<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metapackage xmlns:os="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install" xmlns="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install">
  <group distversion="openSUSE 11.1">
    <name>gnaural</name>
    <summary>Installs gnaural</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of gnaural:
    Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 11.1</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/11.1</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>gnaural</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debugsource</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debugsource</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="openSUSE 11.0">
    <name>gnaural</name>
    <summary>Installs gnaural</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of gnaural:
    Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 11.0</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/11.0</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:11.0</name>
        <summary>openSUSE 11.0 distribution</summary>
        <description>The openSUSE 11.0 distribution.</description>
        <url>http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/11.0/standard/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>gnaural</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debugsource</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debugsource</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="openSUSE 10.3">
    <name>gnaural</name>
    <summary>Installs gnaural</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of gnaural:
    Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 10.3</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/10.3</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:10.3</name>
        <summary>openSUSE 10.3 distribution</summary>
        <description>The openSUSE 10.3 distribution.</description>
        <url>http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/10.3/standard/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>gnaural</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debugsource</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debugsource</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="openSUSE 10.2">
    <name>gnaural</name>
    <summary>Installs gnaural</summary>
    <description>Installs the latest version of gnaural:
    Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>Packman Repository</name>
        <summary>Packman package repository for openSUSE 10.2</summary>
        <description>Latest versions and additional packages in the most popular 3rd party repository</description>
        <url>http://packman.mirrors.skynet.be/pub/packman/suse/10.2</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:10.2</name>
        <summary>openSUSE 10.2 distribution</summary>
        <description>The openSUSE 10.2 distribution.</description>
        <url>http://download.opensuse.org/distribution/10.2/repo/oss/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item recommended="true">
        <name>gnaural</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debuginfo</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debuginfo</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
      <item recommended="false">
        <name>gnaural-debugsource</name>
        <summary>gnaural &gt; gnaural-debugsource</summary>
        <description>Gnaural is a multi-platform programmable binaural-beat generator,
implementing the principles described in the October 1973 Scientific
American article &quot;Auditory Beats in the Brain&quot; (Gerald Oster).
There has been considerable research done on the subject since that
publication, and Gnaural&apos;s Windows-based predecessor, WinAural, has
been used as the audio stimulus in at least one published study,
&quot;The Induced Rhythmic Oscillations of Neural Activity in the Human Brain&quot;,
D. Cvetkovic, D. Djuwari, I. Cosic (Australia), from Proceeding (417)
Biomedical Engineering - 2004.

The central finding of Oster&apos;s article: brain activity can be entrained
to the auditory beat frequencies created when each ear is presented
simultaneously with tones of slightly different frequency. My interest
has been exploring how this effect (known as &quot;frequency following response&quot;
or &quot;brainwave entrainment&quot;) can be used to explore mental states, ranging
from profoundly meditative to highly alert.

Author: Bret Logan</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
</metapackage>