+.B Grab Video Frames
+If your system has a video capture card, selecting this option will allow
+the image-manipulating modes to capture a frame of video to operate on.
+.TP 4
+.B Choose Random Image
+If this option is set, then the image-manipulating modes will select a
+random image file to operate on, from the specified source. That
+source may be a local directory, which will be recursively searched
+for images. Or, it may be the URL of an RSS or Atom feed (e.g., a
+Flickr gallery), in which case a random image from that feed will be
+selected instead. The contents of the feed will be cached locally and
+refreshed periodically as needed.
+.PP
+If more than one of the above image-related options are selected, then
+one will be chosen at random. If none of them are selected, then an
+image of video colorbars will be used instead.
+.RE
+.PP
+.B Text Manipulation
+
+Some of the display modes display and manipulate text. The following
+options control how that text is generated. (These parameters control
+the behavior of the
+.BR xscreensaver\-text (1)
+program, which is what actually does the work.)
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Host Name and Time
+If this checkbox is selected, then the text used by the screen savers
+will be the local host name, OS version, date, time, and system load.
+.TP 4
+.B Text
+If this checkbox is selected, then the literal text typed in the
+field to its right will be used. If it contains % escape sequences,
+they will be expanded as per
+.BR strftime (2).
+.TP 4
+.B Text File
+If this checkbox is selected, then the contents of the corresponding
+file will be displayed.
+.TP 4
+.B Program
+If this checkbox is selected, then the given program will be run,
+repeatedly, and its output will be displayed.
+.TP 4
+.B URL
+If this checkbox is selected, then the given HTTP URL will be downloaded
+and displayed repeatedly. If the document contains HTML, RSS, or Atom,
+it will be converted to plain-text first.
+
+Note: this re-downloads the document every time the screen saver
+runs out of text, so it will probably be hitting that web server multiple
+times a minute. Be careful that the owner of that server doesn't
+consider that to be abusive.
+.RE
+.PP
+.B Power Management Settings
+
+These settings control whether, and when, your monitor powers down.
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Power Management Enabled
+Whether the monitor should be powered down after a period of inactivity.
+
+If this option is grayed out, it means your X server does not support
+the XDPMS extension, and so control over the monitor's power state is
+not available.
+
+If you're using a laptop, don't be surprised if this has no effect:
+many laptops have monitor power-saving behavior built in at a very low
+level that is invisible to Unix and X. On such systems, you can
+typically only adjust the power-saving delays by changing settings
+in the BIOS in some hardware-specific way.
+.TP 4
+.B Standby After
+If \fIPower Management Enabled\fP is selected, the monitor will go black
+after this much idle time. (Graphics demos will stop running, also.)
+.TP 4
+.B Suspend After
+If \fIPower Management Enabled\fP is selected, the monitor will go
+into power-saving mode after this much idle time. This duration should
+be greater than or equal to \fIStandby\fP.
+.TP 4
+.B Off After
+If \fIPower Management Enabled\fP is selected, the monitor will fully
+power down after this much idle time. This duration should be greater
+than or equal to \fISuspend\fP.
+.TP 4
+.B Quick Power-off in "Blank Only" Mode
+If the display mode is set to \fIBlank Screen Only\fP and this is
+checked, then the monitor will be powered off immediately upon
+blanking, regardless of the other power-management settings. In this
+way, the power management idle-timers can be completely disabled, but
+the screen will be powered off when black. (This might be preferable
+on laptops.)
+.RE
+.PP
+.B Fading and Colormaps
+
+These options control how the screen fades to or from black when
+a screen saver begins or ends.
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Fade To Black When Blanking