Tilda is a x11 terminal taking after the likeness of many classic
terminals from first person shooter games, Quake, Doom and Half-Life
to name a few, where the terminal has no border and is hidden from
the desktop till a key or keys is hit.
This is a small command-line utility for setting up and using virtual
desktops.
from the Web page:
invoke it as vdesk <desktop number> to switch to a desktop,
or vdesk <desktop number> <window id> ... to move windows
to a desktop, where desktop 0 means that the window should
be made sticky.
A 64x64 pixel application that displays nine buttons.
Each of these buttons can be configured via a configuration file to
run just about any application you'd like to. Basically, if you can
type it in a shell command, wmbutton can run it. It is based on wmcp,
by Ben Cohen.
xvkbd is a virtual (graphical) keyboard program for X Window System
which provides facility to enter characters onto other clients
(softwares) by clicking on a keyboard displayed on the screen. This may
be used for systems without a hardware keyboard such as kiosk terminals
or handheld devices. This program also has facility to send characters
specified as the command line option to another client.
xmotd is a message-of-the-day browser for X11 and dumb-terminals, that
can also be used to broadcast messages to users logged in across a
network. xmotd periodically checks whether a file has been modified
and pops up and displays the contents of the file, if it has.
DeskMenu is a root menu program which is activated by clicking the root
window. It is configured from a .deskmenurc file in user's home directory.
DeskMenu is useful for window managers which do not provide a menu such as
Oroborus.
Docker is a docking application (WindowMaker dock app)
which acts as a system tray for KDE3 and GNOME2. It can
be used to replace the panel in either environment,
allowing you to have a system tray without running the
KDE/GNOME panel.
xrootconsole is a small utility which displays its input in a transparent
text box on X's root window. It will read from any file listed on the
command line or, by default, from stdin. It is most useful when it reads
from a FIFO; this allows you to redirect multiple commands to the FIFO
and monitor their output.
XSel is a command-line program for getting and setting the contents of
the X selection. Normally this is only accessible by manually
highlighting information and pasting it with the middle mouse button.
This port is similar to x11/xsel, but with different CLI syntax and
a bit more functionality. It is a lot more popular, too.
yalias has a window with two buttons and a text widget. The left
button clears the widget (and is bound to the Escape key). The right
button matches the contents of the widget against a series of regular
expressions that the user has previously specified in their
$HOME/.yaliasrc, and executes the specified command if it matches
any of them.