LinSSID is graphically and functionally similar to Inssider (Microsoft™ Windows®). It is written in C++ using Linux NL80211 tools, Qt5, and Qwt 6.1.
LinSSID may be installed either by downloading source or binary from this site, or if you're using Debian/Ubuntu or one of its brethren, adding a ppa to your software sources and then installing it with your favorite application manager.
You can add the repository with:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:wseverin/ppa
Builds are available for amd64 and i386. ...
Add mobile device detection to your C or C++ program the easy way with 51Degrees. No cloud services, no external plug-ins, all Mozilla Public License source code. It's a great alternative to WURFL or DeviceAtlas.
1. Download and extract.
2. Run the setup file.
3. Import the code into your project or call the compiled executable as a process.
Visit http://51degrees.com/Support/Documentation/APIs/C.aspx to get the full setup guide.
The zip file contains a batch file for easy...
Simple Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) protocol decoder library.
Simple Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) protocol decoder library. You can use the example to parse any MMS message headers and to extract its body parts.
A unified open source software platform based on Linux for mobile smart phone. The first stage features are call, sms, address book, multimedia, J2ME, application install, and smart phone full feature set, something like MS smart phone.
Real-time error alerts, performance insights, and anomaly detection across your full stack. Free 30-day trial.
Move from alert to fix before users notice. AppSignal monitors errors, performance bottlenecks, host health, and uptime—all from one dashboard. Instant notifications on deployments, anomaly triggers for memory spikes or error surges, and seamless log management. Works out of the box with Rails, Django, Express, Phoenix, Next.js, and dozens more. Starts at $23/month with no hidden fees.
This is a multiplatform general utility suite for use with existing network stumbling software, such as Kismet or NetStumbler. The program will convert between multiple output logs, including the popular wi-scan format, between platforms.
The SWAP (Secure Wireless Access Point) project is intended for use in embedded appliances. These appliances will operate in the role of a WEP (wireless encryption protocol) and IPSEC enabled wireless access point, IPSEC VPN gateway, and firewall.
Gwada is a GTK+ based wireless utility, allowing you to easily scan and connect to a wireless network through it's GUI. It can remember the past connected networks and offers you to reconnect automatically to it, while securely keeping your credentials.
Bluetooth Personal Area Network client (PAN) with Support for RADIUS / Bluetooth Network Access Server (Point) (NAS / NAP) with Radius AAA. Project is supported by Nokia. Target BT stacks MS, Widcomm, BlueZ, Affix Blu(etooth) S(ymbian) PAN