Czkawka (tch•kav•ka (IPA: [ˈʧ̑kafka]), "hiccup" in Polish) is a simple, fast and free app to remove unnecessary files from your computer.
Krokiet ((IPA: [ˈkrɔcɛt]), "croquet" in Polish) same as above, but uses Slint frontend.
Amazingly fast - due to using more or less advanced algorithms and multithreading. Cache support - second and further scans should be much faster than the first one. CLI and GUI (gtk4 or slint). Multiple tools for flexibility.
PyHam is a collection of applications and software libraries for ham radio enthusiasts, written in Python.
The applications are intended to address real-world use cases for the ham while keeping complexity to a minimum and focusing on ease of use. By avoiding the lure of trying to be all things to all people, PyHam applications target the majority of users at the possible expense of those few who may desire additional capabilities.
The libraries are written in pure Python, and each focus on a particular technology with the goal of making that technology easier to work with than it otherwise would be. PyHam applications are themselves built upon these libraries.
PyHam software has been developed with a primary focus on Direwolf as a platform, since it is the dominant software TNC in use today. However, where appropriate, the software has also been tested against other platforms such as ldsped and AGWPE.
musikcube is a fully functional terminal-based music player, library, and streaming audio server that runs natively on Windows, macOS, and Linux. it also runs well on a Raspberry Pi with a custom DAC (e.g. IQaudIO DAC+, HiFiBerry DAC+ and others), and can output 24bit/192k audio comfortably.
musikdroid is a native Android app that connects to musikcube servers. it can be used as a streaming audio client and/or a remote control for your computer or home stereo.
musikcore is a cross-platform c++ library that drives things. it can be used by developers as a backend for creating or prototyping apps that play music. out of the box it provides file scanning, tag indexing, gapless and crossfading playback, play queue management, playlist crud, an extensible plugin architecture, and support for libraries containing 250,000+ audio tracks.
J-core is a clean-room open source processor and SOC design using the SuperH instruction set, implemented in VHDL and available royalty and patent free under a BSD license.
The SuperH processor is a Japanese design developed by Hitachi in the late 1990's. As a second generation hybrid RISC design it was easier for compilers to generate good code for than earlier RISC chips, and it recaptured much of the code density of earlier CISC designs by using fixed length 16 bit instructions (with 32 bit register size and address space), using microcoding to allow some instructions to perform multiple clock cycles of work. (Earlier pure risc designs used one instruction per clock cycle even when that served no purpose but to make the code bigger and exhaust the encoding space.)
Hitachi developed 4 generations of SuperH. SH2 made it to the United states in the Sega Saturn game console, and SH4 powered the Sega Dreamcast. They were also widely used in areas outside the US cosumer market, such as the japanese automative industry.
The rest of this page explains how to compile and install a "bitstream" file to implement this processor in a cheap (about $50) FPGA board, then how to build Linux for that board and boot it to a shell prompt.
This service is a search engine that looks for public archives at different File Sharing Services that are not so well known. These services do not offer a simple option to find files hosted on their servers.
Hello visitors! Present punk is the idea that we are either currently living in a cyberpunk dystopia, or that we are transitioning into one.
The first purpose of this blog is to curate a collection of all the news stories today that prove this idea, from the latest corporate takeovers to the newest tech innovations.
The second purpose is to reckon with dystopia becoming true, and probe more deeply into the why’s and the what-can-we-do’s.
Paracon is a packet radio terminal for Linux, Mac and Windows. It is focused on simplicity and ease of use, and incorporates the core functionality that most packet users need without trying to include all of the bells and whistles that few would use.
Multiple simultaneous AX.25 connected mode sessions, allowing for connections to multiple BBS or other remote nodes. Unproto (UI, or datagram) AX.25 mode, allowing for keyboard-to-keyboard chat or other non-connected uses. Text-based console application looks and behaves the same on all supported platforms (Linux, Mac, Windows). Uses the AGWPE protocol to communicate with any server implementing that protocol. Tested and supported with Direwolf, ldsped and AGWPE. Self-contained executable requires only a Python installation to run, without the need to install any additional dependencies.
