Topics matching folders.php


ProtonMail

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ProtonMail

ProtonMail is an end-to-end encrypted email service founded in 2014 at the CERN research facility by Andy Yen, Jason Stockman, and Wei Sun.[3][4] ProtonMail uses client-side encryption to protect email contents and user data before they are sent to ProtonMail servers, unlike other common email providers such as Gmail and Outlook.com. The service can be accessed through a webmail client, the Tor network, or dedicated iOS and Android apps.[5] ProtonMail is run by Proton Technologies AG, a company based in the Canton of Geneva,[6] and its servers are located at two locations in Switzerland, outside of US and EU jurisdiction.[7] The service received initial funding through a crowdfunding campaign. The default account setup is free, and the service is sustained by optional paid services. As of January 2017, ProtonMail had over 2 million users,[8] and grew to over 5 million by September 2018[9] and over 10 million by the end of 2018.[10] Initially invitation-only, ProtonMail opened up to the public in March 2016.

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Tor hidden services

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Free software webmail

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Free security software

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Torrent file

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Torrent file

In the BitTorrent file distribution system, a torrent file or METAINFO is a computer file that contains metadata about files and folders to be distributed, and usually also a list of the network locations of trackers, which are computers that help participants in the system find each other and form efficient distribution groups called swarms.[1] A torrent file does not contain the content to be distributed; it only contains information about those files, such as their names, sizes, folder structure, and cryptographic hash values for verifying file integrity. The term torrent may refer either to the metadata file or to the files downloaded, depending on the context. In a nutshell, a torrent file is like an index, which facilitates the efficient lookup of information (but doesn't contain the information itself) and the address of available worldwide computers which upload the content. Torrent files themselves and the method of using torrent files have been created to ease the load on servers. With help of torr

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BitTorrent

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Computer file formats

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Pop PHP Framework

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Pop PHP Framework

The Pop PHP Framework a free and open source PHP Web framework that was created by Nick Sagona. It is distributed under the BSD License and hosted on GitHub. The framework is intended to be utilized for rapid application development, with an emphasis on web applications. History Development on the Pop PHP Framework was officially begun by Nick Sagona in late 2011, when he refactored a set of older library components into the first version of Pop PHP, which was released on March 19, 2012. The focus was for Pop PHP to become a more modern, MVC-style web framework with a set of supporting components to assist in building web applications. After PHP 5.4 was released, Pop PHP 2 was refactored to take advantage of the new features available in PHP 5.4, as well as fully leveraging Composer by breaking out almost all of the components into separate repositories on GitHub. Pop PHP 2 was first released on July 12, 2015. Pop PHP 3 was a slight refactor of the existing framework, while adding a handful of new compone

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Software using the BSD license

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PHP frameworks

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Free software programmed in PHP

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Google Drive

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Google Drive

Google Drive is a file storage and synchronization service developed by Google. Launched on April 24, 2012, Google Drive allows users to store files on their servers, synchronize files across devices, and share files. In addition to a website, Google Drive offers apps with offline capabilities for Windows and macOS computers, and Android and iOS smartphones and tablets. Google Drive encompasses Google Docs, Google Sheets, and Google Slides, which are a part of an office suite that permits collaborative editing of documents, spreadsheets, presentations, drawings, forms, and more. Files created and edited through the office suite are saved in Google Drive. Google Drive offers users 15 gigabytes of free storage through Google One. Google One also offers 100 gigabytes, 200 gigabytes, 2 terabytes, 10 terabytes, 20 terabytes, and 30 terabytes offered through optional paid plans. Files uploaded can be up to 5 terabytes in size. Users can change privacy settings for individual files and folders, including enabling s

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2012 software

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Collaborative real-time editors

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Online office suites

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Lightbox

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Lightbox

Small lightbox opened to reveal workings A lightbox is a translucent surface illuminated from behind, used for situations where a shape laid upon the surface needs to be seen with high contrast.[1] Types Wall mounted lightbox for inspecting medical X-rays Lightbox used in outdoor advertising Lightbox designed to produce images with diffuse lighting from all angles Lightbox used as a Memorial Plaque Several varieties exist, depending on their purpose: Various backlit viewing devices: A container with several lightbulbs and a pane of frosted glass on the top. It is used by photography professionals viewing transparent films, such as slides. This device was originally used to sort photographic plates with ease. When laid flat, it may be called a light table. Generally, a lightbox uses light similar to daylight (5,000–6,000 kelvins (K)) and has uniform light strength on the glass pane. In the form of vertical panels, they can also be found mounted on the walls of hospitals and medical offices t

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Photography equipment

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Kohana (framework)

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Kohana (framework)

Kohana was a PHP5 HMVC framework. Kohana was licensed under the BSD license and hosted on GitHub.[2] Issues were tracked using Redmine.[3] It was noted for its performance when compared to CodeIgniter and other high-performance PHP frameworks.[4][5][6][7] Features Cascading File System (CFS) allow class, configuration file and translation overloading from the system, module and application folder. ORM is an implementation of the active record pattern. Request and Response for either internal and external request. Routing to reverse URL and dispatch user request. Cache system compatible with multiple back-ends Development Kohana development begun on 31 May 2007 when a few CodeIgniter community members decided to start a community fork of CodeIgniter, named BlueFlame. In June 2007 the project was renamed "Kohana" and in July version 1.0 was released without any documentation. The project leader left in August and development stagnated until September when a new BDFL was selected and an effort to

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Software using the BSD license

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Web frameworks

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PHP frameworks

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Comparison of online backup services

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Comparison of online backup services

