An easy, yet Highly-configurable iptables-based firewall solution designed for everybody from home users to network admins. Functionality for IPv6, tunneling, IPSec, and advanced routing is planned.
awesome is a highly configurable, next generation framework window manager for X. It is very fast, light, and extensible. It is primarily targeted at the power user, developer, and anyone dealing with everyday computing tasks who wants to have fine-grained control over a graphical environment.
OpenVPN is a robust and highly flexible tunneling application that uses all of the encryption, authentication, and certification features of the OpenSSL library to securely tunnel IP networks over a single TCP/UDP port.
Bochs is a highly portable open source IA-32 (x86) PC emulator
written in C++, that runs on most popular platforms. It includes
emulation of the Intel x86 CPU, common I/O devices, and a custom
BIOS. Currently, Bochs can be compiled to emulate a 386, 486,
Pentium, Pentium Pro or AMD64 CPU, including optional MMX, SSE,
SSE2 and 3DNow! instructions. Bochs is capable of running most
Operating Systems inside the emulation including Linux, DOS,
Windows 95/98 and Windows NT/2000.
Bochs was written by Kevin Lawton and is currently maintained by
the Bochs project at "http://bochs.sourceforge.net".
The Intel® JPEG Library provides a set of highly optimized C functions that implement JPEG compression and decompression on Intel architecture processors
Many applications in computer graphics require complex, highly
detailed models. However, the level of detail actually necessary
may vary considerably. To control processing time, it is often desirable
to use approximations in place of excessively detailed models.
GNU Common C++ is a very portable and highly optimized class framework for writing C++ applications that need to use threads and support concurrent sychronization, and that use sockets, XML parsing, object serialization, thread-optimized String and data structure classes, etc. This framework offers a class foundation that hides platform differences from your C++ application so that you need not write platform specific code. GNU Common C++ has been ported to compile nativily on most platforms which support either posix threads, or on maybe be used with Debian hosted mingw32 to build native threading applications for Microsoft Windows.