--
The game is set in Moria and the goal is to kill off the balrog.
Apart from this, the game is almost completely based on Dungeons &
Dragons. The game is a true classic and every true gamer should
have played it.
It was originally written by Robert Alan Koeneke with some help
from Jimmy Wayne Todd. Further development of the game has almost
ceased, but The Pits of Angband, which is based on its code, is
still very much in development.
WWW: http://www-math.bgsu.edu/~grabine/moria.html
Changes:
o fixed two file descriptor leaks in ftpcopy. (Spotted by Matthias
Andree)
o added --bps option to ftpcopy.
o ftpcopy and ftpls now work with the runsocks program from the
socks5 reference implementation. See the FAQ.
o ftpcopy and ftpls now have a --timeout option to set the timeout
used during the connection.
o ftpcopy now has a --tolower option, causing it to change all
local file and directory names to lowercase. Note: you'll
possibly want to read the manual page before you use this
option.
o ftpls can make recursive directory listings. Use the --recursive
option for this.
o don't allow the FTP server do redirect PASV to other hosts or
ports below 1024 (with the exception of port 20).
o temporary files are created in the target directory.
--
This software comes in a client only configuration! If you want
to setup a mixmaster server, read through the example files,
man page and keep in mind, that the server stores all it's files
in $MIXPATH (/etc/mixmaster by default).
The purpose of anonymous remailers (hereafter simply remailers) is
to provide protection against traffic analysis. Traffic analysis
is the study of who you are communicating with, when, and how often.
This reveals more than you might expect about your activities. It
will indicate who your friends and colleagues are (and they can be
told apart by looking at the times you contact them). What your
interests are, from which catalog companies you contact, and which
ftp and WWW sites you visit. Traffic analysis can even reveal
business secrets, e.g. your frequent contact with a rival could
give hints of an impending merger.
Remailers protect your e-mail from traffic analysis. The original
remailers did this by removing all headers, except the subject line,
from any message you sent to them and then forwarding them a
destination of your choice. The recipient of such a message would
not know who had sent it.
The addition of encryption to this scheme gave significant protection
from attackers who simply look a the primary improvement with the
type 2 remailer Mixmaster.
WWW: http://mixmaster.shinn.net
Submitted by Nikolay Sturm <nikolay.sturm@desy.de>
Currently, bootstraps C and C++ on i386.
This is definitely not complete yet. Lots of libtool patches, and local
changes to 2.95.3 (such as proper -shared support) are missing,
but this should allow people to start banging on it.
Fixes:
- GTK GUI: Vim may exit if 'shell' is not a valid program
- defining a highlight link overruled existing GUI highlighting
- Synchronizing on a C comment failed after "//*/"
The purpose of OpRoute is to attempt to establish a
*generalized* measurement system which takes into
account all of the factors that are usually considered
to be important when it comes to performance.
Specifically:
- Packet loss
- Latency
- Layer 3 Hops
- AS Hops
- NAP Hops
- Throughput (To be done, not in there yet)
MAINTAINER= Jason Peel <jsyn@nthought.com>
--
dlint analyzes any DNS zone you specify, and reports any problems
it finds by displaying errors and warnings. Then it descends
recursively to examine all zones below the given one (this can be
disabled with a command-line option). Designed for Unix, dlint
is written in Bourne Shell and Perl.
WWW: http://www.domtools.com/dns/dlint.shtml
Submitted by Jason Peel <jsyn@nthought.com>
After more than 2 months, this is an overdue release. There are a lot
of bugfixes and new features, see the distributed ChangeLog for details.
Main changes:
* The main new feature is that the OpenNap servers are now the default
for nap. The reason for this is that Napster Inc. has modified their
servers to use a new client auth scheme, which means that nap users
can no longer connect to their servers. Nap will automatically
download a list of available servers from napigator.com, and then
connect to the first available one.
* Nap's sourceforge page has been updated and now fully operational.
You are encouraged to use sourceforge's facilities for bug reports,
feature requests, etc.
--
FFTW is a free collection of fast C routines for computing the
Discrete Fourier Transform in one or more dimensions. It includes
complex, real, and parallel transforms, and can handle arbitrary
array sizes efficiently. FFTW is typically faster than other
publically-available FFT implementations, and is even competitive
with vendor-tuned libraries. (See our web page for extensive
benchmarks.) To achieve this performance, FFTW uses novel code-generation
and runtime self-optimization techniques (along with many other
tricks).
WWW: http://www.fftw.org/
Submitted by Nikolay Sturm <Nikolay.Sturm@desy.de>
This release features oodles of bug fixes with cutting text,
especially with the -k (cut to end) option. There is also a new
suspend handler which should make nano play better with mutt. Nano
now also features mutt's case insensitive string compare function
for more speed and less memory usage. Two new translations are
included, Ukrainian and Russian.