This is a comparison of online backup services. Online backup is a special kind of online storage service; however, various products that are designed for file storage may not have features or characteristics that others designed for backup have. Online Backup usually requires a backup client program. A browser-only online storage service is usually not considered a valid online backup service. Online folder sync services can be used for backup purposes. However, some Online Folder Sync services may not provide a safe Online Backup. If a file is accidentally locally corrupted or deleted, it depends on the versioning features of a Folder Sync service, whether this file will still be retrievable. Comparison Provider Win.1 Linux1 Mac1 Android1 iOS1 Encrypted storage Zero knowledge2 Secure Key Management3[1] Limited MB plan4 Unlimited MB plan4 $/MB plan4 Unlimited BW 16 Provider Cloud hosted Net Drive5 Sync7 Autodetect changes12 Public file hosting8 physical media restore9 Server locatio

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Security software comparisons

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File hosting for MacOS

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Backup

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OneDrive

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OneDrive

Microsoft OneDrive (formerly known as Microsoft SkyDrive, Windows Live SkyDrive, and Windows Live Folders) is a file hosting service and synchronization service operated by Microsoft as part of its web version of Office. First launched in August 2007, OneDrive allows users to store files and personal data like Windows settings or BitLocker recovery keys in the cloud, share files, and sync files across Android, Windows Phone, and iOS mobile devices, Windows and macOS computers, and the Xbox 360 and Xbox One consoles. Users can upload Microsoft Office documents directly to OneDrive. OneDrive offers 5 GB of storage space free of charge, with 50 GB, 1 TB, and 5 TB storage options available either separately or with Office 365 subscriptions.[2] History Windows Live Folders logo Logo as "SkyDrive" At its launch the service, known as Windows Live Folders at the time (with a codename of SkyDrive), was provided as a limited beta available to a few testers in the United States.[3] On August 1, 2007, the servic

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IOS software

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Windows Phone software

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Windows components

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Comparison of file synchronization software

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Comparison of file synchronization software

This is a list of file synchronization software. File synchronization is a process of ensuring that files in two or more locations are updated via certain rules. Definitions The following definitions clarify the purpose of columns used in the tables that follow. Name It may contain a product name, or product name plus edition name, depending on what is discussed. Operating system Platform An Operating system (OS) manages the other programs on a computer;[1] most personal computers have an OS installed. The operating system column lists the name of the operating systems on which the corresponding synchronization software runs. Platform is a broader term; it is used as the column name because some of the software in the table were OS-independent but required a certain software platform like Java SE or .NET Framework. (Note: OS X was rebranded MacOS in 2016.) Programming language Programming language was used to write the software, if known. For closed-source software this information may not be known. Licen

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Storage software

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Data synchronization

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Software comparisons

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Suhosin

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Suhosin

Suhosin (Korean 수호신, meaning "guardian angel", pronounced 'su-ho-shin') was an open source patch for PHP and also a PHP extension, written by the German company Sektion Eins. Patch and extension are two independent parts, that can be used separately or in combination. "The goal behind Suhosin is to be a safety net that protects servers from insecure PHP coding practices."[1] Suhosin also reduces the "attackable surface" that PHP adds to a Web Server through function whitelists, resource limits, transparent session and cookie encryption, binary content filter, logging and various other protections.[2] This reduces the risk of deploying previously deemed unsafe PHP programs and protects against known and unknown attacks. Features While the original patch included several low-level memory-related hardening, those feature aren't present in the modules, but most of them have been upstreamed into PHP. Cookies encryption: to mitigate XSS-based cookies stealing, the cookies are encrypted, so an attacker could no

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Computer security software

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PHP

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Icy Phoenix

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Icy Phoenix

Icy Phoenix is a CMS (Content Management System) based on phpBB (an open-source Internet Forum package powered by PHP) plus many modifications and code integrations which add features to the whole package.[1] Icy Phoenix has some features originally developed for phpBB XS Project which was founded by Bicet and then developed by both Bicet (who later started slimbb) and Mighty Gorgon (Luca Libralato). Icy Phoenix has been created by Mighty Gorgon after he left the phpBB XS Project.[2][3] Features phpBB bulletin board and permission system CMS features allowing the creation of new pages and blocks (some of the functions are based on the abandoned IM Portal project). Overall template integration among all site sections. Many ready to use features: Photo Gallery, Downloads, Knowledge Base, Links, Chat. Multilanguage and multitemplate ready. Almost 100% XHTML and CSS W3C compliant. Many of these features are based on mods for phpbb though some may have been written or rewritten by Mighty Gorgon. Others

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Free Internet forum software

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Free groupware

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Free software programmed in PHP

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FreeFileSync

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FreeFileSync

FreeFileSync is a free and open-source program used for file synchronization. It is available on Windows, Linux and OS X. The project is backed by donations. Donors get a few additional features such as an auto-updater, parallel sync, portable version, and silent installation.[2] FreeFileSync works by comparing one or multiple folders on their content, date or file size and subsequently synchronizing the content according to user-defined settings. In addition to supporting local file systems and network shares, FreeFileSync is able to sync to FTP, FTPS, SFTP and MTP devices. Adware/Malware Earlier versions were packaged with OpenCandy,[3][4] an adware module which many antivirus software vendors classify as malware.[5][6][7][8] Since the release of version 10.0 in April 2018, the software is ad-free.[9] As of 13 November 2018 Norton considers FreeFileSync installer as a malware and blocks its installation.[10] Supported OS Latest release compatible with Mac OS X 10.7.5 is FreeFileSync_8.4_Mac_OS_X https

