Set app volumes with real sliders! Arduino project to build hardware
deej is an open-source hardware volume mixer for Windows and Linux PCs. It lets you use real-life sliders (like a DJ!) to seamlessly control the volumes of different apps (such as your music player, the game you're playing and your voice chat session) without having to stop what you're doing. Control your microphone's input level. Lightweight desktop client, consuming around 10MB of memory.
Bash script to control 15c2:ffdc SoundGraph panel.
...It has:
- 12 text characters for messages and the clock;
- 3 fan indicators (updated automatically);
- a temperature indicator (updated automatically);
- a CPU usage bar;
- another bar in the left I couldn't get to work (volume?).
LCDd does keep the panel on, but it can't update any info, and the clock just keeps frozen at 12:00.
I've tried both the imon and the imonlcd drivers, same results.
This script does get it working, however, you need to stop LCDd before running it.
Ivman, or Ikke's Volume Manager, is a generic handler for HAL events. Originally for automounting, it can now be used to run arbitrary commands when events or conditions occur or properties are modified on your hardware. Ivman is based on HAL.
Unlimited organizations, 3 enterprise SSO connections, role-based access control, and pro MFA included. Dev and prod tenants out of the box.
Auth0's B2B Essentials plan gives you everything you need to ship secure multi-tenant apps. Unlimited orgs, enterprise SSO, RBAC, audit log streaming, and higher auth and API limits included. Add on M2M tokens, enterprise MFA, or additional SSO connections as you scale.
...You can program *any* USB keyboard function (with or without Control, Alt, Shift and GUI modifiers) to a button on your infrared remote control and when you press that button IRK! will send the corresponding USB keystroke to the host computer.
You can program *any* USB Consumer Device control code too...for example, Play, Pause, Mute, Volume up, Volume down, and many others.
This is a Linux driver for ThinkPad laptops, written by Borislav Deianov and Henrique de Moraes Holschuh. It aims to support various features of these laptops which are accessible through a ThinkPad-specific ACPI framework. The newest version is available in the latest version of the Linux kernel.
Enable the Volume up and Down Buttons on Logitech USBHeadset.
USB Headsets are very useful for VoIP applications like SIP Networks or Skype.
It doesn't need X
Linux support for Easy Access and Internet keyboards (e.g. Compaq). Features: X11 support : Window Manager independant : all keys user-configurable (GUI & .conf file) : volume control : sound controls
powermated is a program for controlling and monitoring your computer with the Griffin PowerMate USB dial. It can also update the PowerMate's LED based on a number of events including system mixer volume, CPU usage, XMMS/BMP sound output, and more!
Compliant and Reliable File Transfers Backed by Top Security Certifications
Cerberus FTP Server delivers SOC 2 Type II certified security and FIPS 140-2 validated encryption.
Stop relying on non-certified, legacy file transfer tools that creak under the weight of modern security demands. Get full audit trails, advanced access controls and more supported by an award-winning team of experts. Start your free 25-day trial today.
Simple rack/removable hard disk management. Mounts partitions not mentioned in fstab, possibly by volume name. Intended for desktop machines, either run by unprivileged users, or people who often swap hard disks.
This program sits at the back and listens for the "special" hotkeys that you won't normally use on your internet/Multimedia keyboards. The buttons perform their intended behaviors, such as volume up and down, mute the speaker, launch applications, etc. It