Wayland. Out of the box Nobara 39. I found the mouse (Logitech G604) in libinput but couldn’t find where to modify the scrolling behavior.
Wayland. Out of the box Nobara 39. I found the mouse (Logitech G604) in libinput but couldn’t find where to modify the scrolling behavior.
The biggest hurdle I’ve ran into is that GPS resolution just isn’t accurate enough. If you want something that can follow a planned route without having to rely on a bunch of obstacle avoidance (which is difficult enough in itself) then you’ll have to set up some sort of local RTK in conjunction with the GPS.
Currently I’m just setting my mower up like a FPV drone that I can drive around remotely from the comfort of air conditioning. Hoping someone comes out with a good automated solution.
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If you want to give Fedora a test drive, try Nobara. I believe it has an option to auto install the Nviida drivers on first boot like mint. It’s basically Fedora tweaked towards gaming.
Worth a shot. Wouldn’t surprise me if this backwoods town is vulnerable. That being said, I’m open to anyone’s code suggestions and I’ll slap it on there. My coding abilities are limited to BASIC and just enough C to make microcontrollers work.
Is there even a remotely possible chance something like that would work? I have to drive past a ALPR that checks for insurance every day. I wouldn’t mind plastering code across my tailgate in a design that resembles a license plate.
The Internet Archive’s got your back. As if you needed a reason to donate to them.
Yeah. Plex will do exactly what it sounds like you are wanting to do.
Oops, it was a keyboard issue that affected Thinkpads. It’s in the release notes https://www.linuxmint.com/rel_virginia.php
IIRC Mint 21.3 had a touchpad driver keyboard issue on some Thinkpads. It looked like a simple fix if you are effected tho.
Installing Mint on my Thinkpad Yoga was easier than installing Windows. Everything worked right out of the box.
Edit: keyboard not touchpad.
I often delete old posts because sharing my entire post history feels intrusive to me.
You realize with the way lemmy works, when you delete a post, it only deletes it for sure on your instance*. Every other instance it is federated with gets a request to delete that post but it may or may not be acted on. I’ve made posts, realized I misread what I was replying to, deleted my comment, and still got replies for weeks.
*or the one you’re posting to, not 100% sure here
Just sharing because a lot of people (myself included) didn’t realize that’s how it worked.
How much different is setting up immutable distros like Bazzite? I like the concept but I’ve been too intimidated to try it out.