GTD-Free is personal todo/action manager inspired by the GTD (Getting Things Done) method by David Allen. It tries to be a simple and easy to use management tool. It aims to guide users to manage very efficient GTD workflow even if they are not familiar with GTD or are too unorganized to follow it. The user interface is clean and simple at each step of the workflow: the user objective should be to get things done and spend a minimum of time with the tool itself.
The Crossplex package of make macros simplifies the creation of embedded systems, and is powerful enough for large organizations to use for developing elaborate product lines. It allows you to organize many different products under a logical structure, making systems of any complexity easy to specify. When you have many different target platforms, each with multiple different software configurations, Crossplex keeps those configurations from stepping on each other, without requiring redundancy in your source tree. Crossplex allows you to use a single dependency tree encompassing both in-house software and third-party packages, and it is particularly suited to build automation. Crossplex makes it easy to shield your build from the host environment, setting all shell variables explicitly, and giving you complete control over the path that is used at any point in the build. This is nice when you want to support building on a variety of development platforms. Crossplex scales to your needs. You can dabble in the unpacking and patching features as you need them, or you can base your entire system from the ground up on the Crossplex framework. Crossplex supports creation and use of glibc and uClibc toolchains.
sfind is a highly portable and fully POSIX.1-2001 compliant implementation of the "find" utility. It implements features like "-ls" and "-exec program [argument ...] {} +" (the latter is the POSIX built in "xargs"). It has no limitations on path length. Directory loops caused by hard-linked directories are handled gracefully.
BitNami KnowledgeTree Stack is an easy-to-install distribution of the KnowledgeTree ECM software. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Apache, PHP, MySQL, and phpMyAdmin (optional), so users can get a KnowledgeTree installation up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Linux, Windows, and OS X are currently supported.
NoteFinder is an application for managing any text information: notes, quotes, conversations, drafts, articles, contacts, etc. It features creating, viewing, editing, renaming, deleting entries, rich text formatting, inline calculations (e.g., use ~7+8~ to get 15, or functions and constants from Python's math module, such as sqrt, sin, and pi), organizing entries chronologically (creation dates) and semantically (tags), advanced search (with date:, tag:, title:, year:, month:, and day: parameters), saving searches, multiple notebooks, multiple backends, the ability to move/copy entries from one notebook to another, synchronizing via email/Wiki, linking entries together, CamelCase links support, and a tabbed interface.
filegive easily sends or receives files point-to-point, with authentication and ciphering, and the other side only needs a Web browser. No third party server is involved in the transfer. It can use common NAT traversal protocols like uPnP and NAT-PMP, manually forwarded ports, or a public ssh server.
PsyncX allows you to backup either part or all of your hard drive. You can mirror your selected folder to a FireWire drive, a disk image, or a network drive (this feature doesn't seem to be working right now). In addition, psync will create a bootable drive if you mirror your entire harddrive. PsyncX allows you to schedule regular backups as well. (Note: your computer can't be asleep for this to work properly).
Genomorama is a software program for interactively displaying multiple genomes. It provides a powerful yet easy to use interface that leverages the visualization power of modern computers (via OpenGL) and the substantial bioinformatic infrastructure provided by the NCBI (via the NCBI C toolkit). Genomorama is written in portable, highly optimized C++ and comes in three "flavors" that allow it to run natively on (most) modern operating systems: OS X (using Carbon), Microsoft Windows (using MFC), and Linux (using Motif). Executables and source code are freely provided for all flavors.