LinuxLinks.com
Newbies What Next ? News Forums Calendar

Search





News Sections
Home
General News (3972/0)
Reviews (626/0)
Press Releases (464/0)
Distributions (187/0)
Software (807/0)
Hardware (522/0)
Security (192/0)
Tutorials (337/0)
Off Topic (180/0)


User Functions
Username:

Password:

Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User


Events
There are no upcoming events




gLabels

gLabels

gLabels is a lightweight application for label, business card and media cover creation. It is designed for the GNOME desktop environment.

It is designed to work with various laser/ink-jet peel-off label and business card sheets that you'll find at most office supply stores.

gLabels also supports mail merge from sources such as CSV files, vCards and Evolution data servers.

 gLabels 3.0.0

Price
Free to download

Size
2.8MB
License

GNU GPL v2

Developer
Jim Evins

Website
www.glabels.com

System Requirements
GTK+ 3.0.x
librsvg 2.32.x
libxml 2.7.x


Optional:
libebook 2.30.3
Barcode 0.98
Zint 2.4.1
libiec16022 0.2.4
libqrencode 3.1.x

Support Sites:
Documentation, FAQ, Mailing Lists, SourceForge Project Page, Gettng Started with gLabels, Advanced Usage with gLabels

Selected Reviews:
LinuxInsider, Softpedia

Features include:

  • Templates
  • Template designer
  • Barcode generator
  • Support for many barcode formats including POSTNET, UPC, ISBN, and the 2-D DataMatrix
  • Mail merge options
  • Document Merge is a powerful feature that allows a unique label or card to be printed for each record in an external data source
  • High level of control of label printing
  • Create custome labels and CD/DVD/Blu-ray labels
  • Full-featured barcode backend for libzint 
  • Undo/Redo capability
  • Templates are written in XML
  • Translations into Czech, Danish, Dutch, French, German, Japanese, Spanish, Slovenian, Catalan, Swedish, and Brazilian Portugese

gLabels in action

Return to Office Software Home Page

Bookmark and Share


Last Updated Monday, April 09 2012 @ 06:43 AM EDT


We have written a range of guides highlighting excellent free books for popular programming languages. Check out the following guides: C, C++, C#, Java, JavaScript, CoffeeScript, HTML, Python, Ruby, Perl, Haskell, PHP, Lisp, R, Prolog, Scala, Scheme, and SQL.


Group Tests
All Group Tests

Top Free Software
6 Office Suites
6 Lean Desktops
6 Desktop Search
9 Project Management
9 Groupware Apps
14 File Managers
10 Databases
21 Backup Tools
21 DVD Tools
21 Window Managers
21 Productivity Tools
21 Financial Tools
21 Text Editors
21 Video Emulators
21 Home Emulators
42 Graphics Apps
6 CAD Apps
42 Scientific Apps
10 Web Browsers
42 Email Apps
12 Instant Messaging
10 IRC Clients
7 Twitter Clients
12 News Aggregators
11 VoIP Apps
11 Remote Display Apps
9 BitTorrent Apps
42 Best Games
42 More Games
21 More Games
42 Hot Games Part 1
42 Hot Games Part 2
42 Hot Games Part 3
10 Chess Apps
9 Educational Games
42 Audio Apps
42 Video Apps
6 Screencasting Apps
80 Security Apps
9 System Monitoring
6 Family History Apps
11 PDF Tools
6 Music Servers
6 Collection Managers
7 Calculator Apps
8 Geometry Apps
Free Console Apps
14 Multimedia
Programming
8 Compilers
9 IDEs
9 Debuggers
7 Revision Control Apps
6 Doc Generators
'Free' Proprietary
21 Closed-Source Apps
Top Commercial Apps
42 Games
Free Web Software
21 Web CMS
14 Wiki Engines
8 Blog Apps
6 eCommerce Apps
5 Human Resource Apps
10 ERP
10 CRM
6 Data Warehouse Apps
8 Business Intelligence

All Group Tests

Other Articles
Migrating from Windows
Back up your data
Distribution Guide
Distro Portal Pages
20 Free Linux Books
Running Linux Under Windows


Older Stories
Saturday 04/06
  • 6 Top Data Analysis Tools for Big Data (0)

  • Wednesday 04/03
  • 7 Search Engines for Big Data (0)

  • Friday 03/29
  • 7 More Top eCommerce Software (0)

  • Saturday 03/23
  • Top 4 Linux Diary Software (0)

  • Friday 03/22
  • 4 Best Free CoffeeScript Books (0)

  • Sunday 03/17
  • 9 Best Free JavaScript Books (0)
  • 9 Best Free Haskell Books (0)
  • 4 Free HTML Books (0)

  • Friday 03/08
  • 6 Top Free C# Books (0)

  • Saturday 03/02
  • 6 of the Best Free SQL Books (0)


  • Vote

    What do you find MOST attractive about Open Source software?

    Amount of customization
    Security
    Freedom provided
    Speed of development
    Quality
    Multiple versions
    Cost
    Potential to contribute
    Ability to modify code
    Results
    4051 votes | 2 comments

    Built with GeekLog and phpBB
    Comments to the webmaster are welcome
    Copyright 2009 LinuxLinks.com - All rights reserved