duckiegobrrr

joined 4 months ago
[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 1 points 18 hours ago

I had a 128GB USB "3.0" (one of the cheaper ones so might have actually be slower than 2.x max speeds) stick fail on me right after installing Mint onto it and booting into it once or twice, so yes this is indeed a thing that can happen

[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 0 points 6 days ago (1 children)

a lot of apps on the flathub website say "Unverified"

Those are usually either wrappers for proprietary stuff, for example the Chrome flatpak is unverified because it's not from Google themselves but rather somebody grabbing the official deb/rpm and rebuilding it into a flatpak (this is also how a lot of e.g. AUR packages on Arch work, basically), or open source stuff for which the dev/packager simply didn't care enough to do the verification stuff that Flathub wants you to do (doesn't actually seem that hard, but one might simply not have been aware of it or something).

Don't recall people particularly complaining about the unverified badges before Mint started hiding unverified flatpaks by default, though; suddenly after that "everybody" started noticing them.

[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 27 points 1 week ago

curl -L matchctl.sh | sudo bash

yeah screw that, I'm not piping curl into bash and root bash at that

[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 7 points 1 week ago

I mean I have to wipe out my ~ relatively frequently on some machines at times but that's for "actual" "reasons", LLM hallucinations not involved

[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 3 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Ok, now stop doing whatever it is that they're doing to the cursor layer that makes it feel like garbage (wlroots is especially bad, KDE less so but not as good as either Xorg or Windows, GNOME too but has other cursor issues so...) and then I'll finally consider daily driving any of this stuff

[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 1 points 4 months ago

will try again with a photodiode instead, since it's known to be a valid way to measure stuff like this, and it seems precise enough at that

if it isn't this, then I'll probably have to dig into libinput or something

[–] duckiegobrrr@kbin.earth 3 points 4 months ago

You gotta do the measurements. It's probably not even that hard, all you need is a USB mouse emulator (any microcontroller with USB peripheral support can do this and there are tons of examples) and a photodiode.

will absolutely do this, the microcontroller and mouse emulation part is solved for me already so I just need to get an appropriate photodiode and... profit