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Twingly Screensaver Demo. Screensaver - visualizing the global blogosphere. Twingly Screensaver Beta Twingly screensaver is visualizing the global blog activity in real time. Forget RSS readers where you see only what you're interested in. With Twingly screensaver you get a 24/7 stream of all (viewer discretion advised) blog activity, straight to your screen. To use the screensaver you need a PC with Windows and a graphics card supporting OpenGL. How to install: Download the installation files by clicking the download button. To use Twingly as the system screensaver: Right click the desktop. Logstalgia - Project Hosting on Google Code.

Logstalgia (aka ApachePong) is a website access log visualization tool. Description Logstalgia is a website traffic visualization that replays or streams web-server access logs as a pong-like battle between the web server and an never ending torrent of requests. Requests appear as colored balls (the same color as the host) which travel across the screen to arrive at the requested location.

Successful requests are hit by the paddle while unsuccessful ones (eg 404 - File Not Found) are missed and pass through. The paths of requests are summarized within the available space by identifying common path prefixes. Requirements Logstalgia requires a video card supporting OpenGL. As Logstalgia is designed to playback logs in real time you will need a log from a fairly busy web-server to achieve interesting results (eg 100s of requests each minute).

An example access log is included. Supported Log Formats NCSA Common Log Format (CLF) "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b" Controls Donations Related Software News. Logstalgia. Google Dorks. Gource - Project Hosting on Google Code. Gource is a software version control visualization tool. See more of Gource in action on the Videos page. Introduction Software projects are displayed by Gource as an animated tree with the root directory of the project at its centre. Directories appear as branches with files as leaves. Developers can be seen working on the tree at the times they contributed to the project. Currently Gource includes built-in log generation support for Git, Mercurial, Bazaar and SVN (as of 0.29).

Synopsis view the log of the repository (Git, SVN, Mercurial and Bazaar) in the current path: gource Donations If you like Gource and would like to show your appreciation and encourage future work on this and other open source projects by the author, please consider making a donation! Bitcoin: 15WP34zkaZFJCyzCAKLt9qrWSvDuBN7XLv Related Software You may also want to check out Logstalgia, a web server access log visualization tool. News 14 April 2014 Gource 0.41 has been released. Changes since 0.40: 26 April 2013 11 January 2013.

Visualising Subversion with Gource. Over the weekend I stumbled across a video link, released (I assume) by Flickr. The video is a visualisation of the last 7 years of commits into the Flickr Subversion repository. Wow, there’s a lot of work been done to Flickr over the past 7 years! What’s even more interesting is you can easily create the same type of visualisation with your own project using an open-source project called Gource. Gource is a version control visualisation tool developed by Andrew Caudwell. At the moment it supports Git, Mercurial and Bazaar but it is also possible to use it with Subversion (SVN) with a few extra steps. The videos produced by Gource really illustrate how much work goes into projects over time, with each developer ‘shooting a laser’ at each file created / changed / deleted.

Creating the videos is fairly simple, I’ll give you a step by step guide how to do it using an SVN repository below. First you will want to grab a copy of Gource and extract the zip file to somewhere easily accessible. Gource – Réalisez une animation à partir de votre code source. Flickr/Gource. Gource. Bodytag - web programming explorations. Alex dragulescu :: projects. Levitated | the Exploration of Computation. Gallery of Computation. LIVING WORKS binary.ring bit.10001 bone.piles box.fitting box.fitting.img new bubble.chamber buddhabrot city.traveler cubic.attractor deep.lorenz guts new happy.place new henon.phase henon.phase.deep new inter.aggregate new inter.momentary new invader.fractal limb.sand.stroke limb.strat limb.stroke mcp moonlight.soyuz nine.block node.garden new offspring orbitals new paths.i peter.de.jong sand.dollar sand.stroke sand.traveler new self-dividing.line stitches substrate new tree.garden.ii trema.disk trema.spike INFORMATION about the programmer about the medium ORDERING works available production qualities ordering policies CONTACT j.tarbell @ complexification.net.

Gephi, an open source graph visualization and manipulation software. Gephi: Graph Streaming in action. Introducing Gephi 0.7. A quoi ressemble un virus. A quoi ressemble un virus Avez vous déjà vu un virus ? J'imagine que oui, surement dans un magazine ou une émission télé... Mais avez vous déjà vu un virus...informatique ? Ah-ha ! Alex Dragulescu a généré des représentations 3D de malwares connus (virus, vers, trojans et spyware) qui sont tout bonnement hallucinantes. Et c'est tout simplement fascinant ! Je vous laisse admirer... PWSLineage IRCBot MyDoom Virutmytob Stormy Source Vous avez aimé cet article ? Original: c’est beau un virus informatique ! | Toc-Arts.blog.

Alex Dragulescu du MIT Media Lab a utilisé un algorithme pour trouver des profils récurrents dans le code source de virus informatiques et autres logiciels malicieux, puis il a ensuite passé le résultat dans un algorithme de visualisation et simplement ajouté des couleurs artificielles et des effets de lumière pour visualiser la structure de ces virus. Images: Alex Dragulescu Le dernier est plutot sympa pour un tatouage tribal, non ?

Via Wired.

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