Build gen AI apps with an all-in-one modern database: MongoDB Atlas
MongoDB Atlas provides built-in vector search and a flexible document model so developers can build, scale, and run gen AI apps without stitching together multiple databases. From LLM integration to semantic search, Atlas simplifies your AI architecture—and it’s free to get started.
Start Free
Cloud-based help desk software with ServoDesk
Full access to Enterprise features. No credit card required.
What if You Could Automate 90% of Your Repetitive Tasks in Under 30 Days? At ServoDesk, we help businesses like yours automate operations with AI, allowing you to cut service times in half and increase productivity by 25% - without hiring more staff.
HTMLtools includes several Java HTML tools for preparing Web pages. The HTMLtools program automates batch conversion of tab-delimited spreadsheet text files to HTML Web-page files, file & table editing, keyword mapping, templates, and more.
Simple text editor for editing multiple language files in parallel. Corresponding translations are automatically highlighted in order to aid reviewing against multiple sources. Supports gettext PO and key = value format. Highly recommended for polyglots.
With up to 25k MAUs and unlimited Okta connections, our Free Plan lets you focus on what you do best—building great apps.
You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your security. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
Flywheel is a multi-purpose script engine. Define once, publish anywhere. Only seven template commands to learn. Full Java classpath access to functions through the Execute command. Iterate through lists with the List command.
Tubaina is a book generator. Given a text written in afc syntax, a markup language, an html or pdf output is generated. This project has been moved to Github: http://github.com/caelum/tubaina
Like Unix-Tail BUT:
- Runs with or without GUI
- Suspend and resume tailing at runtime
- Can monitor a set of Files
- Print output to a textfield, stdout or file
- Runs in "Grep" mode, too (Read files once)
- (Almost) the same options as Unix-Tail
JLoom is a JSP like template language for text generation - e.g. source code, HTML, XML. JLoom templates are modular encapsulated. Parameters can be any Java type, even Generics or Varargs. There is a plugin for Eclipse and a command line tool.
Open Office Server Daemon based on older daemon written in python (oood).
Open Office is unstable as a server (memory leaks, not multithreaded, ...), this daemon makes it working in long-term without having to change anything in your code.
Use Xilize to create XHTML pages or entire websites with just a plain-text editor. The markup is similar to Textile and extensible via BeanShell. Run as a jEdit plugin, from the command line, or embed in a Java program. Small, fast, easy-to-use.
This is a small command-line program to split a phone bill into several seperate ones to categorise the calls (e.g. for illustration which family member phones how much). It generates HTML files and is able to send them to specified email adresses.
EsTexte is a text-to-HTML based on an intuitive text format akin to various wiki formats and ascii text files. Written in Java, it can be used from the command-line or from other Java programs.
Strip out useless tags and other junk from HTML files. Shrink files, enhance readability of HTML source, promote privacy, and clean HTML exported from Microsoft Word (MS-Word). Run HTMLStrip as-is or customize it with your own regular expressions.
A Java-based spellchecker which focuses on automatic spelling correction by incorporating lingustic and statistical approaches. Development is done by ASV (Abteilung Automatische Sprachverarbeitung) of Leipzig University.
Project is aimed at syntax highlighting of code. It is not strictly oriented for any concrete language and enables user to define own language configuration.
Adapt is data conversion language developped in 1984 by Norman W. Molhant and Christophe Dupriez. It has been used in many circumstances, it translated itself in many programming environment and it should evolve now toward modern environments like Java.