Category/Interface/kde-app
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kde-app (74)
Arson Arson is a KDE frontend to various CD burning and ripping tools. It was originally written to burn audio CDs, as there were no other frontends that used cdrdao (in disk at once mode), that could decode various encoded audio formats (mp3, ogg), and that displayed an accurate track length as the playlist was created. Arson was later expanded to include full progress display for all lengthy operations, audio CD burning, normalization of tracks before burning to even out volumes, data CD burning, CdIndex support (a free CDDB-like service), CD-to-CD copying (direct or with an intermediate file), and audio CD ripping/encoding (ripping tracks from a CD to files), and encoding to WAV, MP3, and Ogg Vorbis formats is supported. Data CD burning and [S]VCD image creation and burning are supported.
Fbxkb fbxkb is keyboard indicator and switcher that shows a flag of the current keyboard in a system tray area and allows you to switch to another one. It is NETWM compliant.
FlowerAttack FlowerAttack is a screensaver with OpenGL graphics that acts as a particle system that emits images that move towards the viewer. Both spacy and cozy savers can be created. It supports presets, any number of emitters per preset, and custom images (five built-ins are included). Speed, color, and movement can be edited with real-time feedback from the preview. It requires accelerated OpenGL.
Gwenview Gwenview is a simple image viewer for KDE 2.0. Image loading is done by the Qt library (so it supports all image formats your Qt installation supports). It features a folder tree window and a file list and thumbnail window for easy navigation in your file hierarchy and uses docked windows so you can alter the layout.
K3b 'K3b' is a CD and DVD burning application for GNU/Linux systems optimized for KDE. It provides a comfortable user interface to perform most CD/DVD burning tasks, such as creating an audio CD from a set of audio files or copying a CD. While the experienced user can influence all steps of the burning process, the beginner may find comfort in the automatic settings and the reasonable defaults which allow a quick start. The actual burning is done by the command line utilities cdrecord, cdrdao, and growisofs.
KAlarm KAlarm lets you configure personal messages to be displayed, commands to be executed, or emails to be sent, at scheduled times. It allows you to choose the message font and color, how often to repeat, whether to display an advance reminder, whether to speak the message or play a sound when it is displayed, and whether to cancel the alarm if it can't be triggered on time (e.g. if you are logged out at the time). As well as using the graphical interface to configure alarms, you can use the command line, and there is a DCOP interface for other applications.
KAlarm 2 KAlarm configures personal alarm messages, commands, and emails and displays/executes/sends them at scheduled times. Users choose the message font and color, how often to repeat, whether to display an advance reminder, whether to beep or play a sound file when the message is displayed, and whether to cancel the message if it can't be displayed on time. It has a DCOP interface for other applications. It is available in 39 languages, and can be used with other desktops as long as KDE is installed. KAlarm is in the kdepim package in KDE 3. It is also available as a standalone package for both KDE 2 and KDE 3.
KBag kBag synchronizes your documents between one computer and another.
KDE KDE is a graphical desktop for GNU/Linux systems. It is available in 42 languages and ships with the core KDE libraries, the core desktop environment, and over 100 applications. The current distribution includes run-time libraries and base components, as well as various user applications including an office suite, graphics, multimedia, games, utilities, and networking packages. It also includes an integrated help system.
KDE Accessibility KDE Accessibility is a set of assistive technologies for the KDE desktop. It currently consists of three applications: KMagnifier, KMouseTool, and KMouth. 'kmousetool' clicks the mouse for you, so you don't have to. It works with any mouse or pointing device. The amount of time it waits before it clicks is adjustable, of course, and is by default just half a second. KMouseTool can also drag the mouse. 'KMagnifier' is a screen magnifier. It magnifies the area around the mouse pointer or optionally a user-defined area. Additionally it offers to save the magnified screen shots to disk. 'KMouth' lets people who have lost their voice make their computers speak for them. It has a text input field and speaks the sentences that you enter. It also has support for user-defined phrase books.
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The copyright and license notices on this page only apply to the text on this page. Any software described in this text has its own copyright notice and license, which can usually be found in the distribution itself.
This page was last modified on 6 July 2011, at 17:51.

