This is a program to help manage many of the XKB features of X window. This
includes such features as MouseKeys, AccessX, StickyKeys, BounceKeys, and
SlowKeys. It also includes a perl/tk gui program to help with MouseKeys
acceleration management.
Stephen Montgomery-Smith
stephen@math.missouri.edu
XMangekyou is a kaleidoscope on X. You can see many, many, many kaleidoscope
patterns.
Xfce4-embed-plugin is a plugin that enables the embedding of arbitrary
application window into the Xfce panel. The window is resized into the
panel space available, and the associated program can be automatically
launched if it is not open.
The goal of the xfce4-quicklauncher-plugin is double.
First, it is intented to offer you a fast and easy way to configure the
plugins wich are on your panel.
Secondly, it is able to display these launchers on one or more lines, and
they are displayed so that they don't waste space. They also feature
a little zoom effect when you pass the mouse over them.
This is a port of the xfce-goodies plugin that adds a task
manager to Xfce.
The WMdock plugin is a compatibility layer for running WindowMaker dockapps
on the Xfce desktop. It integrates the dockapps into a panel, closely
resembling the look and feel of the WindowMaker dock or clip, respectively.
A minimal xlock with minimum usage of resources.
XMascot displays a moving mascot on your X11 screen. XMascot has the
following options:
- Moving pretty mascot moving
- Stretch stretch it as you like
- Talking mascot talks with extract command and data
- Alarm mascot may make some actions at defined time
- BIFF mascot may let you know arriving a mail
XMascot supports these image formats:
- MAG (*.mag) 16 colors and 256 colors
- TIFF (*.tif) 16 colors and 256 colors, in raw or lzw
- PPM (*.ppm) 256 level color, in raw
- PGM (*.pgm) 256 level gray scale, in raw
- PBM (*.pbm) 2 level monochrome, in raw
- PNM (*.pnm) PPM, PGM, or PBM
XMascot distinguishes images from their suffix and can load other image
formats when corresponding *topnm, *topgm, or *topbm commands are found
in your system.
bgrot is a simple suite of scripts to handle rotation of your X
background, using (at present) xv. It takes a series of images, puts
them in random order, and rotates them at given intervals. Why? Heck,
why not?
The bgs program allows you to tailor the appearance of the background
("root") window on a workstation display running X.
bgs uses imlib2 for image rendering and rotates the images automatically.
It is made for dynamic Xinerama/Xrandr setups such as used with notebooks,
but it works very fine in any setup.