Make sure it's built properly by USE_LIBTOOL.
Use the default install target, just tweak the html files location.
Bump the minor number to leave room for a stub library to put on CDs
to allow for things to depend on lame.
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GKrellMSS is a plugin for GKrellM that has a VU meter and a chart. The
VU meter displays left and right channel audio levels. The sound scope
chart draws combined left and right audio channels as an oscilloscope
trace. The trace sweep speeds are adjustable from 100 usec/div to 50
msec/div, and there is a vertical sensitivity adjustment. And of course,
since it's a scope, it's triggered.
WWW: http://web.wt.net/~billw/gkrellmss/gkrellmss.html
Shorten reduces the size of waveform files (such as audio) using
Huffman coding of prediction residuals and optional additional
quantisation. It supports lossless and lossy modes.
xmms-shn provides playback support for shorten (.shn) files in XMMS.
Real-time seeking support is provided for .shn files that have
accompanying seek tables generated by shorten 3.x.
Disc-Cover creates front and back covers for audio CDs. The CD has
to be present in the CD-ROM drive, or alternatively a valid CDDB
file can be used. Disc-Cover searches the CDDB database for an
entry corresponding to the CD's CDDB ID. It starts by looking for
a local CDDB entry in ~/.cddb (or another directory pointed to by
your cddb installation). If no local CDDB entry matches the CD,
disc-cover continues to search the online CDDB databases or CDINDEX
databases as configured in the AudioCD library. It then formats
the entry to produce a Latex, Dvi, Postscript or PDF file, which
contains the front and back covers on a single page. Other formats
supported include a simple text output, a CDDB compatible format,
HTML and an output format that can be used with cdlabelgen
(http://www.red-bean.com/~bwf/software/cdlabelgen/), another cover
builder.
WWW: http://www.liacs.nl/~jvhemert/disc-cover
MAINTAINER= Nikolay Sturm <Nikolay.Sturm@desy.de>
Tempest for Eliza is a program that uses your computer monitor to
send out AM short wave radio signals. You can then hear computer
generated music in your radio. It teaches you that your computer
can be observed. Tempest for Eliza works with every monitor,
every resolution.