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File copy utilities

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File copy utility

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Free file comparison tools

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Flash MP3 Player

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Flash MP3 Player

Flash MP3 Player is a web application that allows users to create a music player on their website. It is based on Flash and PHP, but it can be installed without any programming skills. Users are simply required to embed a piece of HTML code into their website and application automatically generates a playlist by scanning a specified folder for MP3 files and using ID3 tags for naming. The looks of the application is customizable via XML file. Features Easy installation. Forms playlist automatically. Customizable design. Fully resizable. Autoplay and autoresume options. See also Comparison of media players External links Flash MP3 Player main site Flash MP3 Player demo Flash MP3 Player download

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PHP software

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Creative Commons-licensed works

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PHP programming language

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Comparison of file managers

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Comparison of file managers

The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of notable file managers. General information Name Creator First public version(date) Latest stable version(date, number) Cost Software license Altap Salamander Altap August 15, 1997 July 1, 2019 (4.0) Free Proprietary Commander One Eltima Software August 4, 2015 September 29, 2015 (1.1) US$29.95[1] Proprietary CRAX Commander Soft4U2 September 1, 2013 June 5, 2018 (1.11.1) US$19.99[1] Proprietary Directory Opus Jonathan Potter,GPSoftware Amiga: v1 (1990-01-03)Windows: v6 (2001-06-18) December 19, 2018 (12.11) A$49 lite / A$89 pro Proprietary Dired integral part of Emacs,part of the GNU project 1974? July 30, 2009 (7.17) Free GPL Dolphin KDE June 7, 2006 (0.5) 19.08.2 (10 October 2019[2]) [±] Free GPL DOS Navigator Ritlabs 1991 (0.90) 1999 (1.51) Free BSD original DOS Shell Microsoft / IBM 1988 1998 Part of MS-DOS/PC DOS (OS) Proprietary D

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Software comparisons

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File managers

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FUDforum

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FUDforum

FUDforum is a free and open-source Internet forum software, originally produced by Advanced Internet Designs Inc., that is now maintained by the user community. The name "FUDforum" is an abbreviation of Fast Uncompromising Discussion forum.[1] It is comparable to other forum software. FUDforum is customizable and has a large feature set relative to other forum packages.[2] FUDforum runs on a number of operating systems that are able to support the PHP programming language, including Unix, Linux and Windows systems. To store its data, FUDforum relies on either IBM DB2, Firebird, MS-SQL, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL or SQLite. The interface is based on HTML5 with CSS, jQuery and AJAX to provide a more flexible user interface.[3] The code is released under the GNU General Public License and Internet sites can use the software royalty-free. History FUDforum was originally developed by Ilia Alshanetsky. The first version of FUDforum was released in 2001. Versions 2.8.0 and above are developed and supported by the

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Free Usenet clients

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Free Internet forum software

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Free groupware

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List of file formats

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List of file formats

This is a list of file formats used by computers, organized by type. Filename extensions are usually noted in parentheses if they differ from the file format name or abbreviation. Many operating systems do not limit filenames to one extension shorter than 4 characters, as was common with some operating systems that supported the File Allocation Table (FAT) file system. Examples of operating systems that do not impose this limit include Unix-like systems, and Microsoft Windows NT, 95, 98, and ME which have no three character limit on extensions for 32-bit or 64-bit applications on file systems other than pre-Windows 95 and Windows NT 3.5 versions of the FAT file system. Some filenames are given extensions longer than three characters. While MS-DOS and NT always see the final period in a filename as an extension, in UNIX-like systems, the final period doesn't necessarily mean the text afterward is the extension.[1] Some file formats, such as .txt or .text, may be listed multiple times. Archive and compressed



File manager

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File manager

A file manager or file browser is a computer program that provides a user interface to manage files and folders. The most common operations performed on files or groups of files include creating, opening (e.g. viewing, playing, editing or printing), renaming, moving or copying, deleting and searching for files, as well as modifying file attributes, properties and file permissions. Folders and files may be displayed in a hierarchical tree based on their directory structure. Some file managers contain features inspired by web browsers, including forward and back navigational buttons. Some file managers provide network connectivity via protocols, such as FTP, HTTP, NFS, SMB or WebDAV. This is achieved by allowing the user to browse for a file server (connecting and accessing the server's file system like a local file system) or by providing its own full client implementations for file server protocols. Directory editors A term that predates the usage of file manager is directory editor. An early directory edi

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File managers

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Utility software types

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WordPress

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WordPress

WordPress (WordPress.org) is a content management system (CMS) based on PHP and MySQL[4] that is usually used with the MySQL or MariaDB database servers but can also use the SQLite database engine.[5] Features include a plugin architecture and a template system. It is most associated with blogging but supports other types of web content including more traditional mailing lists and forums, media galleries, and online stores. Used by more than 60 million websites,[6] including 33.6% of the top 10 million websites as of April 2019,[7][8] WordPress is the most popular website management system in use.[9] WordPress has also been used for other application domains such as pervasive display systems (PDS).[10] WordPress was released on May 27, 2003, by its founders, Matt Mullenweg[1] and Mike Little,[11][12] as a fork of b2/cafelog. The software is released under the GPLv2 (or later) license.[13] To function, WordPress has to be installed on a web server, either part of an Internet hosting service like WordPress.co

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Automattic

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Free and open-source Android software

