Open Source ChromeOS Education Software - Page 5

Education Software for ChromeOS

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  • 1
    Spoon Knife

    Spoon Knife

    This repo is for demonstration purposes only

    The Spoon-Knife repository is a test project created and maintained by GitHub to help new users learn how to fork repositories and contribute through pull requests. It is intentionally simple, containing minimal HTML and CSS code, so that the focus is on practicing workflow rather than navigating a complex codebase. This project serves as a safe playground where developers can clone, edit, and submit changes without worrying about breaking anything meaningful. The repository is often used in tutorials, guides, and onboarding materials to help beginners become comfortable with GitHub's collaborative features. By interacting with Spoon-Knife, contributors learn essential skills like creating forks, committing changes, making pull requests, and syncing with upstream repositories. Its simplicity makes it accessible to absolute beginners, while still being a useful refresher for experienced developers who want to test GitHub functionality.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 2
    Swift Guide

    Swift Guide

    Swift Featured Projects in brain Mapping

    SwiftGuide is a comprehensive, community-maintained guide to the Swift programming language, designed to serve as both a learning resource and a handy reference. It covers all major language aspects: syntax, control flow, functions, closures, generics, protocols, extensions, memory management, concurrency, and the standard library. Each topic typically includes clear explanations, annotated code snippets, and tips for best practices, helping readers understand both how features work and how to use them idiomatically. Over time, the guide has evolved alongside Swift itself, with updates to reflect new language releases, deprecations, and shifting patterns. It also collects references to additional resources, external libraries, and community articles, making it a kind of curated gateway. Because it’s open content, readers can contribute corrections, translations, or expansions to keep it current.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 3
    Tacofancy

    Tacofancy

    Community-driven taco repo

    TacoFancy is a collaborative cookbook built on Git, inviting everyone to submit taco recipes via pull requests. Instead of single monolithic recipes, it organizes the universe of tacos into modular parts—shells, proteins, salsas, toppings, and full assemblies—so you can mix and match to invent your own. The structure encourages creativity and reuse: a new salsa might pair with dozens of fillings, while a different tortilla technique can transform a favorite combination. Because it lives in Git, the entire cooking process becomes versioned and reviewable; contributors discuss tweaks in issues and iterate like they would on software. The repository is playful yet practical, spanning weeknight-simple ideas to elaborate, slow-cooked masterpieces, with plenty of vegetarian and regional twists. It’s as much a community project as it is a cookbook, showing how open source collaboration can make dinner more interesting.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 4
    Tech Interview Handbook

    Tech Interview Handbook

    Curated coding interview preparation materials

    Tech Interview Handbook is a curated, mostly self-contained compilation of technical interview preparation resources—including algorithms, system design, resume tips, and behavioral questions—crafted for busy software engineers. The information in this repository is condensed. Ultimately, the key to succeeding in technical interviews is consistent practice and I don't want to bore you with too many words. I tell you the minimum you need to know on how to go about navigating the interview process, you go and practice and land your dream job. This repository has practical content that covers all phases of a technical interview, from applying for a job to passing the interviews to offer negotiation. Technically competent candidates might still find the non-technical content helpful. Also, existing resources focus mainly on algorithm questions and lack coverage for more domain-specific and non-technical questions.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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    TechCPP

    TechCPP

    C++ learning and interview guide aimed at back-end systems developers

    TechCPP is a comprehensive C++ learning and interview guide aimed at back-end and systems developers preparing for professional roles. It gathers frequently asked concepts and deep dives—value categories (lvalue/rvalue), perfect forwarding, casts, memory models, atomics, and more—into a structured, readable format. The material goes beyond syntax to discuss performance, optimization techniques, and how standard library containers are implemented under the hood. You’ll also find practical debugging and tooling advice, such as using gdb to diagnose deadlocks or reasoning about concurrency primitives. The repository organizes topics so you can quickly locate weak spots before interviews or brush up for day-to-day coding. It’s equally useful as a revision handbook and as a roadmap for engineers moving from “effective C++ usage” toward “systems-level competence”.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 6
    The Art of Programming

    The Art of Programming

    A collection of practical tips can be found at the bottom of this page

    The Art of Programming (Second Edition) is a curated collection of programming problems and solutions originally derived from the Microsoft 100 Interview Questions blog series, later refined into a long-running tutorial and ultimately a published book. Created by July, the series began in 2010 and has since evolved into an in-depth exploration of algorithmic thinking, data structures, and coding interview preparation. The repository brings together 42 classic programming problems from the original series, enhanced with detailed explanations, formula derivations, and optimized solutions. In July 2023, work on the second edition was announced, which expands the project with updated content, new problems inspired by recent big-tech interviews, and introductions to modern machine learning techniques such as XGBoost, CNNs, RNNs, and LSTMs. This collection serves both as a historical record of algorithm problem-solving and as a living resource for programmers preparing for interviews.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 7
    The Sourdough Framework

