I’m running DualSense on Arch without issues. It even uses the touch pad for mouse movements when not in-game (Steam).
Make sure to check the docs if you aren’t using Gnome: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Gamepad.
My only complaint is the atrocious battery life, but that’s not a Linux issue.
The existence of ArchWiki and the Arch User Respository (AUR). And rolling releases, if that’s your thing.
In the early days they would quietly take all your contact info on your phone and send emails in your name that made it seem like you were reaching out to those contacts. Something like “(your name) is trying to reach you on LinkedIn”.
Back then, Android didn’t have app permissions like it does now where you have to ask the user explicit permission for access to certain data. It would only show up on the very first app install and only if you’d be looking for that.
I cancelled my account back then and never looked back.
Speaking of which: I’m cooking up an app platform for this purpose on ESP32: https://github.com/ByteWelder/Tactility
No issues here with Gnome via Arch on a Framework 13. At 150% scaled if recall correctly.
My only regret for picking team red is that DaVinci Resolve doesn’t support hardware encoding.
why doesnt GNOME have a maximize button
Probably because you can double-click the window 'bar' to achieve the same.
I found kdenlive terrible. DaVinci Resolve is much better, but it’s closed source and has some limitations in terms of hardware encoding support (nvidia only).
@ByteWelder
@lemmy.ml