displays, and lighting effects. DelVJ aims for the flexibility and convenience needed for Pixel fests of many kinds.
Stantor-Domodulor is a home automation software system. It lets you manage electric and electronic facilities through Web pages and WAP 2 and 1 for smartphones. Stantor can drive Velleman k8000/k8055/k8061 boards, Ethernet and USB Arduino Mega, Uno and Duemilanove boards, X10 materials, USB webcams, and sound boards. Stantor correspondents can sent alerts via email and instant messaging. The Linux distributions supported are Ubuntu, Fedora, and Mandriva.
TurnKey Symfony Appliance is a server appliance for Symfony, a PHP Web application framework that follows the MVC paradigm. It provides an architecture, components, and tools for developers to build complex Web applications faster by minimizing repetitive coding tasks. It is designed to be easy to use and easy to maintain. Security patches are automatically installed. It provides a Web management interface, configuration console, and an AJAX Web shell. To minimize footprint the appliance is built from the ground up with the minimum required components. It runs everywhere thanks to multiple build formats, including an installable live CD, a VMDK with OVF support, and an Amazon EC2 AMI.
GroundWork Monitor Community Edition can give you insight into your computing infrastructure, allowing you to see the current and historical states of all your computers: servers, desktops, and laptops, all of your network devices, all of your services (like TCP/IP and Web services), and all of your applications (like mail servers and database apps). You can choose to be alerted when something goes awry via pager, SMS, email, or phone, and even set up automatic restarts or fall-overs.