    The Sourdough Framework

    Make the best possible sourdough bread at home

    The Sourdough Framework is an open, experiment-driven handbook that explains sourdough baking as a system rather than a set of isolated recipes. It breaks breadmaking into measurable variables—starter strength, flour characteristics, hydration, temperature, salt, timing—and shows how each affects dough behavior and flavor. The text leans on baker’s percentages and dough temperature targets to help you plan, troubleshoot, and reproduce results across seasons and kitchens. You’ll find step-by-step fermentation schedules, shaping and scoring guidance, and comparisons of techniques like slap-and-fold, stretch-and-fold, autolyse, and cold retard. A strong emphasis on diagnostics helps you read the dough (windowpane, poke test, gas retention) and fix common problems such as dense crumbs, weak gluten, or over-/under-proofing.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 8
    Uneebee

    Uneebee

    Platform for creating interactive courses

    Uneebee is an open-source Elixir/Phoenix application focused on community content and learning workflows, designed to be both a usable product and a practical reference for building modern web apps in the Elixir stack. Its structure showcases common concerns—authentication, profiles, content creation, feeds, tagging, and search—implemented with clean boundaries so features can evolve independently. Real-time updates and responsive interactions are handled using Phoenix’s live capabilities and channels, demonstrating how to mix server-driven UI with interactive client behavior. Background jobs, caching, and pagination patterns are laid out in a way that scales from small communities to heavier usage. The codebase emphasizes maintainability with clear contexts, test coverage, and a straightforward deployment story. As a learning resource, it helps teams see how to stitch together Phoenix primitives into a cohesive, production-leaning application.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 9
    jstutorial

    jstutorial

    Javascript tutorial book

    This repository is a comprehensive, tutorial-style guide to JavaScript that walks readers from the language’s fundamentals to practical application in the browser and on the server. It explains core concepts like values and types, scope, functions, objects, and prototypes in a clear, example-driven style that favors short, readable snippets. The material steadily introduces modern features—modules, arrow functions, classes, destructuring, promises, and async/await—while relating them back to the underlying mechanics of the language. Beyond syntax, it explores how JavaScript actually runs, touching on the event loop, asynchronous patterns, and common pitfalls that trip up newcomers. The browser section covers DOM manipulation, events, storage, and network requests so readers can build interactive pages with confidence. Later chapters introduce Node.js usage and ecosystem basics, making the tutorial a practical bridge between front-end and back-end JavaScript.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 10
    lean-side-bussiness

    lean-side-bussiness

    Guide to building and running lean side businesses

    A pragmatic guide to building and running lean side businesses, oriented toward solo developers and small teams. It collects experience-based notes, checklists, and lightweight frameworks for validating ideas quickly before investing significant time or money. The emphasis is on shipping fast, narrowing scope, and focusing on channels that predictably convert rather than chasing vanity metrics. It also covers everyday operations—pricing, payment flow, support, and simple analytics—so a side project can function like a real product from the start. The materials are clear and tactical, helping you avoid common pitfalls such as over-engineering, unclear positioning, or unfocused marketing. For developers who want repeatable processes, it offers a blueprint that turns weekend hacks into sustainable micro-products.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 11
    one-person-businesses-methodology

    one-person-businesses-methodology

    Methodology for building one-person online businesses

    This project distills a methodology for building one-person online businesses that are realistic to start, maintain, and grow. It frames product selection around personal unfair advantages—skills, access, or niche knowledge—so you can compete without a large team. The repository breaks the journey into phases: idea mining, problem-solution fit, audience building, monetization, and compounding through small, continuous improvements. Rather than theory, it focuses on day-to-day habits, weekly cadences, and decision heuristics that keep a solo founder moving. It also highlights risk management for health, burnout, cash flow, and platform dependence, which are often overlooked in indie-hacker playbooks. The result is a playbook you can revisit to guide prioritization, cut scope, and keep momentum when resources are tight.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 12
    JMCAD - modeling of dynamic systems
    JMCAD is an program for the modeling and simulation of complex dynamic systems. This includes the ability to construct and simulate block diagrams. The visual block diagram interface offers a simple method for constructing, modifying and maintaining complex system models. The simulation engine provides fast and accurate solutions for linear, nonlinear, continuous time, discrete time, time varying and hybrid system designs. With JMCAD, users can quickly develop software or "virtual" prototypes of systems or processes to demonstrate their behavior prior to building physical prototypes. The user builds his system model by selecting predefined blocks from a block library and simply wiring the blocks together. Each block of the diagram performs a function. Users can also create custom blocks in Java and add them to the JMCAD block library. JMCAD is a block diagram language for creating complex nonlinear dynamic systems.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 13
    SLiMS Library Management System

