Yes, I wanted to do that on stock Ubuntu and doing that on a side (I install it mostly just to /opt) is less invasive than replacing core system packages using packages from Neon. It’s rather not intended to use Neon repos when it’s not Neon. Besides, I wanted to spend 15h on tinkering I guess :)
azvasKvklenko
I have no idea how something like that would work. I was stuck on it calling natively installed executables via dbus and with it uninstalled it wouldn’t launch. I didn’t try too deep, but I don’t think I would be perfectly happy with running everything inside Podman container and having to go outside additionally for native accees wasn’t super fun when I played with Hyprland run like that. Trying to integrate it with display manager and keep it secure wasn’t fun either.
They also know the importance of lightweight and comfortable clothing, unlike Ukrainians wearing thick heavy costumes, not adjusted to the hot summer weather at all
Bazzite, huh?
KVM + Qemu + libvirt + virt-manager = ❤️
rsync -a src dst
Wait, wasn’t Vanguard coming in form of a driver? I don’t use Windows and don’t play games with intrusive software requirements, but I believe I saw someone installing it and showing how it works on YouTube, and if I don’t misremember it, it was in fact a virtual device driver, not just a fully privileged process.
If the maximum speed pointer is too slow (which can also be subjective) for your touchpad, this might a be driver bug or some missing calibration for your variant of hardware. Reach out to libinput devs, they track issues here: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libinput/libinput/-/issues
For me putting the slider to 1.0 makes the touchpad so fast it’s barely usable
Two direct continuations of CentOS aiming for full RHEL compatibility
Windows on external USB drive, disconnected after each use