openSUSE GNOME
os-gnome-maintainers
Involved Projects and Packages
The Mousetweaks package provides mouse accessibility enhancements for
the GNOME desktop.
Mutter is a window and compositing manager based on Clutter, forked
from Metacity.
Mx is a widget toolkit using Clutter that provides a set of standard
interface elements, including buttons, progress bars, scroll bars and
others.
Nautilus is the file manager for the GNOME desktop.
ImageResizer adds a "Resize Images..." menu item to the context menu of all images. This opens a dialog where you set the desired image size and file name. A click on "Resize" finally resizes the image(s) using ImageMagick's convert tool.
This is a nautilus extension that allows you to open a terminal in
arbitrary folders.
This package adds an option to the context menu of folders in Nautilus
to search for files.
This package provides the functionality to the Nautilus file browser to
send files over e-mail or instant messaging protocols via Evolution,
Empathy and Pidgin.
Application for the GNOME desktop integrated in Nautilus, that allows
simple use of Nautilus shares without signing in as root.
Features: * A new entry in your Nautilus right-click menu with a
nice icon.
* A simple dialog to share your folder, which allows you to choose a
name and decide whether to make it read-only.
* Possibility to access it from the Properties tab of your folder.
* Possibility to see whether a share name already exists by simply
typing it.
* Nautilus displays a palm icon to visually show you which folders are
shared.
Nautilus Terminal is an integrated terminal for the Nautilus file browser.
Nemiver is a standalone graphical debugger that integrates well in the
GNOME desktop environment. It currently features a backend which uses
the well known GNU Debugger gdb to debug C / C++ programs.
net6 is a library which eases the development of network-based
applications as it provides a TCP protocol abstraction for C++. It is
portable to both the Windows and Unix-like platforms.
NetworkManager attempts to keep an active network connection available
at all times. The point of NetworkManager is to make networking
configuration and setup as painless and automatic as possible. If
using DHCP, NetworkManager is intended to replace default routes,
obtain IP addresses from a DHCP server, and change name servers
whenever it sees fit.
This package contains GNOME utilities and applications for use with
NetworkManager, including a panel applet for wireless networks.
NetworkManager-openconnect provides VPN support to NetworkManager for
OpenConnect.
NetworkManager-openvpn provides VPN support to NetworkManager for
OpenVPN.
NetworkManager-pptp provides VPN support to NetworkManager for PPTP.
It provide a plugin for NetworkManager to configure road warrior clients for the most common setups.
NetworkManager uses DBUS to communicate with a plugin loaded by the IKEv2 charon daemon.
The plugin uses a certificate for gateway authentication and supports EAP and RSA authentication for client authentication.
PSK is not supported, as it is considered insecure if the secrets are not strong enough.
NetworkManager-vpnc provides VPN support to NetworkManager for vpnc.
Nini is an uncommonly powerful .NET configuration library designed to
help build highly configurable applications quickly.
D-BUS notification daemon.
This notification daemon is an alternative to the notification-daemon
package. It follows the freedesktop notification specification and
introduces some new policies for streamlining the user-experience by
discouraging the use of actions and timeouts.
nss-mdns is a plug-in for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS)
functionality of the GNU C Library (glibc) providing a hostname
resolution via Multicast DNS (aka Zeroconf, aka Apple Rendezvous, aka
Apple Bonjour), and effectively allowing name resolution by common
Unix/Linux programs in the ad-hoc mDNS domain .local.
nss-mdns provides only client functionality, which means that you have
to run a mDNS responder daemon separately from nss-mdns if you want to
register the local hostname via mDNS. I recommend Avahi.
By default, nss-mdns tries to contact a running avahi-daemon to resolve
hostnames and addresses and makes use of its superior record cacheing.