    SLiMS Library Management System

    Free & Open Community Edition Server in a Complete Virtual Machine

    This VM is created for 2 reasons: 1. Very little initial setup work required to make a Library Management System live, within minutes. 2. This system should keep running for Years, without requiring Updates / Breakages. If you are new to Virtual Machines, then please watch the Video below ( taken from my other project. just replace td with lm wherever mentioned ) After starting this VM, please access these websites ( Just Accept Any Warnings ) : Public Website Address: https://lm.local/ Staff Website Address: https://lm.local/index.php?p=login Staff Username: admin Staff Password: change_this from any PC on your Local Network. For better performance, Increase the CPU Count & Memory in the VM's Settings, as available on the physical machine. Backup the system regularly, to avoid any issues, as shown in the video below. Google Search helps in finding more about SLiMS Library Management Software.
    Downloads: 26 This Week
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  • 14
    Network Simulator (fork CORE - Live USB)

    Network Simulator (fork CORE - Live USB)

    Live DVD with CORE network simulator

    The Common Open Research Emulator (CORE) is a tool for emulating networks on one or more machines. You can connect these emulated networks to live networks. CORE consists of a GUI for drawing topologies of lightweight virtual machines, and Python modules for scripting network emulation.
    Downloads: 14 This Week
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  • 15

    Web-CAT

    Open-source automated grading of programming assignments

    Web-CAT is a plug-in based web application for automatically grading programming assignments in many programming languages. This project also provides Eclipse plugins for electronic submission and feedback services directly from the Eclipse IDE. We now use github for source code control (https://github.com/web-cat), although all file releases are still provided here through SourceForge. The CVS repository here is for archival purposes only.
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    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 16
    The purpose of this project is to create a German translation of the book <a href="http://www.byteofpython.info">"A Byte of Python"</a> originally written in English by Swaroop C H.
    Downloads: 23 This Week
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  • 17
    jVLT (Vocabulary Learning Tool) is a tool that helps you managing your vocabulary. It allows you to create a dictionary of words and to perform quizzes.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 18
    CompPad
    CompPad is a LibreOffice extension that provides live mathematical and engineering calculations within a Writer document. It is intended to provide a free / open-source alternative to Mathcad .
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 19
    DESMO-J is a framework for rapidly building discrete event driven simulation models in Java, which is not restrained to any particular domain of application. It supports both event-oriented and process-oriented modelling views. See http://desmoj.de.
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    Downloads: 20 This Week
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  • 20
    JPC
    The fast x86 PC emulator in 100% pure Java
    Downloads: 11 This Week
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  • 21

    Docear

    An Academic Literature Suite

    Docear (pronounced dog-ear) is what we call an “academic literature suite”. It integrates everything you need to search, organize and create academic literature in a single application: a digital library, reference manager, PDF and file manager, note taking and mind mapping. And the best: Docear works seemlessly with many existing tools like Mendeley, Microsoft Word, and Foxit Reader. Docear is free and open source, based on Freeplane, funded by the German Federal Ministry of Technology and developed by scientists from around the world, among others from OvGU, and the University of California, Berkeley.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 22
    BibleTime

    BibleTime

    a Bible study tool

    BibleTime is a powerful cross platform Bible study tool. It uses the SWORD programming library to work with Bible texts, commentaries, dictionaries and books provided by the CrossWire Bible Society (http://www.crosswire.org).
    Downloads: 18 This Week
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  • 23
    NoteLab is an advanced "digital notebook" specifically designed for tablet computers. With its stroke smoothing, antialiasing, and "smart rendering," NoteLab provides a beautiful and powerful note taking environment on any operating system.
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    Downloads: 10 This Week
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  • 24
    CasADi
    A symbolic framework for C++, Python and Octave implementing automatic differentiation by source code transformation in forward and reverse modes on sparse matrix-valued computational graphs.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 25
    TSP Solver and Generator

    TSP Solver and Generator

    Generate and solve Travelling Salesman Problem tasks

    TSPSG is intended to generate and solve Travelling Salesman Problem (TSP) tasks. It uses Branch and Bound method for solving. An input is a number of cities and a matrix of city-to-city travel prices. The matrix can be populated with random values in a given range (useful for generating tasks). The result is an optimal route, its price, step-by-step matrices of solving and solving graph. The task can be saved in internal binary format and opened later. The result can be printed or saved as PDF, HTML, or ODF. TSPSG may be useful for teachers to generate test tasks or just for regular users to solve TSPs. Also, it may be used as an example of using Branch and Bound method to solve a particular task.
    Downloads: 17 This Week
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