Tools based on libXcm, a library for colour management on X:
. xcmddc requests EDID from a monitor over the i2c bus;
. xcmedid is for parsing EDID data blocks;
. xcmevents observes X11 colour management events.
XCurs is a program for editing XCursor formatted XFree86/X.Org mouse cursors.
This type of format became available as a result of Keith Packard's work on
XFree86 v4.3.
setlayout is a small program that arranges desktops in an MxN grid.
It should work with any EWHM-compliant window manager, such as Openbox.
Example usage: setlayout 0 2 2 0 for a 2x2 grid.
Terminal is a modern terminal emulator for the Unix/Linux desktop,
primarily for the Xfce desktop environment. It's a lightweight emulator
based on the VTE widget, easy to use and provides an optional drop-down
window.
This package contains xbiff, which displays a little image of a mailbox in
the X Window System. The flag on the mailbox is down when there is no mail,
and the flag goes up when new mail arrives.
The Fluxbox Background Tool gives you a nice GUI to make background
changing easier in fluxbox/blackbox. It lets you use pixmaps as well
as solid colours. It includes a daemon to change the background
automatically.
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.
XStarRoll is a simple demonstration program for X11. Letters and pixmaps
fly to far, far, far away. You can fly optional letters and pixmaps, and
use XStarRoll as a background picture.
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?
YASR ("Yet Another Screen Reader") is an attempt at a lightweight,
portable screen reader. It works by opening a shell in a pty and
intercepting all user input/output, maintaining a window of what
should be on the screen by looking at the codes and text sent to the
screen. It thus uses no Linuxisms such as /dev/vcsa0 and does not
necessarily need to be setuid root (the only requirement being that
the user be able to access the tts device).