The Fuzzball is an operating system and a package of applications for the Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) PDP11 family of computers, including the LSI-11 board-level components. The package was conceived in 1971 as a replacement for the RAMP operating system for the DEC PDP8. It later was evolved as a virtual machine supporting the DEC RT-11 operating system and early developmental versions of the TCP/IP protocol and applications suite. Prototype versions of popular Internet tools, including Telnet, FTP, DNS, EGP and SMTP were first implemented and tested on the Fuzzball. Fuzzball is now in the Computing Dictionary and remembered in the NSF history archives.
Fuzzballs were deployed extensively in the DARPA SATNET program during the 1970s. Fuzzball nests were deployed at the INTELSAT earth stations in the US, UK, Germany, Norway and Italy. Perhaps the best known role of the Fuzzball was as routers for the NSFNET Phase-I Backbone Network, which was deployed during the 1986-1988 time period. There were five routers co-located at the five NSF supercomputer centers and connected by 56-kbps data circuits. The Fuzzballs carried traffic between the centers, the center users and the adjacent college campuses.
The following is an archive of St. GIGA's broadcasted program "Tide of Sound" (音の潮流) aircheck. The files are given as is from an anonymous source.
Programatically sync and edit BookStack pages. Useful for text editor integrations (an emacs PoC implementation is included).
Pages in the configured Bookstack wiki will be downloaded and written to Markdown files in book/page.md
format. Local Markdown files that don't exist in the wiki will be uploaded as new pages in a book. When a local file is deleted the wiki page will be deleted if their last_modified dates are the same. Wiki pages that are deleted will cause their local counterparts to be deleted as well. Out-of-synch pages (i.e., the local file and wiki page have been edited independently and their edits do not line up) will not be synched without the --force
option.
A dark blue/dark mode theme for Shaarli.
Command line tools for fetching system/other information. Operating system, kernel, CPU, GPU, memory info and more.
The metadata.json file is updated after commit. You can request this file in raw format and use it like a static API. Interesting.
A duck that waddles around in your Neovim window between lines of text. It's cute.
Vim Bootstrap makes it easy to learn a new editor, focus on learning how to use it and leave the configuration to us. Pick languages or frameworks to enable specific syntax support for, pick a visual theme, pick an editor (vim or neovim), click the button, and you have a .vimrc file ready to use.
A faithful heretic is someone who acts with courage and integrity in the face of mainstream opposition. Take them with you into school, work, church, or anywhere else you need a little dead friend to fight in your corner.
This repository serves as a historical archive containing specifications for the fictional hardware of the game 0x10c. The game was to be a multiplayer sandbox game set in space, with a fully programmable CPU controlling a ship. The game was cancelled in 2013 to much dismay of fans. A number of fan projects appeared aiming at continuing development, but they also appear to be abandoned.
There are a large number of fan works on GitHub, mainly implementations of the DCPU-16 hardware or code to run on it. GitHub still has a list of DCPU-16 ASM trending repositories. These usually included links to the official specifications which were either hosted on Pastebin or 0x10c.com. The later has been been offline since February 2014 (weirdly the domain was renewed for another year in April 2014), so this is my attempt to archive them for future reference.
This is my fork of the repo for later reference.
A search engine for blogs and podcasts, where every search is an RSS feed.
Editor.js is an open-source text editor offering a variety of features to help users create and format content efficiently. It has a modern, block-style interface that allows users to easily add and arrange different types of content, such as text, images, lists, quotes, etc. Each Block is provided via a separate plugin making Editor.js extremely flexible.
Editor.js outputs a clean JSON data instead of heavy HTML markup. Use it in Web, iOS, Android, AMP, Instant Articles, speech readers, AI chatbots — everywhere. Easy to sanitize, extend and integrate with your logic.