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Chromium (Google Chrome)

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Claimed by Google Analyzed 2 months ago

Chromium is the open-source project behind Google Chrome. It builds on components from other open source software projects, including WebKit and Mozilla, and is aimed at improving stability, speed and security with a simple and efficient user interface. See licensing at ... [More] http://dev.chromium.org/developers/faq and http://code.google.com/chromium/terms.html [Less]

30.9M lines of code

2,109 current contributors

2 months since last commit

2,202 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.5
   
I Use This

Transmission

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

cross-platform BitTorrent client

259K lines of code

15 current contributors

3 days since last commit

375 users on Open Hub

High Activity
4.32673
   
I Use This

Synergy

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

Synergy is free open source software for sharing one mouse and keyboard between multiple Windows, Mac OS X and Linux computers on your desk. Seamlessly copy and paste between your computers. An open source community run project, in development since May 2001.

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

over 6 years since last commit

174 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.63158
   
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: gpl

Cyberduck

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  No analysis available

Cyberduck is an open source FTP, SFTP (SSH Secure File Transfer) and WebDAV client licensed under the GPL with an easy to use interface, integration with external editors and support for many Mac OS X system technologies such as Spotlight, Bonjour, the Keychain and AppleScript. Windows version also available.

0 lines of code

7 current contributors

0 since last commit

159 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.07895
   
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: gpl

iTerm.app

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

iTerm is a terminal emulation program written using Cocoa. The letter i represents a native Apple look and feel of the program interface, and an emphasis on complete international support. It provides multiple tabs within one window, support for Applescript, transparent windows and custom background ... [More] pictures, Rendezvous support, and support for all language encodings that are available with OS X. [Less]

22.8K lines of code

0 current contributors

about 15 years since last commit

71 users on Open Hub

Inactive
3.82609
   
I Use This

macvim

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  Analyzed 2 days ago

MacVim is a port of the text editor Vim to Mac OS X. MacVim supports multiple windows with tabbed editing and a host of other features such as: bindings to standard OS X keyboard shortcuts (⌘Z, ⌘V, ⌘A, ⌘G, etc.), transparent backgrounds, full-screen mode, multibyte editing with OS X input ... [More] methods and automatic font substitution, ODB editor support, and more. Most importantly, MacVim brings you the full power of Vim 7.2 to Mac OS X. Note: MacVim is in no way connected with http://macvim.org. That site is no longer being maintained and only provides outdated binaries of the old Carbon port of Vim. Snow LeopardMacVim now builds as 64 bit by default on Snow Leopard (10.6). I simplified the build process as well, so check out the Building wiki page on how to build your own binary. The stable build seems to run fine on Snow Leopard, but please consider using a snapshot instead as they are built specifically for Snow Leopard (the snapshot also runs on Leopard). DownloadThere are two official binaries of MacVim to choose from: Stable: The latest stable release is MacVim 7.2 stable 1.2 which was released on the 21st of August 2008. It is a universal binary which runs on Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.5. Mac OS X 10.6 ("Snow Leopard") seems to work fine as well but I strongly suggest using the latest snapshot build on Snow Leopard. Snapshot: A new snapshot is released every month or so and contains several features and bug-fixes which have not yet been included in the stable build. The latest version can be downloaded here. If the download fails for some reason then try using the download mirror. You may also build your own version from the source code. Please consider contributing to the MacVim project if you are able. MacVim is distributed free as charityware (type :h license inside MacVim for details). If you find MacVim a useful addition to your life please consider helping needy children in Uganda. Getting startedThe book A Byte of Vim is freely available online and is suitable for newcomers as well as more experienced users of Vim. Another freely available online book is Vim Recipies which serves as a cookbook where you can look up different ways to perform a specific task. There are also several Vim tutorials available online, such as this Vim introduction and tutorial. Once familiar with the basics you may benefit from using the following article on Efficient Editing With Vim as a quick reference. Before diving into all that material, you may want to read the article "Why use Vim?" which dispels common misconceptions about Vim and also provides examples which illustrate some of its many features. Vim comes bundled with a tutor which can be quite helpful to go through since it encourages you to experiment as you read. At the moment it requires some trickery to get going, but once there it should be easy to follow. The tutor is a text file which needs to be copied to a folder where it can be modified. To copy the tutor to your home folder, open MacVim and type (make sure you are in normal mode first by hitting Esc): :!cp $VIMRUNTIME/tutor/tutor ~/then hit enter. This will place a file named tutor in your home folder. Now, to start the tutor simply open that file in MacVim, e.g. by pressing ⌘O to show the file open dialog and then browsing to the tutor file. How to get helpThere is a fairly active mailing list called vim_mac where you can post questions about MacVim and request new features. Before posting a question, you should consult the FAQ, search the vim_mac archives, and consult the built-in Vim help by typing :h macvim inside MacVim. Since the binary releases always are a couple of versions behind the source code it is also possible that any problems you encounter may already have been fixed. Check the change log for the latest updates to the source code. Help me!If you find a bug, then please file an Issue report but first make sure that it has not already been reported by searching for old Issues. Unless you are absolutely sure that you have really found a bug you should probably post a question on the vim_mac mailing list first. (Note that there are several people answering questions on the mailing list whereas there is only one of me responding to Issue reports.) [Less]

536K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 9 years since last commit

39 users on Open Hub

Inactive
4.72727
   
I Use This

Smultron

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  Analyzed 2 days ago

Smultron is a free text editor for Mac OS X, which is both easy to use and powerful. It is designed to not confuse newcomers nor disappoint advanced users. It has all the advantages of an Cocoa application and some of its features are tabs, line numbers, support for syntax colouring for many ... [More] different languages, functions list, support for text encodings, snippets, a toolbar, a status bar, preview, split window, multi-document find and replace with regular expressions, possibility to show invisible characters, authenticated open and saves, command-line utility, full screen editing and running commands and scripts from within the application. [Less]

124K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 13 years since last commit

39 users on Open Hub

Inactive
3.94118
   
I Use This

GNUstep

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Claimed by GNU Analyzed 3 months ago

GNUstep is a mature Framework, suited both for advanced GUI desktop applications as well as server applications. The framework closely follows Apple's Cocoa (formerly NeXT's OpenStep) APIs but is portable to a variety of platforms and architectures. GNUstep offers Development tools for ... [More] command-line and GUI development, as well as the foundations for a Desktop environment, which other projects can complete. [Less]

1.37M lines of code

24 current contributors

3 months since last commit

26 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.4
   
I Use This

OsiriX

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  No analysis available

OsiriX is an image processing software dedicated to DICOM images (".dcm" / ".DCM" extension) produced by medical equipment (MRI, CT, PET, PET-CT, ...) and confocal microscopy (LSM and BioRAD-PIC format). It can also read many other file formats: TIFF (8,16, 32 bits), JPEG, PDF, AVI, MPEG and ... [More] Quicktime. It is fully compliant with the DICOM standard for image comunication and image file formats. OsiriX is able to receive images transferred by DICOM communication protocol from any PACS or medical imaging modality (STORE SCP - Service Class Provider, STORE SCU - Service Class User, and Query/Retrieve) . [Less]

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

0 since last commit

20 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.875
   
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: GNU_Gener...

X-Chat Aqua

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  Analyzed 2 days ago

X-Chat Aqua is X-Chat with an Aqua interface for MacOS X. X-Chat Aqua uses the irc engine from X-Chat, and is designed to look and feel like the GTK+ front end.

27.7K lines of code

1 current contributors

over 2 years since last commit

11 users on Open Hub

Inactive
4.0
   
I Use This