AppSignal starts at $23/month with all features included. No overages, no hidden fees. 30-day free trial.
Tired of monitoring tools that punish you for scaling? AppSignal offers transparent, predictable pricing with every feature unlocked on every plan. Track errors, monitor performance, detect anomalies, and manage logs across Ruby, Python, Node.js, and more. Trusted by developers since 2012 with free dev-to-dev support. No credit card required to start your 30-day trial.
Try AppSignal Free
Push Code. Get a Production URL. Done.
Cloud Run deploys any language instantly. Scales to zero. Pay only when code runs.
Skip the Kubernetes configs. Cloud Run handles HTTPS, scaling, and infrastructure automatically. Two million requests free per month.
JStella is a Java-based Atari 2600 VCS emulator. It allows one to play old Atari 2600 games in an operating system independent manner. It also supports web page based applets. Its emulation core is based on Stella-Atari 2600 Emulator.
The Wolfram Machine project is an effort to create a set of documentation and useful modules (both hardware and software) for a computing architecture based on the mathematical theories presented in Steven Wolfram's book _A_New_Kind_of_Science_.
Stop waiting on engineering. Build production-ready internal tools with AI—on your company data, in your cloud.
Retool lets you generate dashboards, admin panels, and workflows directly on your data. Type something like “Build me a revenue dashboard on my Stripe data” and get a working app with security, permissions, and compliance built in from day one. Whether on our cloud or self-hosted, create the internal software your team needs without compromising enterprise standards or control.
This project is a implementation of the in1660 course assignment of the Delft University of Technology.
It is a simulator of an operating system scheduler in Java. It has sample processes/jobs as input and shows how the recources are divided.
This project is based on sources published by original Ataroid developer, who in turn used code of Stella.
This project is abandoned in favor of Droid2600: https://code.google.com/p/droid2600/. Available sources do not compile into anything working anyway.
This project is based on sources published by original psx4droid developer (or someone else – I don't care as it is all GPLed anyway), who in turn used code of PCSX-ReARMed, forked from PCSX-Reloaded, based on PCSX-df and original PCSX...
This project is abandoned in favor of libretro PCSX-ReARMed variant: https://github.com/libretro/pcsx_rearmed. Current sources already depend on recent version of platform anyway.
There are a number of emulators for those nostalgic moments of your early computer years. JavaCPC and Jemu from Winape. This project attempts to squeeze these limited capacity machines into an application that will run on your mobile phone.