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I am doing a source that can manage FOSS one of them is by Black Duck Software which is also known for ohloh.net.
I am wondering if anyone knows quite similar tools ?
Below are some of the alternatives:
Protecode
FOSSology
OSS Discovery (itself having GNU Affero Public License v3)
Palamida
Ninka (itself GNU GPL licensed)
Masterbranch but it seems sadly in standby (or dead?) since its main actors were hired by TalentBin around the beginning of 2013.
Coderwall more focused on developers and teams
Open Source Software Directory (only a search tool)
The Free Software Directory (wiki)
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Looks like this guy's site is offline or unresponsive.
I used to use this daily.
If anyone has an app or program that is free or nearly free they can recommend that would be super awesome.
Thank you in advance.
{EDIT}
What I am looking for is a unicode character conversion utility. Apologies I take it for granted that people are familiar with this online tool as it is super helpful and was Number 1 on google when you searched for character conversion or unicode conversion.
it appears that the tool is all javascript based so you could just go the wayback machine and save the page or download it etc
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Is there an alternative open sourced version of a system like http://airbrake.io/pages/home
I would use airbrake but its purely for internal software and exception management
Yes there is. It's https://github.com/errbit/errbit ; It's fully compliant with our notifier / API.
We offer a hosted version of Airbrake if you're a large company.
Regards,
Ben from Airbrake.
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I'm just about to rewrite my personal site as a learn-as-you-go project and am thinking of open-sourcing the code (see this question).
Are there any examples of large-ish web sites (not desktop applications) which have made their code open-source? Or is this generally thought of as a bad idea because it would be easier for a malicious hacker to find any security holes in the code?
WordPress is the best example, I can think of in your case.
And, the security implications come from the loopholes, you might leave by mistake or in coding process. But, then when you are open-sourcing the project, a lot of people may contribute and help you resolve those issues, which is how WordPress also works. They have a bug-tracker setup for them for this purpose.
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I'm looking to create a program that will burn an audio CD. Before diving in I was hoping to see a selection of libraries that will make writing the code to burn the audio easy to write. I don't care much about language but something that is cross OS would be nice. (Specifically Windows and linux).
So far the only library that I see is PrimoBurn, but I can't seem to get their C++ version to compile.
So what do you guys use?
cdrecord runs on both Windows and Linux (Mac as well). Call it through a system call.
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I've seen some complex, enterprise tools for requirements like Rymatech's FeaturePlan -- is there something that enables collaboration and best practices for putting Business-Readable, Domain-Specific (or natural language) requirements and acceptance criteria in place?
Have a look http://sourceforge.net/projects/rth/. An open source tool for requirements management.
You may want to try www.tracecloud.com . Its free (up to 500 requirements) and I have seen some good reviews about it.
There's also GatherSpace - http://gatherspace.com/
I tried it a bit about a year ago. Didn't stick for me, but might work for you.
You could also take a look at SpiraTest which does requirements and test management, some people I know have had some success with it.