Hi, * Charles Plessy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006-05-07 16:50]: > Package: wnpp > Severity: wishlist > Owner: Charles Plessy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Package name : amap-align > Version : 2.0 > Upstream Author : Ariel Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > URL : http://bio.math.berkeley.edu/amap/download/amap.2.0.tar.gz > License : Public domain > Description : Protein multiple alignment by sequence annealing > > AMAP is a command line tool to perform multiple alignment of peptidic > sequences. It utilizes posterior decoding, and a sequence-annealing > alignment, instead of the traditional progressive alignment method. It > is the only alignment program that allows to control the sensitivity / > specificity tradeoff. It is based on the ProbCons source code, but > uses alignment metric accuracy and eliminates the consistency > transformation. > . > Homepage: http://bio.math.berkeley.edu/amap/
apt-cache show amap Package: amap Priority: extra Section: net Installed-Size: 204 Maintainer: Andrés Roldán <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Architecture: i386 Version: 4.8-1.1 Depends: libc6 (>= 2.3.5-1), libssl0.9.8 Suggests: nmap Filename: pool/main/a/amap/amap_4.8-1.1_i386.deb Size: 70512 MD5sum: a8f70d5acabd22ca17e4292849a05dbe Description: Network protocol probing tool Amap allows you to probe IP ports for running protocols, ignoring the port number. It does this by sending probe packets to the port and analyzing the responses. This will allow you to find services running on non-standard ports. . Additionally, amapcrap is a tool that helps getting information for ports that don't show any output. . Having nmap installed is suggested, since amap cannot scan for open ports (but there is an option to import nmap's output). Kind regards Nico -- Nico Golde - JAB: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | GPG: 0x73647CFF http://www.ngolde.de | http://www.muttng.org | http://grml.org Forget about that mouse with 3/4/5 buttons - gimme a keyboard with 103/104/105 keys!
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