21 projects tagged "Windows"
Activity Manager is a project management tool that is simple to use, lightweight, and very efficient and customizable. It features collaborators repository administration, tasks repository administration, contributions management (activity management), and an extensible report facility (with built in templates). It allows you to build and maintain a hierarchical task tree. It is based on a database with a very simple model that allows quickly building custom reports through the report facility or through simple SQL requests.
The Lightweight Java Game Library is a native binding for OpenGL and OpenAL written with game developers in mind. It allows the full OpenGL and OpenAL APIs to be exposed without the penalties associated with competing methods, nor the limitations of APIs such as Java3D. Tutorials and demos are available, and Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X are supported.
LiteWebServer (LWS) is a small, modular Web server and Java web container. It is based on code from Apache's popular Tomcat server, tweaked and extended for easier installation and management. It consists of a set of modules that can be installed separately, so you can install and manage exactly the features you need. The base module provides basic Web server features (HTTP/1.1 support) and support for the Servlet API. Add-on modules provide additional features, such as JSP support. Installing new modules and upgrading or removing existing modules is as easy as can be with the bundled JustGetIt module manager.
MiGLayout is a versatile and flexible Swing and SWT layout manager. It uses string constraints or API type-checked constraints to format the layout. Strings are both short to type and easy to understand. MiGLayout can produce flowing, grid-based, absolute (with links), grouped, and docking layouts. It was created to be to manually coded layouts what Matisse/GroupLayout is to IDE-supported visual layouts.
Open Runtime Platform (ORP) is a Java Virtual Machine (JVM) that implements advanced JIT and GC interfaces. These interfaces allow the JIT, GC, and remaining runtime system to be developed in complete isolation and at independent rates. A major benefit is that JIT and GC researchers are relieved of the intractable task of developing a full system before they can innovate in their area of expertise.