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Mouse Jiggler is a very simple piece of software whose sole function is to "fake" mouse input to Windows, and jiggle the mouse pointer back and forth.

Project README

mousejiggler

Mouse Jiggler is a very simple piece of software whose sole function is to "fake" mouse input to Windows, and jiggle the mouse pointer back and forth.

Useful for avoiding screensavers or other things triggered by idle detection that, for whatever reason, you can't turn off any other way; or as a quick way to stop a screensaver activating during an installation or when monitoring a long operation without actually having to muck about with the screensaver settings.

Installation

The easiest means of installing Mouse Jiggler is using Chocolatey:

choco install mouse-jiggler

Bare releases continue to be available at right for installation without administrative permissions, although the .NET 5 Desktop runtime must be installed first.

Please note that due to a compatibility issue with the Chocolatey shims, running Mouse Jiggler via the shim does not display command-line help or the Mouse Jiggler version when the -h/--help/-? or --version switches are used. To do so, Mouse Jiggler must be invoked directly. To easily discover the location of the original Mouse Jiggler executable for this purpose, run:

mousejiggler --shimgen-log

Portable Version

A portable version of Mouse Jiggler (i.e., one which does not require the .NET 5 runtime, and so can be installed on locked-down corporate machines that don't have it installed) is available on the releases page, as MouseJiggler-portable.zip. Just unzip and go.

DO NOT USE THIS VERSION IF YOU HAVE ANY OTHER ALTERNATIVE.

Let me put it to you this way. Standard Mouse Jiggler, at the time of writing, is a single executable a mite under 1 MB in size. Portable Mouse Jiggler is a folder of executables summing to approximately 83 MB, for one of the most trivial applications imaginable, after all the assorted trimming-and-compressing magic is done. It's a bloated behemoth. If there is any possibility that you will ever run any other app that uses the .NET 5 runtime, you are much better off installing that and the regular version.

The only reason this exists is for those poor sods whose IT department makes it impossible to do that, and may their deities have mercy on their souls.

Operation

Simply run the MouseJiggle.exe included in the release .zip file. Check the "Jiggling?" checkbox to start jiggling the mouse pointer; uncheck it to stop. The jiggle is slight enough that you should be able to use the computer normally even with jiggling enabled.

Check the "Settings..." checkbox to reveal the settings; these should be relatively self-explanatory. The 'Zen jiggle?' checkbox enables a mode in which the pointer is jiggled 'virtually' - the system believes it to be moving and thus screen saver activation, etc., is prevented, but the pointer does not actually move. This, however, may not work with a few applications which chose to implement their own idle detection.

To minimize Mouse Jiggler to the notification area, click the down-arrow button.

These settings are remembered from session to session. They can also be overridden by command-line options:

Usage:
  MouseJiggler [options]

Options:
  -j, --jiggle               Start with jiggling enabled.
  -m, --minimized            Start minimized (sets persistent option). [default: False]
  -z, --zen                  Start with zen (invisible) jiggling enabled (sets persistent option). [default: False]
  -s, --seconds <seconds>    Set number of seconds for the jiggle interval (sets persistent option). [default: 1]
  --version                  Show version information
  -?, -h, --help             Show help and usage information

The -j command-line switch tells Mouse Jiggler to commence jiggling immediately on startup.

Bugs

When installed using Chocolatey, command-line help may not be displayed properly. See "installation" above.

Features That Will Not Be Implemented

This is a list of feature requests which I've decided won't be implemented in Mouse Jiggler for one reason or another, along with what those reasons are, just for reference:

  • Autorun on startup (because that's what the Startup group, Task Scheduler, etc. are for; it's inelegant to duplicate system facilities in a minimal app).
  • Timed startup/shutdown (again, Task Scheduler is for this).

Support

Mouse Jiggler is a free product provided without warranty or support.

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Mousejiggler" Project. README Source: arkane-systems/mousejiggler
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