closed after doing an eject, something which caused the
tray to never eject until the program closed and the fd
was closed that way.
Fix provided by Nils Nordman <nino@nforced.com>
I am no longer the developer of the Nemesis Project.
This project is now developed by Jeff Nathan <jeff@wwti.com>
I will still remain the active maintainer of the OpenBSD port.
For those curious, details of WHY I have given up Nemesis and
the future direction of this project can be found here:
http://www.packetninja.net/nemesis_announcement.html
Force people to choose from sun, oss, esd as their sound system, print
error message if that is not done.
Suggested by Heikki Korpela <heko@saitti.net>
Various improvements, including OpenBSD native audio.
* Fix audio device path. This has caused audio not to work without the
esd flavor before, many people (including me) had link to /dev/dsp because
of linux emulation programs and haven't noticed the problem.
* Fix OSS audio.
* Sync libtool patches
* Properly include @SYSTEM_LIBS@ in sdl-config to ensure proper linking
of SDL applications.
--
Corkscrew is a tool for tunneling SSH through HTTP proxies.
Corkscrew has been tested against the Gauntlet, CacheFlow, and
JunkBuster proxies.
WWW: http://www.agroman.net/corkscrew/
Submitted by Jason Peel <jsyn@nthought.com>
Submit & Maintain : Maurice Nonnekes <maurice@amaze.nl>
---
Python Distribution Utilities, or Distutils for short, are a
collection of modules that aid in the development, distribution,
and installation of Python modules. (It is intended that ultimately
the Distutils will grow up into a system for distributing and
installing whole Python applications, but for now their scope is
primarily module distributions.)
that can be played with ordinary sound players. The phone conversation can
either be played directly from the network or from a tcpdump output file.
Vomit is also capable of inserting wavefiles into ongoing telephone
conversations. Vomit can be used as a network debugging tool, a speaker
phone, etc ...
vomit is written by Niels Provos and the port created by Jason Peel.
been idle for a period, and then runs a graphics demo chosen at
random. It turns off as soon as there is any mouse or keyboard
activity. It can also lock the screen (immediately, after a longer
idle period, or on demand.) xscreensaver consists of two parts:
xscreensaver itself, the (the ``driver'' or ``daemon''), which
detects idleness and does locking; and the many graphics demos that
are launched by xscreensaver.
Any X program that can draw on the root window can be used with
xscreensaver, regardless of how that program is written, or what
language it is written in, or what libraries it uses. The xscreensaver
daemon takes care of detecting when the user is idle, locking, and
checking passwords and all the other book-keeping; all the other
programs need to do is draw.
The benefit that xscreensaver has over the combination of the xlock
and xautolock programs is the ease with which new graphics hacks
can be installed. You don't need to recompile (or even re-run) the
xscreensaver program to add a new display mode, you just change a
config file.
WWW: http://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/