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Macosx Photoshop Windows 7 Skype Adobe Flash Player Internet Explorer | PDF | Desktop Environment | Linux
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Macosx Photoshop Windows 7 Skype Adobe Flash Player Internet Explorer

The document discusses several open source software programs available for Linux and other UNIX systems. It provides brief descriptions of Linux, the GNOME and KDE desktop environments, the Apache web server, the Firefox web browser, the Dovecot and Postfix email servers, the SquirrelMail email client, the Thunderbird email client, the OpenOffice office suite, the KOffice office suite, the Asterisk PBX phone system, and the FreeSWITCH VoIP development environment. URLs are provided for more information on each program.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
81 views2 pages

Macosx Photoshop Windows 7 Skype Adobe Flash Player Internet Explorer

The document discusses several open source software programs available for Linux and other UNIX systems. It provides brief descriptions of Linux, the GNOME and KDE desktop environments, the Apache web server, the Firefox web browser, the Dovecot and Postfix email servers, the SquirrelMail email client, the Thunderbird email client, the OpenOffice office suite, the KOffice office suite, the Asterisk PBX phone system, and the FreeSWITCH VoIP development environment. URLs are provided for more information on each program.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Linux (see http://www.linux.org/): a computer operating system and kernel originating as a UNIX system and existing in many versions.

GNOME (see http://www.gnome.org/): a desktop development environment providing tools for developing desktop applications (as well as its own basic desktop applications) and available for Linux and other UNIX systems. KDE (see http://www.kde.org/): another desktop development environment. Apache (see http://www.apache.org/): a web server program (for supplying pages in response to requests) used in most web server computers and available for Windows as well as Linux and other UNIX systems. Firefox (see http://www.mozilla.org/firefox/): a web client program (for viewing and hearing web pages) available for Windows and Mac as well as Linux and other UNIX systems. Dovecot (see http://www.dovecot.org/): an email server program (for sending and receiving email) supporting POP3 and IMAP and available for Linux and other UNIX systems. Postfix (see http://www.postfix.org): an email server program (for sending and receiving email) supporting SMTP and available for Linux and other UNIX systems. SquirrelMail (see http://squirrelmail.org/): an email application (for reading and writing email through a web client program) supporting IMAP and SMTP and available for Windows and Mac as well as Linux and other UNIX systems. Thunderbird (see http://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/): an email client program (for reading and writing email) supporting POP3, IMAP and SMTP and available for Windows and Mac as well as Linux and other UNIX systems. OpenOffice (see http://www.openoffice.org/): an office application set (for word processing, spreadsheet manipulation, picture drawing and data base access) compatible with all other major office application sets such as Office and available for Windows and Mac as well as Linux and other UNIX systems. KOffice: (see http://www.koffice.org/): another office application set. Asterisk: (see http://www.asterisk.org/): a Private Branch eXchange (PBX) providing features such as interactive voice response, conference bridging and call queuing (as well as analogue, digital and VoIP telephony), supporting H.323, SIP and IAX2 (and other VoIP protocols), and available for Mac as well as Linux and other UNIX systems. FreeSWITCH (see http://www.freeswitch.org/): a VoIP development environment providing tools for developing

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Mac OS X Photoshop Windows 7 Skype Adobe Flash Player Internet Explorer

RealPlayer, iTunes, Adobe Photoshop, Mac OS X, WinZip and some versions of Unix.

AVG Antivirus Norton Antivirus AnyVideo Converte

Registry Mechanic Blue-Cloner Total Privacy Easy Movie Splitter 2.5.3 UltraISO 7.6 Wondershare YouTube Downloader Internet Download Accelerator 3.1 CloneDVD 4.3 PHP Debugger 2.1.3.3 BadCopy Pro 3.61 System Mechanic 8.0 IVOS - Intelligent Voice Operating System 1.02 WinAVI Video Converter 7.1 Xilisoft Video Converter Ultimate 5.1.26 SnapTouch Read more at Buzzle: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/examples-of-shareware.html

The most common characteristic of most software as a service is its remote access. Most programs can be accessed anywhere there's an Internet connection; this is cloud computing, where the user's machine functions as a terminal for software and information access. For the user, there's no software to install, and there's less worry that their computer will be insufficient to run the program. Developers also benefit because users encounter fewer problems when using the product, and the supply chain is mostly bypassed.

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