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Web design

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Visual Studio Code

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Visual Studio Code

Visual Studio Code is a source-code editor developed by Microsoft for Windows, Linux and macOS.[7] It includes support for debugging, embedded Git control and GitHub, syntax highlighting, intelligent code completion, snippets, and code refactoring. It is highly customizable, allowing users to change the theme, keyboard shortcuts, preferences, and install extensions that add additional functionality. The source code is free and open source and released under the permissive MIT License.[8] The compiled binaries are freeware and free for private or commercial use.[9] Visual Studio Code is based on Electron, a framework which is used to deploy Node.js applications for the desktop running on the Blink layout engine. Although it uses the Electron framework,[10] the software does not use Atom and instead employs the same editor component (codenamed "Monaco") used in Azure DevOps (formerly called Visual Studio Online and Visual Studio Team Services).[11] In the Stack Overflow 2019 Developer Survey, Visual Studio Co

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Software using the MIT license

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MacOS text editors

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Java development tools

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Content Management Interoperability Services

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Content Management Interoperability Services

Content Management Interoperability Services (CMIS) is an open standard that allows different content management systems to inter-operate over the Internet.[1] Specifically, CMIS defines an abstraction layer for controlling diverse document management systems and repositories using web protocols. Concept CMIS defines a domain model plus bindings that can be used by applications to manipulate content stored in a repository. CMIS provides a common data model covering typed files and folders with generic properties that can be set or read. There is a set of services for adding and retrieving documents ('objects'). There may be an access control system, a checkout and version control facility, and the ability to define generic relations. Three protocol bindings are defined, one using WSDL and SOAP, another using AtomPub,[2] and a last browser-friendly one using JSON. The model is based on common architectures of document management systems. The CMIS specification provides an API that is programming language-a

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XML-based standards

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Standards

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Content management systems

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SuEXEC

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SuEXEC

Apache suEXEC is a feature of the Apache web server. It allows users to run Common Gateway Interface (CGI) and Server Side Includes (SSI) applications as a different user. Normally, all web server processes run as the default web server user (often wwwrun, www-data, Apache or nobody). The suEXEC feature consists of a module for the web server and a binary executable which acts as a wrapper. suEXEC was introduced in Apache 1.2 and is often included in the default Apache package provided by most Linux distributions. If a client requests a CGI and suEXEC is activated, it will call the suEXEC binary which then wraps the CGI scripts and executes it under the user account of the server process (virtual host) defined in the virtual host directive.[1] Additionally, suEXEC perform a multi-step check on the executed CGI to ensure security for the server (including path-checks, a limit of permitted commands, etc.)[2] Example User "Alice" has a website including some Common Gateway Interface script files in her own p

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Apache httpd modules

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Apache Software Foundation

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Unix security-related software

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Comparison of email clients

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Comparison of email clients

The following tables compare general and technical features of a number of notable email client programs. General Basic general information about the clients: creator/company, O/S, licence, & interface. Clients listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development. Client Author/Developer Operating system Software license User Interface Alpine University of Washington Cross-platform Apache License 2.0 TUI Apple Mail Apple macOS, iOS, watchOS Proprietary GUI (Cocoa) Balsa Stuart Parmenter Linux GNU General Public License GUI (GTK+) Becky! Internet Mail Rimarts Windows Proprietary GUI BlitzMail Dartmouth College BSD licenses GUI Citadel citadel.org Unix-like GNU General Public License Webmail Claws Mail the Claws Mail team Cross-platform GNU General Public License GUI (GTK+) Cone Courier Mail Server developers Unix-like GNU General Public License TUI Courier (formerly Calypso) Micro Co

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Email clients

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Software comparisons

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Jamroom

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Jamroom

Jamroom is a community focused open source software web content management system (CMS) and Framework based on PHP and MySQL, which runs on a web hosting service.[2] Features include a module based extension system and skins using the Smarty templating engine.[3] Jamroom is distributed under the open source Mozilla Public License (MPL)[4] Features Jamroom URL routing Jamroom has a web template system using a template processor. Skins Jamroom users may install and switch between skins. Skins allow users to change the look and functionality of a Jamroom website. Skins may be installed using the Jamroom "Marketplace" administration tool or skin folders may be uploaded via FTP.[5] The PHP, HTML & CSS code found in themes can be added or edited for providing advanced features. Many Jamroom skins exist, some free, and some premium (paid for) templates. Modules One very popular feature of Jamroom is its module architecture which allows users and developers to extend its abilities beyond the core instal

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Web frameworks

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PHP frameworks

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Web application frameworks

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Scaffold (programming)

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Scaffold (programming)

Scaffolding, as used in computing, refers to one of two techniques: The first is a code generation technique related to database access in some model–view–controller frameworks; the second is a project generation technique supported by various tools. Code generation Scaffolding is a technique supported by some model–view–controller frameworks, in which the programmer can specify how the application database may be used. The compiler or framework uses this specification, together with pre-defined code templates, to generate the final code that the application can use to create, read, update and delete database entries, effectively treating the templates as a "scaffold" on which to build a more powerful application. Scaffolding is an evolution of database code generators from earlier development environments, such as Oracle's CASE Generator, and many other 4GL client-server software development products. Scaffolding was made popular by the Ruby on Rails framework. It has been adapted to other software frame

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Types of tools used in software development

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Software architecture

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Computer programming

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Pushd and popd

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Pushd and popd

In computing, pushd and popd are commands used to work with the command line directory stack.[1][2] They are available on command-line interpreters such as 4DOS, Bash,[3] Command Prompt and PowerShell for DOS, Microsoft Windows, ReactOS,[4] and in Unix-like operating systems. Overview The pushd command saves the current working directory in memory so it can be returned to at any time, optionally changing to a new directory. The popd command returns to the path at the top of the directory stack.[5][6] This directory stack is accessed by the command dirs in Unix or Get-Location -stack in Windows PowerShell. In Windows PowerShell, pushd is a predefined command alias for the Push-Location cmdlet and popd is a predefined command alias for the Pop-Location cmdlet. Both serve basically the same purpose as the Unix-like pushd and popd commands. The first Unix shell to implement a directory stack was Bill Joy's C shell. The syntax for pushing and popping directories is essentially the same as that used now.[7][8]

