public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from macroron with tags dot.org & documentation

February 2006

Minix3 Download

a new open-source operating system designed to be highly reliable, flexible, and secure. It is based somewhat on previous versions of MINIX, but is fundamentally different in many key ways. MINIX 1 and 2 were intended as teaching tools; MINIX 3 adds the n

December 2005

Catalyst - The Elegant MVC Web Application Framework

by 4 others
Perl Module - MVC framework will make web development something you had never expected it to be: Fun, rewarding and quick.

November 2005

Open Dylan Home - for linux and freebsd

an advanced, object-oriented, dynamic language. supports multiple inheritance, polymorphism, multiple dispatch, keyword arguments, object introspection, macros, and many other advanced features.

mod_perl: Welcome to the mod_perl world

by 1 other
brings together the full power of the Perl programming language and the Apache HTTP server.

Dillo Web Browser Home Page

by 3 others
a GTK-based web browser written completely in C, designed to be small and fast. The RPM is only 220-250 KB, even with various patches applied to add functionality and to make it play nice with KDE and Gnome menus. At present I have packages for several ve

Ajax Patterns Home

by 45 others
an Ajax portal and homepage for the upcoming "Ajax Design Patterns" book (O'Reilly), with full text online. Maintained by Michael Mahemoff

October 2005

Can't Get Enough Desktops!

by 1 other
It is possible to run multiple desktops simultaneously, and it is a lot of fun once you get the hang of it.

Appeal - Appeal Wiki Home - a living experiment in progressive development and organizational concepts as applied to the KDE project

the practices of art, usability and software development are brought together during the earliest phases of development and supported through ongoing communication and periodic in-person meetings. Appeal serves as an incubator for emerging technologies th

Plasma: KDE4 Desktop Shell: Plasma for KDE

by 2 others
Desktop computing has changed radically in the last 20 years, yet our desktops are essentially the same as they were in 1984. It's time the desktop caught up with us.