WeeWM (Wee Enhanced Environment) is a fast and light window manager
for XFree86. Everything can be done with a keyboard. It is customizable,
and has dock management, smart window placement, virtual desktops,
and more.
The wmanager-addons package contains a couple of helper shell scripts and
manual pages for the x11/wmanager window manager selector. They were
originally part of the Debian wmanager package, but have later been ported
to other operating systems.
WMII is a small, dynamic window manager for X11. It supports both classic
and tiling (acme-like) window management with extended keyboard, mouse, and
9p filesystem based remote control. It replaces the workspace paradigm with
a new tagging approach and is highly scriptable (with plain shell or Python
and even Chicken).
Its minimalist philosophy attempts to not exceed 10.000 lines of code
(including all shipped utilities and libraries), to enforce simplicity and
clarity (read: it is hackable and beautiful).
A command line tool for switching GTK+ themes.
A simple GTK-2 Terminal with tabs.
bbappconf makes it possible to set some options for the windows blackbox opens,
like:
* on which desktop they should open
* if it should be displayed without titlebar
* if it should be sticky
* position size of windows
IMWheel translates mouse wheel activity into keycodes for X11 applications,
using a configuration file that allows per-user translation preferences.
For more information on setting up your wheeled mouse to work with X, see
either the imwheel man page or the FreeBSD FAQ.
InnerSpace is a screensaver.
Innerspace is a screensaver which is compatible with BackSpace
from the NeXTSTEP era. It can, with few changes to the module,
run old BackSpace modules.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
Blast blows holes in windows - you can see what's behind it through them. It
uses the X Shape Extension.
Bricons program allows the user to quickly start up applications by
selecting the appropriate button from the display and pressing the left
mouse button. A maximum of up to sixteen main menu buttons can be
displayed. Each main menu button can launch an application or pop-up a
sub menu containing more buttons. The buttons can be represented as a
bitmap, text or a colour icon (i.e Pixmap).