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Internal DOS commands

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Computing commands

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Windows commands

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ReadCube

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ReadCube

ReadCube is a technology company developing software for researchers, publishers, academic and commercial organizations. ReadCube’s product line includes the reference manager ReadCube Papers, Anywhere Access and custom services for publishers.[1] It is part of the Digital Science's portfolio.[2] The ReadCube Papers app suite is under development based on the original ReadCube and Papers applications. It is currently available as a web-based platform (Web App) and on Mobile operating systems iOS and Android. The ReadCube Papers' page announces that the desktop applications should be coming in Fall 2019.[3] The legacy ReadCube and Papers applications are no longer actively developed. The original ReadCube desktop application was available for free, selling premium services such as storage on the online library. In contrast, Papers was a software sold for a one time payment. ReadCube Papers is now a yearly subscription-based model. The prices are $5/month for full time researchers and $3/month for students. C

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All articles with minor POV problems

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Reference management software

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Personal information management

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Personal information management

Personal information management (PIM) is the activities people perform in order to acquire, organize, maintain, retrieve, and use personal information items such as documents (paper-based and digital), web pages, and email messages for everyday use to complete tasks (work-related or not) and fulfill a person's various roles (as parent, employee, friend, member of community, etc.).[1] More simply, PIM is the art of getting things done in our lives through information.[2] Practically, PIM is concerned with how people organize and maintain personal information collections, and methods that can help people in doing so. People may manage information in a variety of settings, for a variety of reasons, and with a variety of types of information. For example, an office worker might manage physical documents in a filing cabinet by placing them in folders organized alphabetically by project name, or might manage digital documents in folders in a hierarchical file system. A parent might collect and organize photographs

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Personal information managers

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Information science

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Sandbox

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Zend Framework

topic

Zend Framework

Zend Framework (ZF) is an open source, object-oriented web application framework implemented in PHP 7 and licensed under the New BSD License.[3] The framework is basically a collection of professional PHP[4]-based packages.[5] The framework uses various packages by the use of Composer as part of its package dependency managers; some of them are PHPUnit for testing all packages, Travis CI for continuous Integration Services. Zend Framework provides to users a support of the Model View Controller (MVC) in combination with Front Controller solution.[6] MVC implementation in Zend Framework has five main areas. The router and dispatcher functions to decide which controller to run based on data from URL, and controller functions in combination with the model and view to develop and create the final web page.[5] On 17 April 2019 it was announced[7] that the framework is transitioning into an open source project hosted by the Linux Foundation to be known as Laminas. License Zend Framework is licensed under the Ope

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Tales of Maj'Eyal

topic

Tales of Maj'Eyal

Tales of Maj'Eyal is a open-source roguelike video game released for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux in 2012. Tales of Maj'Eyal is available as donation-supported[1] freeware (donationware) from the developers.[2] Donations grant some exclusive online features (Freemium model). The game may also be purchased through the digital distribution outlets Steam[2][3] or GOG.[4] The game's TE4 game engine source code is under a GNU GPLv3 license,[5] the game's assets are licensed for use "with the Tales of Maj'Eyal game only."[6] Gameplay Tales of Maj'Eyal is a dungeon crawl featuring a customizable graphical interface that integrates classic roguelike keyboard commands with a mouse-driven interface.[7] In a departure from many older roguelike games, Tales of Maj'Eyal has full-color graphics, can be played almost exclusively with the mouse, and despite permadeath the player can earn extra lives through various ways and leveling up.[8] Tales of Maj'Eyal emphasizes tactical turn-based combat and flexible play

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Quick Look

topic

Quick Look

Quick Look is a quick preview feature developed by Apple Inc. which was introduced in its operating system Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. The feature was announced at the Worldwide Developers Conference on Jun. 11, 2007. While OS X's Finder has always had icon previews, Quick Look allows users to look at the contents of a file in the Finder at full or near-full size, depending on the size of the document relative to the screen resolution. It can preview files such as PDFs, HTML, QuickTime readable media, plain text and RTF text documents, iWork (Keynote, Pages, and Numbers) documents, ODF documents, Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint) files (including OOXML), and RAW camera images. Quick Look can also be opened in full screen and launched from the command line. Additionally, multi-page documents like PowerPoint slide shows can be navigated using the slide previews at the side of the preview window. Quick Look technology is implemented throughout the Apple suite of software starting with Mac OS X 10.5, i

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List of wiki software

topic

List of wiki software

This is a list of notable wiki software applications. For a comparative table of such software, see Comparison of wiki software. For a list of wikis, or websites using wiki software, see List of wikis. Standard wiki programs, by programming language JavaScript-based Lively Wiki is based on Lively Kernel and combines features of wikis and development environments. Users can create and edit application behavior and other content. TiddlyWiki is a HTML-JavaScript-based server-less wiki in which the entire site/wiki is contained in a single file. Wiki.js is an open-source, Node.js-based wiki application using git as the back end storage mechanism and automatically syncs with any git repository. It provides a visual Markdown editor with assets management, authentication system and a built-in search engine. Java-based XWiki is an open-source wiki engine with a complete wiki feature set (version control, attachments, etc.) and a database engine and programming language which allows database driven applic

