Fresh
Votes: 65
liqbase is a graphical playground for the Nokia Internet Tablets running Maemo.
featuring finger friendly menus, variable resolution kinetic scrolling fullscreen document viewer, pressure sensitivity sketching with a graffiti wall showing all drawings, cpu throttling adjustments and a fullscreen starfield screensaver.
Votes: 0
This package includes a Hebrew keyboard definition file (vkb) for the default on screen keyboard, and an xkb Hebrew configuration file for the N810 internal keyboard.
In addition it depends on three more packages, providing an almost complete Hebrew support solution:
- Culmus fonts package
- him-arabic providing an altenative on screen keyboard.
- locale-resolver-extra for displaying Hebrew and Arabic language names in the menus.
Votes: 2
This is a tool to find cover images via the Amazon Web Services API and to save them locally. It's written in C and needs Gtk+2 and libxml2. The search box allows specifying the artist and title in the following format: artist:search artist;title:search title
So searching for Eric Johnson's cd Tones would be: artist:Eric Johnson;title:Tones
Votes: 4
You need an A1.net account for this application.
If you're on the tablet and want to use WebSMS to send SMS cheap or for free, you don't want to log into the website every time with the browser. This app (smpy) asks you for your login data once, and then allows you to easily select contacts and write messages in your GUI, and will log into the web account, fill in the web forms and send your SMS and give you feedback in the GUI.
Votes: 7
Bos Wars is a futuristic real time strategy game (RTS). Bos Wars has a dynamic rate based economy. Energy is produced by power plants and magma gets pumped from hot spots. Buildings and mobile units are also built at a continuous rate. Control of larger parts of the map creates the potential to increase your economy throughput. Holding key points like roads and passages allow for different strategies.
Bos Wars is copyrighted in 2004-2008 by Tina Petersen Jensen, François Beerten et al.
