![]() The ionosphere's contribution to the RM can then be removed.Īquila astrophotography package: small LRGB astrophotography reduction and processing package, by Dominik Gronkiewicz. It then uses the TEC and a model of the Earth's magnetic field to compute the ionosphere's effect on the Faraday Rotion Measure (RM) observed for an astronomical radio source. Associated paper: The halo-finding problem revisited: a deep revision of the ASOHF code, by David Vallés-Pérez, Susana Planelles, and Vicent Quilis, Astronomy&Astrophysics, 664 (2022).ĪLBUS_ionosphere: determines the ionosphere total electron content (TEC) over any location on the Earth as a function of location and time, by Tony Willis. ![]() XenakisFreeStochasticMusicFortran: working versions of a Xenakis FORTRAN program (Xenakis 1971 Formalized Music p 149) Astronomy and AstrophysicsĪdaptive Spherical Overdensity Halo Finder (ASOHF): primarily designed to identify bound dark matter structures (dark matter haloes), as well as their stellar counterparts (galaxies) in the outputs of cosmological simulations. There is also uzura1_fpm that works with the Fortran Package Manager. Uzura3: mpeg audio layer 3 encoder written in Fortran 90/95 (mp3 encoder), by cure-honey. Listen to a song and hit enter key with style and you'll get the corresponding number of beats per minute (BPM). TapTempo Fortran: command line taptempo written in modern Fortran, by Vincent Magnin. MUSICV: Max Mathew's MUSIC V synthesis program, prepared by Bill Schottstaed for gfortran, with additions and fixes by Victor Lazzarini. Its purpose was to give non-progammers access to an IBM System/360 Model 40 computer at the University of New Mexico in order to explore artistic and aesthetic uses of the machine.įormidi: small Fortran MIDI sequencer for composing music and exploring algorithmic music, by Vincent Magninįorsynth: small Fortran synthesizer to explore sound synthesis, sound effects, electronic music, algorithmic music, etc, by Vincent Magnin Quantum Chemistry and Electronic StructureĪrt1: program written by Richard Williams in 1968.Make my old Centrino work like it’s nobody’s business and make those fancy 圆4 Vista powered machines crying in utter humiliation.Fortran code on GitHub - also see fortran-lang package index What I’m trying to say is… yes, applications and compatibility is very important, but what the hell have all our operating systems turned into? Gruesome multi gigabyte monstrosities, no longer the means to an end but an end in themselves… If it was possible to squeeze this kind of performance back then, why isn’t it possible now with our “modern” OSes and muticore CPUs?! I for one salute syllable and haiku, because you guys are doing what needs to be done: Getting rid of the bloat, applying modern OS design principles and rewriting the whole damn thing from scratch! Reinventing the wheel? Hell yeah! Ferraris don’t run on chopped logs! Take your damn time and build a lean, mean platform on witch to build the killer apps of tomorrow. I use Ubuntu on a Centrino Duo, and I don’t think I can do it either. He said “This can’t be true, this is not possible, not even my P4 does that.” He uses Vista. I watched that video and then it struck me… I suddenly remembered why I used to say that BeOS was the best OS ever… I mean… that stress test is just plain sick! I’ve shown that to a friend of mine and he just went stupid. That’s all fine and dandy… However, a few days ago i followed a link on slashdot and found: In that perspective there’s little argument that indeed Windows rules the corporate and multimedia desktop because of office 2K7 and flash, photoshop, etc… and Linux is really starting to gain momentum in the home and small office, mainly because of the security features and the availability of superior everyday usage applications(pidgin, firefox, exaile, banshee, f-spot, etc). Sure an OS is defined by the apps that run on it, and what those apps enable you to achieve. ![]() The more I use Windows or Linux, the more think that there’s stuff going on that it’s just plain wrong.
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