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Roundcube

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Roundcube

Roundcube is a web-based IMAP email client. Roundcube's most prominent feature is the pervasive use of Ajax technology. After about two years of development, the first stable release of Roundcube was announced in early 2008. Roundcube is written in PHP and can be employed in conjunction with a LAMP "stack", or any other operating systems that support PHP are supported as well. The web server needs access to the IMAP server hosting the email and to an SMTP server to be able to send messages. Roundcube is free and open-source software subject to the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) with exceptions for skins and plugins.[3] On May 3, 2015, Roundcube announced in partnership with Kolab Systems AG that they planned to completely rewrite Roundcube and create Roundcube Next. A crowdfunding campaign was set up to finance the project. The goal of $80,000 was reached on June 24.[4] The final amount raised was $103,541 USD.[5] Roundcube Next was intended to include additional features like calendar, chat

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Deepa Jayakumar

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Deepa Jayakumar

Deepa Jayakumar (born 10 November 1974), also known as J. Deepa, was a former Indian politician and a journalist.[1][3][4] She is the niece of J. Jayalalithaa, the former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu [2] Family and Education Deepa was born on November 10, 1974 to Jayakumar and Vijayalakshmi. Jayakumar is the elder brother of Chief Minister Jayalalithaa. She did her schooling in Adharsh Vidyalaya, Chennai. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature degree from the University of Madras [5]. Then she pursued her Master of Arts in Journalism and Mass Communication in Madurai Kamarajar University [6]. Later, she worked as a sub editor in the New Indian Express for a brief period and then went to UK in 2010. She completed an M.A. in International Journalism at the Cardiff university, in Wales. Deepa has a brother Deepak Jayakumar. Deepa's family resided in Poes Garden together with Selvi. Jayalalithaa till 1978 [7]. After the death of grandmother Sandhya, Deepa's father Jayakumar left the Poes G

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Tree (command)

topic

Tree (command)

In computing, tree is a recursive directory listing command or program that produces a depth-indented listing of files. It is available in Unix and Unix-like systems, as well as DOS, Digital Research FlexOS,[1] IBM/Toshiba 4690 OS,[2] PTS-DOS,[3] FreeDOS,[4] IBM OS/2,[5] Microsoft Windows,[6] and ReactOS. Overview With no arguments, tree lists the files in the current directory. When directory arguments are given, tree lists all the files or directories found in the given directories each in turn. Upon completion of listing all files and directories found, tree returns the total number of files and directories listed. There are options to change the characters used in the output, and to use color output.[7] The command is available in MS-DOS versions 3.2 and later and IBM PC DOS releases 2 and later.[8] DR DOS 6.0 includes an implementation of the tree command.[9] The Tree Unix utility was developed by Steve Baker.[10] The FreeDOS version was developed by Dave Dunfield[11] and the ReactOS version was deve

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Clement Bowman

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Clement Bowman

Clement "Clem" Willis Bowman, C.M., PhD., P.Eng., HCIC, FCAE (born January 7, 1930 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian chemical engineer, the founding chairperson of the Alberta Oil Sands Technology and Research Authority. He is a recipient of the Order of Canada and the Global Energy Prize.[1][2][3] Education He was born to Emily and Clement Willis Bowman Sr. on January 7, 1930 in Toronto, Ontario. His father was an émigré from England who settled in Ingersoll, Ontario. After high school, Bowman enrolled in the University of Toronto where he graduated as a chemical engineer in 1952. After working several years with DuPont Canada on the production of nylon, Bowman returned to the University of Toronto in 1957 for postgraduate work. In 1958, he attained a MASc and then a PhD in 1961. Career After receiving his PhD, he joined Imperial Oil Limited, an affiliate of Exxon Corporation, at the Esso Research Centre in Sarnia, Ontario.[4] In 1964, he was assigned to a test of bitumen separation on the oil sands f

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Zarafa (software)

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Zarafa (software)

Zarafa, an open-source groupware application, originated in the city of Delft in the Netherlands. The company that developed Zarafa, previously known as Connectux, is also called Zarafa. The Zarafa groupware provided email storage on the server side and offered its own Ajax-based mail client called WebAccess and a HTML5-based, WebApp. Advanced features were available in commercially supported versions ("Small Business", "Professional" and "Enterprise" (different feature levels)[1]). Zarafa has been superseded by Kopano. Zarafa was originally designed to integrate with Microsoft Office Outlook and was intended as an alternative to the Microsoft Exchange Server.[2] Connectivity with Microsoft Outlook was provided via a proprietary client-side plugin. Support for the plugin has been discontinued after Q1/2016,[3] though Outlook from then on can use its own ActiveSync implementation instead. The WebApp (and WebAccess) has the same "look-and-feel" as the Outlook OWA. The software handles a personal address-book,

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Wireless email

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Drupal

topic

Drupal

Drupal [5] is a free and open-source content management framework written in PHP and distributed under the GNU General Public License.[4][6][7] Drupal provides a back-end framework for at least 2.3% of all websites worldwide[8][9] – ranging from personal blogs to corporate, political, and government sites.[10] Systems also use Drupal for knowledge management and for business collaboration.[11] As of March 2019, the Drupal community comprised more than 1.37 million members,[12][13] including 114,000 users actively contributing,[14] resulting in more than 42,650 free modules that extend and customize Drupal functionality,[15] over 2,750 free themes that change the look and feel of Drupal,[16] and at least 1,270 free distributions that allow users to quickly and easily set up a complex, use-specific Drupal in fewer steps.[17] The standard release of Drupal, known as Drupal core, contains basic features common to content-management systems. These include user account registration and maintenance, menu managemen

