If your user is in the input group (set up in pretty much every distro), you can use uinput over netcat for forwarding devices (display server agnostic) without extra privileges. Same with the video group. No idea if anyone used this in an actual remote desktop software tho.
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ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are the best reasons people have given you for not wanting to try Linux?
1·7 days agoHmmm, don’t Libreoffice devs test it with actual MS Office instead of guesstimating the format?
Another thing that helps is baking in the fonts or using metric compatibles to MS ones.
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are the best reasons people have given you for not wanting to try Linux?
3·9 days agodisplay drivers
describes an issue that would be the job of your compositor & window manager
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are the best reasons people have given you for not wanting to try Linux?
5·9 days agoODF support is in MS Office as well, but if you want to be extra sure you can export as .doc from any office suite (Libreoffice should also tell you if a feature you are using can’t be exported).
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
2·9 days agoOh, see, unlike on x86 where you have the ACPI to detect hardware with minimal device quirks (still a lot of them), everything else doesn’t have that. Well, except some Qualcomm chips, but their implementation sucks and basically only works reasonably with Windows and Windows Phone. So you need a device tree blob (DTB) to tell the kernel where everything is. But enabling all of the drivers in a single kernel build makes it not fit (the partition for that is traditionally quite tight), so you make different kernels per device.
AND, on Android in particular, lots of features need device specific configuration for all of the small stuff like the proximity sensor and the cameras (a LOT more complex than webcams). This + the need for OEMs to insert their own spyware and the already existing tradition at the time to make device specific images made the decision stick around. There’s GSI, which basically forces the OEM to write drivers and all of that with a stable-ish API to make universal images possible, but it results in a system with lots of tiny inexplicable problems that slowly make you loose your sanity in my experience.
How postmarketOS handles it is that there are basically meta packages per device that depend on the kernel package appropriate to the device (sometimes for a whole platform or SoC, having multiple DTBs inside for each device) that flashes itself to the appropriate partition via a post installation hook, as well as all of the config files for apps that need device specific stuff and don’t already have it upstream (like camera apps).
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
3·9 days agoI use MUSL/Linux on a tablet btw
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are the silliest reasons people have given you for not wanting to try Linux?
8·10 days agoHello, this is Linus Torvalds, and I pronounce Linux as Linux
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Valve's new Steam Machine and Steam Frame and implications for Linux
9·19 days agoMaybe the Arch Linux “ports” RFC will finally be of use…
Also, box64 works better in my experience when all of the depending libraries are installed properly, and they are guaranteed to be there in this scenario given that there’s the Steam runtime.
ApertureUA@lemmy.todayBanned from communityto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•What the fuck is a gentoo?
1·20 days agoRemoved by mod
Why is there telegram on car infotainment