I know a VPS is a simple thing in theory but sometimes it’s a lot for a beginner.
A VPS paired with Docker may also unintentionally expose something not meant for the outside world due to it ignoring iptables and ufw
I know a VPS is a simple thing in theory but sometimes it’s a lot for a beginner.
A VPS paired with Docker may also unintentionally expose something not meant for the outside world due to it ignoring iptables and ufw
If you decide to ditch Bazzite
Forgot to mention, I switched to Nobara. I had some difficulties with your recommended to remove the hidpp module file altogether and saw the frustrations that I’d have with an immutable distro. So far, Nobara has been super smooth.
Alright, I found a solution based on the last comment on that bug report!
Scrolling applications in plasma task switcher with G903 Lightspeed (wireless mode) is so fast that is unusable, but sudo modprobe -r hid_logitech_hidpp fix this, are these bugs all related?
Using that command turned every tiny scroll input into a full scroll. Pairing that with Solaar, disabling smooth scrolling, now everything works correctly!
Hell, this is worth a shot.
I 'm already shopping around for a new distro because of this. Games are completely unplayable because of the scroll wheel. The tiniest movement will swap weapons, even if I’m not touching the wheel at all.
Still not working :/
I looked at the boot parameters and the blacklist was not on there, so I typed it it and booted and it still didn’t work.
I set up Authentik for some of my services and it works.
The setup really threw me off but I powered through learning it. It’s a strange UI and process.
Basically you set it up with Nginx or Caddy or whatever reverse proxy you use. Your reverse proxy points to Authentik and Authentik takes that link and checks for authorization first. If not authorized, prompt login. If authorized, pass on to the subdomain or whatever it is.
To do all this, you’d need a domain.
Love my Racknerd VPS.
Edit: Some deals here
No dice :/
This is my original grub file:
GRUB_TIMEOUT=5
GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR="$(sed 's, release .*$,,g' /etc/system-release)"
GRUB_DEFAULT=saved
GRUB_DISABLE_SUBMENU=true
GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT="console"
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="rhgb quiet"
GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"
GRUB_ENABLE_BLSCFG=true
I added:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="module_blacklist=hid-logitech-hidpp"
and that didn’t work.
I also tried this:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="rhgb quiet" "module_blacklist=hid-logitech-hidpp"
and that didn’t work.
Either I’m formatting this incorrectly, or my setup is different somehow.
KDE switched evdev to libinput and dropped some options, including the advanced config tab in the KDE mouse settings.
Here’s all the options I have:
(Screenshot taken from my laptop, but the menu for this mouse is the same)
I can’t wait to try this when I get home today. I can’t thank you enough for the details. I’ll let you know how it goes later.
if you have a Bolt dongle, try using that instead of Bluetooth.
I use the unifying receiver that came with the mouse.
I think any issues would show in “other”
Just hide it in your OS notification settings
I self-host my own rustdesk server and it’s awesome. It just works flawlessly.
It can be done with adb:
You can if you use adb shell:
Developer Options > USB debugging turned on CMD prompt > adb devices Allow connection from the PC prompt on phone
Then add shell pm uninstall --user 0 com.sec.android.gallery3d
This will remove Gallery, BUT… The stock camera will not allow you to view the pic after you take it (it will show up in Google Photos still)
To restore the above removed app:
cmd package install-existing com.sec.android.gallery3d
deleted by creator
I have a FLIRC remote with the receiver and use it for both my TV and HTPC.
It’s awesome once set up, but the app is honestly dogshit. They put in all these smooth menu transitions and whatnot, making it painfully difficult to configure the remote.
So, once OS updates are unavailable, the machine might become a weak link from security standpoint or stop running some software.
That’s why I specified:
Double check before buying that it can be wiped and you can put Linux on it.
Not for longevity. Oracle can shut it off in a blink for no reason