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Namespace

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Namespace

In computing, a namespace is a set of symbols that are used to organize objects of various kinds, so that these objects may be referred to by name. In Java, a namespace ensures that all the identifiers within it must have unique names so that they can be easily identified. In order to manage the namespace Java provides the mechanism of creating Java packages. Prominent examples include: file systems are namespaces that assign names to files;[1] some programming languages organize their variables and subroutines in namespaces;[2][3][4] computer networks and distributed systems assign names to resources, such as computers, printers, websites, (remote) files, etc. operating systems can partition kernel resources (process IDs, users, network sockets) by isolated namespaces to support virtualization containers Namespaces are commonly structured as hierarchies to allow reuse of names in different contexts. As an analogy, consider a system of naming of people where each person has a proper name, as well

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TYPO3

topic

TYPO3

TYPO3 is a free and open-source Web content management system written in PHP. It is released under the GNU General Public License. It can run on several web servers, such as Apache or IIS, on top of many operating systems, among them Linux, Microsoft Windows, FreeBSD, macOS and OS/2. TYPO3 is, along with Drupal, Joomla! and WordPress, among the most popular content management systems worldwide, however it is more widespread in Europe than in other regions. The biggest market share can be found in German-speaking countries.[2][3] TYPO3 is credited to be highly flexible, as code and content are operated separately. It can be extended by new functions without writing any program code. Also, the software is available in more than 50 languages and has a built-in localization system, therefore supports publishing content in multiple languages. Due to its features like editorial workplace and workflow, advanced frontend editing, scalability and maturity, TYPO3 is used to build and manage websites of different type

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Free content management systems

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Kajona

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Kajona

Kajona is a PHP based content management framework, released and developed as an open source project using the LGPL-licence. The system requires a relational database system such as MySQL, PostgreSQL or SQLite. Due to the abstraction of the database provided by Kajonas database-layer, nearly all relational database systems can be connected. Kajona uses UTF-8 to store its content, resulting in a system suitable for international websites. Since the system is written as a framework, external developers are able to enrich the system with new functionalities using one of the many hooks / plugin concepts Kajona provides. There are HotSpots for nearly every aspect such as for widgets, search plugins, elements or modules. Features Kajona ships with a set of modules and page-elements by default, including a comprehensive page-management (including a WYSIWYG editor for in-site-editing), navigation management, a search-module and image-elements including the support of on-the-fly image manipulations such as resizing

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Vanilla Forums

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Vanilla Forums

Vanilla is a Canadian software company founded in 2009 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is both a cloud-based (SaaS) community forum software and an open source community supported software. The company’s main product is Vanilla Cloud. Its open source product, Vanilla OSS, is a lightweight Internet forum package written in the PHP scripting language using the Garden framework. The software is released under the GNU GPL.[1] Vanilla Forums is free software, standards-compliant, customizable discussion forums. Since 2009 there is also a cloud-hosted version (offered by Vanilla). Vanilla's open source project was released on 1 July 2006, and has since undergone many changes, the most notable being the complete rewrite between Vanilla OSS and Vanilla Cloud, the latter of the two became the primary product and Vanilla 1 was passed into the hands of other developers.[2]. Vanilla 2, open source is still maintained and supported by the core team. Vanilla is designed to bring forums back to their roots, providing cor

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GMail Drive

topic

GMail Drive

GMail Drive was a free third-party Windows Shell namespace extension ("add-on") for Google's Gmail. GMail Drive was not supported by Google. It allowed a user to access a virtual drive stored in a Gmail account by causing the contents of the Gmail account to appear as a new network share on the user's workstation. In order to use this add-on, the user needed a Gmail e-mail account. The add-on enabled the user to use the standard Windows desktop file copy and paste commands to transfer files to and from the Gmail account as if it were a drive on the user's computer. Gmail Drive was based upon GmailFS, a file system developed by Richard Jones. GMail Drive was published in 2004 and functional as early as 2005 which predates Google's later implementation of Google Drive released on April 24, 2012. As of 2015, the official extension page declares the project dead.[1] Function In order for GMail Drive to operate, the computer must be connected to the Internet and the user must have a Gmail account. A broadband co

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SharePoint

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SharePoint

SharePoint is a web-based collaborative platform that integrates with Microsoft Office. Launched in 2001,[5] SharePoint is primarily sold as a document management and storage system, but the product is highly configurable and usage varies substantially among organizations. Microsoft states that SharePoint has 190 million users across 200,000 customer organizations.[6] Editions There are various editions of SharePoint which have different functions. SharePoint Server SharePoint Server is provided to organizations that seek greater control over SharePoint's behavior or design. This product is installed on customers' IT infrastructure. It receives fewer frequent updates but has access to a wider set of features and customization capabilities. There are three editions of SharePoint Server: Standard, Enterprise, and Foundation (free) which was discontinued in 2016.[7] These servers may be provisioned as normal virtual/cloud servers or as hosted services. SharePoint Standard Microsoft SharePoint Standard bui

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WebDAV

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WebDAV

Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) is an extension of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) that allows clients to perform remote Web content authoring operations. WebDAV is defined in RFC 4918 by a working group of the Internet Engineering Task Force. The WebDAV1 protocol provides a framework for users to create, change and move documents on a server. The most important features of the WebDAV protocol include the maintenance of properties about an author or modification date, namespace management, collections, and overwrite protection. Maintenance of properties includes such things as the creation, removal, and querying of file information. Namespace management deals with the ability to copy and move web pages within a server's namespace. Collections deal with the creation, removal, and listing of various resources. Lastly, overwrite protection handles aspects related to locking of files. Many modern operating systems provide built-in client-side support for WebDAV. History WebDAV began i

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Sweeney Todd (album)

topic

Sweeney Todd (album)

