amqp
Qpid 0.5
Open source and free AMQP based messaging tool more>> With Tidy Up! you can search for duplicate files and packages; by the owner application, content, type, creator, extension, date modified, date created, name, label, visibility and more. You can also search by the tag, duration and bit rate of MP3s and AACs audio files, search the content of the iTunes and iPod dababases, and synchronize deletions with iTunes.
Tidy Up! allows you to search for duplicate folders; by name, date modified, date created, label visibility, empty folders, their contents and more.
Tidy Up! is fast, from 20% to 50% faster than the already fast Doublet Scan. With its multitasking capability, you can do more searches at a time and take advantage of the latest Macintosh computers and operating systems
Tidy Up! have a security system that assure you to keep at least an item of the duplicate group on the disk.
Tidy Up! comes with a list of tasks with which to do some common searches
Tidy Up! offers a full-size preview of the most commonly used files such as: audio, media, text, pdf, graphics, fonts and more...
One of the most interesting features of Tidy Up! is the capability to separate, for quick and easy organization, found items using custom criteria via "Smart Baskets."
Of course Tidy Up! allows you to trash, move, burn and export into html files all found items.
Tidy Up! is fully customizable and allows you to create your preferred workspace.<<less
0MQ 0.6.1
Fastest open source messaging ever more>> Fastest open source messaging ever
Getting two apps to talk is always a challenge. They have to agree on what the data looks like. And what it means. They have to agree on how the data is organised into a message. XML, binary, or something else? They have to agree how to speak to each other.
They have to agree on security. They have to agree how to connect, across what networks. They need to queue messages that cant be delivered immediately. They need to detect and handle errors properly.
Many apps try to solve these problems from scratch. But you can also buy big, expensive, slow packages called "messaging systems" that handle a lot of these jobs for you.
Some of these systems even agree on standard protocols like AMQP. Using a messaging system usually costs a lot but it gives you the power to bring apps together.
Messaging used to be for big wealthy firms only, and the really fast messaging systems are still very expensive. This situation is changing.
0MQ ("ZeroMQ") final goal is to become the fastest messaging ever. The way to get performance is to optimise the whole software and hardware stack together. So, 0MQ is closely developed with major hardware firms.
0MQ is already very fast because its already getting 30 micro-seconds end-to-end latencies and over 3 million messages a second today.
0MQ is intended to be POSIX compliant and is compatible with the following platforms:
- Mac OS X (tested on 10.5)
- Linux (tested on Debian 4.0, Ubuntu 8.0.4)
- FreeBSD (tested on 5.5 release)
- Solaris (tested on 8, 10)
Main features:
- Built on standards: for frameworks, protocols, and community.
- Demolishes any network, from 10Gb Ethernet, to 4X IB.
- Transfers 2M messages a second on a 1Gb network with one CPU at each end.
- End-to-end latency under twenty ?sec over TCP using custom network hardware and drivers.
- Beats any commercial product: faster, more portable, more reliable, more usable.
- Built for the community: GPLv3 software developed in an active community.
- Designed for the real world: stocks, grids, real time data, streams, video, gaming.
- Runs everywhere: the smallest devices, all operating systems, all languages.
- Fully distributed: no central servers to crash, millions of WAN and LAN nodes.
- Extensible framework: kernel-style drivers for custom hardware, protocols or applications.
Enhancements
- Ruby and COBOL language bindings have been added.
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