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...It allows the execution of animations and profiles and handle can input to interact with the LEDs, profiles can be triggered based on different events, like programs running, network input, game name, etc.
Includes some utilities to make an arcade cabinet more attractive and cool!
A simple daemon to control fan speed on all MacBook/MacBook Pros
...It reads temperature data via the coretemp kernel module and drives fan speeds through the applesmc interface, making it especially valuable for users running Linux natively on Apple hardware where automatic thermal control may be lacking. The daemon supports multiple processors and multiple fans, allowing flexible configurations for complex Mac models, and aims to keep systems both cool and quiet by dynamically adjusting fan behavior. While originally based on Allan McRae’s mbpfan, this enhanced version expands compatibility and tuning options. It’s especially useful on Linux installations where default drivers don’t effectively communicate with Apple’s proprietary sensor and fan hardware. Users often pair it with custom configuration profiles to match their preferred balance of noise and temperature control.
Initially this project started as hobby to build a "cool" christmas LED decoration. The result was 175 RGB LED snowflake driven by a Raspberry Pi.
Since the hardware prototype is finished it's time to share the software and documentation...
KOnAir is a KDE application designed to handle radio cards, using the V4L API.
It implements a traditional KDE look and feel interface as in Kscd or KMP3.
It will also provide cool features like a Spectrum Analyser, an alarm clock and a snooze function.
AppSignal's MCP server hands Claude, Cursor, or Zed your real errors, traces, and the deploy that shipped them. AI writes the fix; you review the diff.