wm2 is a window manager for X. It provides an unusual style of window
decoration and as little functionality as I feel comfortable with in a
window manager. wm2 is not configurable, except by editing the source
and recompiling the code, and is really intended for people who don't
particularly want their window manager to be too friendly.
wm2 provides:
* Decorative frames for your windows.
* The ability to move, resize, hide and restore windows.
* No icons.
* No configurable root menus, buttons or mouse or keyboard bindings.
* No virtual desktop, toolbars or integrated applications.
w9wm is a quick & dirty hack based on 9wm, the wonderful "template"
window manager made by David Hogan.
9wm is really nice for all day use (I mean, a large Emacs window
covering the whole screen and a terminal to use Lynx and browse the
web ;-)) provided that you do not have a large number of windows on
your screen. But in some occasions it is not the case (ie. you have
to telnet to 4-5 remote machines), which is painful with 9wm.
This need for virtual screens motivated this about 50 lines hack.
w9wm brings support for virtual screens (provided you use the second
button, aka middle button to select one virtual screen) as well as for
key bindings (to switch from one window to another).
euclid-wm is a minimalist, tiling window manager for X11 that seeks to allow
easy management of numerous windows entirely from the keyboard.
euclid seeks to do two things in particular:
- balance the ease of use common among window managers with automatic
or fixed layouts with the flexibility of those dynamic layouts,
- create an easy way to manage minimized windows
Conky is an advanced, highly configurable system monitor.
This port configures conky for use with the Awesome window manager
from x11-wm/awesome. Unless you're using Awesome or some other system
with a client pipe, you probably want the main version of Conky in
sysutils/conky.
IBM 026 Keypunch Emulator for the X Window System.
* Requires slow, deliberate typing or input will be lost
(typeahead can be enabled if you insist)
* Overpunches available by backspacing or holding down Alt or Meta
* Tab set for FORTRAN
* Automatic sequence numbers in columns 73-80 (can be disabled)
* Paste X11 selection with middle mouse button
* Can save deck in file, either in ASCII or in Douglas Jones's standard format
* Can select from several card and keypunch types
3270 terminal emulator under X.
A Haskell binding to the X11 library. The binding is a direct
translation of C binding.
x2x allows the keyboard and mouse on one ("from") X display to be used
to control another ("to") X display. Since x2x uses the XTEST
extension, the "to" X display must support XTEST.
In the default interface, x2x puts a window on the "from" display.
This window is labeled with the name of the "to" display. Keystrokes
typed into this window go to the window on the "to" display that has
the input focus. Clicking on the x2x window causes the mouse on the
"from" display to control the cursor on the "to" display. Perform-
ing a subsequent multiple button click on the "to" display returns
control to the "from" display.
If the -east or -west options are specified on the command line, x2x
starts up with a different interface. When the mouse moves to the
(east or west) side of the default screen on the "from" display, the
cursor slides over to the "to" display. When the mouse returns to to
side of the "to" display that it entered, it slides back onto the
"from" display.
Unless the -nosel option is specified, x2x relays X selections from
one display to the other.
IBM Research is developing the open-source X10 programming language to
provide a programming model that can address the architectural challenge
of multiples cores, hardware accelerators, clusters, and supercomputers
in a manner that provides scalable performance in a productive manner.
High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) is the latest generation video compression
standard.
* This standard was developed by the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group
(MPEG) and ITU-T Video Coding Experts Group (VCEG), through their Joint
Collaborative Team on Video Coding (JCT-VC)
* HEVC is also known as ISO/IEC 23008-2 MPEG-H Part 2 and ITU-T H.265
* HEVC provides superior video quality and up to twice the data compression
as the previous standard (H.264/MPEG-4 AVC)
* HEVC can support 8K Ultra High Definition video, with a picture size up to
8192x4320 pixels