(Bucharest, Romania); I got the coordinates from google maps since I
need an external antenna to convince the GPS to be more precise that
"Somewhere, Europe".
Approved by: lawrance (mentor)
- Do not use OPTIONS for the mutually exclusive UI choices, use
conflicting slave ports (celestia-gnome and celestia-gtk)
- Axe KDE support since I cannot test it (patches welcome)
- Enable Lua support by default
- Always install a desktop entry
- Relayout the Makefile
- Take maintainership
whether that format is a common mapping format like Delorme, Streets and Trips,
or even a serial upload or download to a GPS unit such as those from Garmin and
Magellan. By flattening the Tower of Babel that the authors of various programs
for manipulating GPS data have imposed upon us, it returns to us the ability
to freely move our own waypoint data between the programs and hardware we
choose to use.
It contains extensive data manipulation abilities making it a convenient for
server-side processing or as the backend for other tools.
WWW: http://www.gpsbabel.org/
PR: ports/96490
Submitted by: Laurent Courty <lrntct@gmail.com>
installing it by actually overwriting that with the correct manual page
"source". Fixes the manual page looking broken.
PR: 93728
Submitted by: Frank W. Josellis <frank@dynamical-systems.org>
Approved by: Josh Paetzel <josh@tcbug.org> (maintainer)
Use your unused CPU cycles to aid in computations analyzing radio
telescope information for possible signs of ET. The Enhanced version
is still beta, but this is mainly for administrative reasons.
This version is a FreeBSD binary built by Stefan Urbat for Pentium II
or AMD K6 CPUs and higher (requires MMX instructions).
WWW: http://www.lb.shuttle.de/apastron/boincDown.shtml#freebsd
PR: ports/94980
Submitted by: Rene Ladan <r.c.ladan@student.tue.nl>
Use your unused CPU cycles to aid in computations analyzing radio
telescope information for possible signs of ET.
This version is a Linux binary built by Harold Naparst for Pentium 3
CPUs and higher (requires SSE instructions). It was heavily optimized
for best performance, can process a work unit under an hour on recent
hardware.
WWW: http://naparst.name/seti.htm
Use your unused CPU cycles to aid in computations analyzing telescope
information for possible gravitational waves emitted by pulsars as
predicted by Albert Einstein.
WWW: http://einstein.phys.uwm.edu/
PR: ports/93643
Submitted by: Rene Ladan <r.c.ladan@student.tue.nl>