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The first library to be equipped with PMB was the library of Bueil-en-Touraine (in France). The version 4.1 has been downloaded more than 38 000 times. The 4.2 is available since 24 July 2015 and has been downloaded 2272 times on 15 September.
Openbiblio was created in 2002 by Dave Stevens, who was interested in creating an easy-to-use, well-documented, easy-to-install library system. [2] The current maintainer is Hans van der Weij. After 2017, the current version with a variety of options and bugfixes was published on openbiblio.de.
PMB can stand for: Phenylmagnesium bromide, a reagent; p-Methoxybenzyl, in the benzyl group; Nickname of Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; Picture Motion Browser, Sony software; PMB (software), a library system; Postmenopausal bleeding, a menstrual condition; Print Measurement Bureau, a Canadian media surveying company
Picture Motion Browser (PMB) is a software application from Sony for organizing and editing digital photos. [1] In 2012, PMB was succeeded by Sony's PlayMemories Home . Photo Features
The Bessie Head Library (before 2005 also known as Msunduzi Municipal Library, [1] and before that as the Natal Society Library) in Pietermaritzburg, Msunduzi Local Municipality, is the oldest library in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. It was established in 1849 and became a legal deposit library in 1916. [2] [3] It is named after the writer ...
Free and open-source software portal; This is a category of articles relating to library and information science software which can be freely used, copied, studied, modified, and redistributed by everyone that obtains a copy: "free software" or "open-source software".
Netpbm (formerly Pbmplus) is an open-source package of graphics programs and a programming library. It is used mainly in the Unix world, where one can find it included in all major open-source operating system distributions, but also works on Microsoft Windows, macOS, and other operating systems.
Pacific scholar Harry E. Maude, Department of Pacific History at the Australian National University from 1958, was the first to conceptualise the workings of the Bureau when he discussed the need for interlibrary co-operation in the copying of documents of Pacific interest for Pacific researchers with Dr Floyd Cammack, University of Hawaii in December 1962.