Stanislav Brabec
sbrabec
Involved Projects and Packages
This audio file library is an implementation of the SGI audio file
library. At present, not all features of the SGI audio file library are
implemented.
This library allows the processing of audio data to and from audio
files of many common formats (currently AIFF, AIFC, WAVE, and
NeXT/Sun).
GNU Autoconf is a tool for configuring source code and makefiles. Using
autoconf, programmers can create portable and configurable packages,
because the person building the package is allowed to specify various
configuration options.
You should install autoconf if you are developing software and would
like to create shell scripts to configure your source code packages.
Note that the autoconf package is not required for the end user who may
be configuring software with an autoconf-generated script; autoconf is
only required for the generation of the scripts, not their use.
AutoTrace is a program for converting bitmaps to vector graphics. The
aim of the AutoTrace project is the development of a freely-available
application similar to CorelTrace or Adobe Streamline. In some aspects,
it is already better. Originally created as a plug-in for the GIMP,
AutoTrace is now a stand-alone program and can be compiled on any UNIX
platform using GCC.
This package contains the file /etc/SuSE-brand, and its name is used as
a trigger for installation of look and feel and branding of packages as
it was defined by upstream developers.
WARNING: If you decide to install this package instead of the default
branding package, you will lose vendor customization of your
distribution.
This library encapsulates CD-ROM reading and control. Applications
wanting to be oblivious to the OS and device-dependent properties of a
CD-ROM can use this library.
The CELT codec is an experimental audio codec for use in low-delay
speech and audio communication.
Chromaprint is the core component of the Acoustid project. It's a client-side
library that implements a custom algorithm for extracting fingerprints from any
audio source.
This package provides directories and rpm macros that are required/used to store color management data for many applications.
Linux Driver support for the CoolKey and CAC products. CoolKeys are
part of a complete PKI solution that provides smart card login, single
sign-on, secure messaging, and secure email access. In the complete
solution, users are issued CoolKeys by their employer, ISP, bank, or
other parties. When the user plugs the keys in for the first time, the
keys are automatically provisioned with certificates, keys, and a PIN,
unique for that user by the Red Hat Certificate System. Once the
CoolKey is provisioned, the user can take the key to any system and use
it to login (authenticate), send and receive signed and encrypted
email, or participate in secure messaging or IRC communication. Using a
CoolKey should be as easy as starting a car. To accomplish that vision,
we are focusing on building complete support for CoolKey on exactly one
token. As the system is built out, we can add token support. CoolKeys
are based on JavaCard 1.2. We are testing with Axalto Egate Cyberflex
cards, which are available in both smart card and USB Fob form factors.
This packages contains a couple of command line utilities for
working with desktop files.
More information about desktop files can be found at:
http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/desktop-entry-spec
Dirac is an open source video codec. It uses a traditional hybrid video
codec architecture, but with the wavelet transform instead of the usual
block transforms. Motion compensation uses overlapped blocks to reduce
block artefacts that would upset the transform coding stage.
Dirac can code just about any size of video, from streaming up to HD
and beyond, although certain presets are defined for different
applications and standards. These cover the parameters that need to be
set for the encoder to work, such as block sizes and temporal
prediction structures, which must otherwise be set by hand.
Dirac is intended to develop into real coding and decoding software,
capable of plugging into video processing applications and media
players that need compression. It is intended to develop into a simple
set of reliable but effective coding tools that work over a wide
variety of content and formats, using well-understood compression
techniques, in a clear and accessible software structure. It is not
intended as a demonstration or reference coder.
Calibrates and characterizes display devices using a hardware sensor, driven by the open source color management system Argyll CMS. Supports multi-display setups and a variety of available settings like customizable whitepoint, luminance, black level, tone response curve as well as the creation of matrix and look-up-table ICC profiles with optional gamut mapping. Calibrations and profiles can be verified through measurements, and profiles can be installed to make them available to color management aware applications.
Profile installation can utilize Argyll CMS, Oyranos and/or GNOME Color Manager if available, for flexible integration.
Engine_pkcs11 is an implementation of an engine for OpenSSL. It can be
loaded using code, a configuration file, or the command line and passes
any function call by openssl to a PKCS#11 module. Engine_pkcs11 is
meant to be used with smart cards and software for using smart cards in
PKCS#11 format, such as OpenSC. Originally, this engine was part of
OpenSC until OpenSC was split into several small projects to improve
flexibility.
A multiplexing and caching sound daemon. It can use ALSA or OSS for
sound output. Many projects, including Enlightenment and GNOME, use
esound to play and record their sounds.
XMP parsing and IO library
freealut is a free implementation of OpenAL's ALUT standard.
FTGL is a free open source library that enables developers to use
arbitrary fonts in their OpenGL (www.opengl.org) applications.
Unlike other OpenGL font libraries, FTGL uses standard font file
formats, so there is no need of a preprocessing step to convert the
high quality font data into a lesser quality, proprietary format.
FTGL uses the Freetype (www.freetype.org) font library to open and
'decode' the fonts. It then takes that output and stores it in a format
that is most efficient for OpenGL rendering.
The supported rendering modes are:
- Bit maps
- Antialiased Pix maps
- Outlines
- Polygon meshes
- Extruded polygon meshes
- Texture maps
- Buffer maps
GEGL provides infrastructure to do demand based cached non destructive
image editing on larger than RAM buffers. Through babl it provides
support for a wide range of color models and pixel storage formats for
input and output.
The OpenGL Extension Wrangler Library (GLEW) is a cross-platform
open-source C/C++ extension loading library. GLEW provides efficient
run-time mechanisms for determining which OpenGL extensions are
supported on the target platform. OpenGL core and extension
functionality is exposed in a single header file.
Gnonlin is a library built on top of GStreamer, which provides support
for writing non-linear audio and video editing applications. It
introduces the concept of a timeline.
A tool to manipulate with keyrings with keys used by upstream developers for signing of their project tarballs. Keys can be verified during building process.
It includes RPM macros for build-time offline verification of upstream tarballs during build.
GstRTSP is a RTSP server library using the GStreamer framework.
This package is based on the package 'gstreamer-0_10' from project 'openSUSE:Factory'.
GStreamer is a streaming-media framework, based on graphs of filters
which operate on media data. Applications using this library can do
anything from real-time sound processing to playing videos, and just
about anything else media-related. Its plug-in-based architecture
means that new data types or processing capabilities can be added by
installing new plug-ins.
GStreamer is a streaming-media framework, based on graphs of filters
which operate on media data. Applications using this library can do
anything from real-time sound processing to playing videos, and just
about anything else media-related. Its plug-in-based architecture
means that new data types or processing capabilities can be added by
installing new plug-ins.
GStreamer is a streaming-media framework, based on graphs of filters
which operate on media data. Applications using this library can do
anything from real-time sound processing to playing videos, and just
about anything else media-related. Its plug-in-based architecture
means that new data types or processing capabilities can be added by
installing new plug-ins.
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