Sweeney Todd is the first album of the Canadian glam rock band Sweeney Todd. The single "Roxy Roller" reached #1 in the RPM national singles survey on June 26, 1976, and held that position for three weeks.[2][3][4] Singer Nick Gilder and guitarist Jim McCulloch later went on to solo careers. They have both since returned to the band. Track list "Roxy Roller" "Broadway Boogie" "Juicy Loose" "Short Distance, Long Journey" "The Kilt" (instrumental) "Rock'N'Roll Story" "Sweeney Todd Folder" "See What We're Doing Now" "Daydreams" "Rue De Chance" "Let's Do It All Again" Personnel Nick Gilder: Lead Vocals Jim McCulloch: Guitar Dan Gaudin: Keyboards Budd Marr: Bass John Booth: Drums Rod Dirk: Engineer [5] Martin Shaer: Producer References Discogs - Tony Rivers and the Castaways http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?brws_s=1&file_num=nlc008388.4158a&type=1&interval=24&PHPSESSID=kjerdnvbvl3a8p4jfufutrc7u6 http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rp

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Arokia Rajiv

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Arokia Rajiv

Arokia Rajiv (born 22 May 1991) is an Indian sprinter who specialises in the 400 metres distance. He won silver medals in the men's and mixed 4×400 m relays at the 2018 Asian Games and placed third in the individual 400 m in 2014. He won medals in both the 400 m and 4×400 m events at the 2016 South Asian Games and 2017 Asian Championships. He competed in the relay at the 2016 Summer Olympics.[2] Early life Rajiv was born in Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu,[1] in a poor family. He studied at the Government Boys Higher Secondary School, Lalgudi, and St. Joseph's College, Tiruchirappalli.[3] Career Rajiv began his career as a long jumper before taking to 400 metres.[2] At the 2019 Asian Championship, he Finished 4th Place, clocking 45.37 seconds in the final.[4] In the process, he bettered his previous best of 45.92 seconds, which he had achieved at the Asian Games in Incheon on 28 th September 2014.[5] International competitions Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes Representing  India 2013

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Athletes (track and field) at the 2018 Asian Games

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Internet Server Application Programming Interface

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Internet Server Application Programming Interface

The Internet Server Application Programming Interface (ISAPI) is an N-tier API of Internet Information Services (IIS), Microsoft's collection of Windows-based web server services. The most prominent application of IIS and ISAPI is Microsoft's web server. The ISAPI has also been implemented by Apache's mod_isapi module so that server-side web applications written for Microsoft's IIS can be used with Apache, and other third-party web servers like Zeus Web Server offer ISAPI interfaces. Microsoft's web server application software is called Internet Information Services, which is made up of a number of "sub-applications" and is very configurable. ASP.NET is one such slice of IIS, allowing a programmer to write web applications in their choice of programming language (VB.NET, C#, F#) that's supported by the Microsoft .NET CLR. ISAPI is a much lower-level programming system, giving much better performance, at the expense of simplicity. ISAPI applications ISAPI consists of two components: Extensions and Filters.

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MediaWiki

topic

MediaWiki

MediaWiki is a free and open-source wiki engine. It was developed for use on Wikipedia in 2002, and given the name "MediaWiki" in 2003.[5] It remains in use on Wikipedia and almost all other Wikimedia websites, including Wiktionary, Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata; these sites continue to define a large part of the requirement set for MediaWiki.[6] MediaWiki was originally developed by Magnus Manske and improved by Lee Daniel Crocker.[7][8] Its development has since then been coordinated by the Wikimedia Foundation. MediaWiki is written in the PHP programming language and stores all text content into a database. The software is optimized to efficiently handle large projects, which can have terabytes of content and hundreds of thousands of hits per second.[6][9] Because Wikipedia is one of the world's largest websites, achieving scalability through multiple layers of caching and database replication has been a major concern for developers. Another major aspect of MediaWiki is its internationalization; its inte

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Intel Corporation

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Enterprise wikis

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Nokia 1100

topic

Nokia 1100

The Nokia 1100 (and closely related variants, the Nokia 1101 and the Nokia 1108) is a basic GSM mobile phone produced by Nokia. Over 250 million 1100s have been sold since its launch in late 2003,[1] making it the world's best selling phone handset[2] and the best selling consumer electronics device in the world at the time.[3] The model was announced on 27 August 2003[4] and was discontinued in 2009.[5] The 1100 achieved its popularity despite being made during a time when more modern and advanced devices were available in the market. It was targeted towards developing countries and users who do not require advanced features beyond making calls and SMS text messages, alarm clock, reminders, etc.[6] The Nokia 1100 was the company's cheapest mobile phone when it was released to the market,[7] making it ideal for the developing world. Its feature set is similar to the previous 5110/3210/3310 models that were among the most popular mobile phones in the world during their time, before handsets developed several

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FHFS (file server)

topic

FHFS (file server)

FHFS is a FTP and HTTP Web Server package, transparently based on HFS and FileZilla.[1] FHFS is built to act as an all-in-one user-based file hosting website, good for schools, businesses, etc. whose students/employees need to easily transport files. FHFS is designed specifically for account-based storage, not easily compatible with other uses or using over-top of an original HFS setup. Early development was started in January 2011, beta builds were tested in October 2011, version 1.0 was released on 11/3/2011.[2] FHFS was started to accelerate development on FileSplat.com, as well as showcase the capabilities of HFS macros. FHFS 2.0 was released on 10/28/2012, exactly one year after the first beta of 1.0. FHFS was loosely based on source code from www.filesplat.com at the time, and was created by the same developer.[3] Filesplat no longer uses FHFS. FHFS is written in several different languages, including: HFS Macros, XML, XHTML, CSS, JavaScript, DOS, PHP, and C#. FHFS is recognized by the developer of HFS.

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