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Content Tagged with License:BSD + Software

EricDaugherty.com - iTunes Export M3U Playist Exporter

Provides the ability to parse the iTunes Music Library and playlists and songs in formats not supported by the built in iTunes features. Supports exporting playlists as m3u files. Built using .NET and primarily targeted at Windows users.

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SciTE

SciTE is a GUI-based single-document editor which uses the Scintilla editor component. It rapidly styles most common programming languages with good control over how syntactic elements are displayed, and features folding for C++ , C, Java, JavaScript, Php and Python.

ssh-agent

SSH Agent is a graphical front-end to some of the OpenSSH tools included with OSX. Additionally, it allows you to make the ssh-agent global.

mod_random

Mod Random is an Apache module for Apache2 generates random URLs within a defined pattern.

Mod Random can also display random HTML pages, which are customizable to display pieces such as ads or quotes. Mod Random is most often used for banner ads, random page generation, and random quotations, and it includes functionality to support these uses.

Blosxom

Blosxom (pronounced “Blossom”) is a lightweight yet feature-packed Weblog application designed from the ground up with simplicity, usability, and interoperability in mind.

FontForge

FontForge is an outline font editor that lets you create your own Postscript, TrueType, OpenType, CID-keyed, multi-master, CFF, SVG, and bitmap (BDF) fonts, or edit existing ones.

It also lets you convert one format to another, and has support for many Macintosh font formats.

Gifsicle

Gifsicle is a powerful command-line program for manipulating GIF image files.

Tcl

Tcl is a simple-to-learn yet very powerful programming language. Its syntax is described in just a dozen rules, but it has all the features needed to rapidly create useful programs in almost any field of application – on a wide variety of international platforms.

GNU is Not Unix

The GNU Project was launched in 1984 to develop a complete UNIX operating system which is free software: the GNU system. (GNU is a recursive acronym for “GNU’s Not UNIX”; it is pronounced “guh-noo.”)

Variants of the GNU operating system, which use the kernel Linux, are now widely used; though these systems are often referred to as “Linux”, some say they are more accurately called GNU/Linux systems because of the suite of GNU tools they use.