Matthias Pfafferodt
syntron
Involved Projects and Packages
contains:
snapback2: backup tool using rsync
freeciv: different versions
... (more) ...
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
TCLAP is a small, flexible library that provides a simple interface for
defining and accessing command line arguments. It was intially inspired by the
user friendly CLAP libary. The difference is that this library is templatized,
so the argument class is type independent. Type independence avoids
identical-except-for-type objects, such as IntArg, FloatArg, and StringArg.
While the library is not strictly compliant with the GNU or POSIX standards, it is close.
This package is based on the package 'vorbisgain' from project 'openSUSE:Factory:Contrib'.
VorbisGain is a utility that uses a psychoacoustic method to correct the volume of an Ogg Vorbis file to a predefined standardized loudness.
It is meant as a replacement for the normalization that is commonly used before encoding. Although normalization will ensure that each song has the same peak volume, this unfortunately does not say anything about the apparent loudness of the music, with the end result being that many normalized files still don't sound equally loud. VorbisGain uses psychoacoustics to address this deficiency. Moreover, unlike normalization, it's a lossless procedure which works by adding tags to the file. Additionally, it will add hints that can be used to prevent clipping on playback. It is based upon the ReplayGain technology.
The end result is that playback is both more convenient and of higher quality compared to a non-VorbisGain'ed file.
whohas is a command line tool that allows querying several package lists at once - currently supported are Arch, Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, Mandriva, openSUSE, Slackware (and linuxpackages.net), Source Mage, Ubuntu, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Fink, MacPorts and Cygwin. whohas is written in Perl and was designed to help package maintainers find ebuilds, pkgbuilds and similar package definitions from other distributions to learn from. However, it can also be used by normal users who want to know:
* Which distribution provides packages on which the user depends.
* What version of a given package is in use in each distribution, or in each release of a distribution (implemented only for Debian).
NOTE: This package is maintained in home:saigkill. Please send your submitrequests to this place.
links to packages from home:Herbster0815
deactivated => use home:Herbster0815 directly ...