Pogo, seems to be a pretty good alternative to kicker
How would you compare it (pork) to naim?
Pogo, seems to be a pretty good alternative to kicker
[quote author=gorn link=board=2;threadid=5187;start=120#msg79338 date=1078190982]
I like cp, mv and rm as my file manager. Maybe a bit of bash scripting with some sed or perl mixed in too.
[/quote]
I also like it but only the parts where perl is mixed into it.![]()
[quote author=countach44 link=board=2;threadid=5187;start=120#msg79344 date=1078197110]
How would you compare it (pork) to naim?
[/quote]
very similar, but naim was having issues signing on at the same time as gaim (i think due to TOC?)
TOC wrecks my buddy list, but I coulda sworn that naim used OSCAR?
naim is the original ncurses AIM client. It uses the TOC protocol, and features many commonly-requested features found nowhere else, while still providing an intuitive chat interface.pork is an ncurses-based AOL instant messenger client. It uses the OSCAR protocol (the one the windows client uses) to access AIM. Pork features Perl scripting; an online help system; the ability to configure nearly all aspects of the program's look-and-feel; an alias system; and a powerful, fully-configurable key binding system. It supports being logged in with more than one screen name at the same time. The default look-and-feel of the client is modeled after the ircII IRC client. Anyone comfortable using ircII (or any clients derived from it -- e.g., epic, BitchX, etc.) will feel comfortable using pork.
Thanks for clarifying ;D
bandwidthd -- a daemon designed to run on your router that graphs the traffic passing through generating a webpage to give you a nice overview of what's going on on your network. Easily covers installations of a few thousand hosts with very little system load. It's main advantage over mrtg: Configuring bandwidthd is piece of cake. Takes all of two minutes.
Well, after reading all the posts, no one posted about zsh. Very powerful shell. zsh stands for THE Z-SHELL. You can also make a .zshrc and source it.I have become quite used to it on Slackware. Also :P , no one mention This
P.S: It is Perl.And also Samba. A great very powerful tool for..i dunno yet. Check it out here: http://us3.samba.org/samba/samba.html
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