Brightside

Brightside Renders Into Gnome Helpful Things Such as are In Other Desktop Environments

The Brightside logo

The Brightside Screen Corners and Edges daemon


Table of contents


Introduction to Brightside

Brightside is a tool to add reactivity to the corners and edges of your Gnome desktop.

Brightside provides ‘edge flipping’ to allow you to switch to the adjacent workspace simply by pressing your mouse against the edge of the screen.

Brightside also allows you to assign configurable actions to occur while you rest the mouse in a corner of the screen. Currently available actions comprise:

The actions are reversed when the pointer leaves the corner — if you wish to prevent the screen being locked you have until the action progress bar fills up (1 second, as it happens). Custom actions comprise a command to run upon entering the corner, and a decision to either kill that process upon leaving the corner or run another command.

Alternatively, you may choose to switch to the diagonally adjacent workspace when you press the mouse into the corner of the screen.

Upon switching workspace, a pager will be shown in the centre of the screen; as long as it stays on screen you can keep switching workspace without penalty of delay for workspace switching to be activated.

History

Brightside was born both out of a motivation to add a missing if nonessential feature, i.e. edge flipping, to Gnome; and also out of the need for an easy and fast way to mute music when taking a phone call or responding to conversation, and a quick way to lock the screen when leaving the computer.

Because of my lack of experience at starting software projects, I used Bastien Nocera's ACME as a template, a guide, and a source of useful code. Quite a bit of code still shows its provenance.

More information

There is more up-to-date information available in the README and ChangeLog.

. The acronym for Brightside was made up on the spot shortly after the name was decided upon. I consider it worse than most (yet still better than many) in terms of trite artificiality. Incidentally, ‘renders’ is intended to be taken in the sense of To give (or hand) back, to restore; also, the use of ‘into’ rather than ‘unto’ may be excused by either taking Gnome as a collective noun, or regarding my usage as an archaism (indeed, one employed by Shakespeare).

Opinions (or, why not to use Brightside)

Havoc Pennington:
...‘ouija board’ UI, where you just move the mouse around and the computer guesses what you mean, has a lot of issues.
I don't like edge flipping because:
[regarding workspace wrapping]
Basically this is your standard combinatorial explosion of preferences; you can change number of spaces and their layout, and choose directional or direct-to-space or mouse navigation, etc. etc., and so then you might learn to work in a way that involves wrapping or not, and then it goes on and on. How many ways can we accomplish the same simple task...
I'm opposed to a preference here, it just perpetuates the insanity and is feature-micromanagement-via-prefs. Let's just pick something and go with it.
Jamie Zawinski:
[regarding the lack of corner actions in XScreenSaver]
The reason is just that I don't like that behavior (I think it's non-obvious, non-discoverable, and counter-intuitive.) I added an ‘Activate XScreenSaver’ menu item to my window manager, and that's good enough for me.

Screenshots of Brightside

Screenshots of Brightside 1.3.0:


Downloading Brightside

Brightside is, of course, licensed under the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.

Source code is available in the download folder. To install the traditional way, just use the standard method:

./configure
make
make install

Brightside will install an item into the Gnome Desktop Preferences system, available via preferences:/// and the Gnome menu — if you aren't running FAM you will need to kill gnome-panel to reload the menu tree.

Make sure you read the README.

Packaging systems

The configure stage should generate a spec file, suitable for RPM based systems.

Note that if you are compiling on an RPM based binary system you will need to install -devel packages for all the support libraries used by Brightside. On Debian based binary systems you will need the corresponding -dev packages. Of course, if you use a source-based distribution the header files will be installed with the libraries.

Ebuilds are available from my Portage overlay, in the directory gnome-extra/brightside (download directory tarball).

I would welcome specification files for other package management systems.

I am willing to post links to binary packages for popular distributions, as long as the packager is willing to support users of their packages.


The Brightside logo

The Brightside logo (which you can see at the top of this page) is based on the Monitor icon from the beautiful Amaranth Gnome icon theme by Michael Doches. It was edited using Inkscape 0.36, then the original SVG was converted to PNG using rsvg from the librsvg library.


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Created: Sun Jan 11 18:50:09 GMT 2004
Updated: Wed May 19 11:25:50 BST 2004
Author: Ed Catmur, <ed@catmur.co.uk>
URL: http://catmur.co.uk/brightside/