tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post7540002368310427781..comments2024-03-12T00:42:06.642+10:00Comments on Who-T: libinput's "new" trackpoint acceleration methodPeter Huttererhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17204066043271384535noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post-22680925978579592062018-09-06T15:12:30.174+10:002018-09-06T15:12:30.174+10:00Great work man. I can test it on latitude 7490 if ...Great work man. I can test it on latitude 7490 if you need it.uid0https://www.blogger.com/profile/09706658290209356493noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post-33889133946221235472018-08-24T23:27:48.470+10:002018-08-24T23:27:48.470+10:00works good on my x1c5works good on my x1c5Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post-38790268423451016222018-08-17T04:32:31.704+10:002018-08-17T04:32:31.704+10:00Since I moved to FC28 from Debian, the trackpoint ...Since I moved to FC28 from Debian, the trackpoint on my Thinkpad 13 has been a non-issue (I previously reported a bug which made it hard to use https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98689 ).<br /><br />$ rpm -qa libinput<br />libinput-1.11.902-201808160257gitc476524.fc28.x86_64<br /><br />this works pretty well for me- I'll just echo the comment above that trackpoints should be tuneable independently of other input devices.<br /><br />Thanks for your excellent work!koalillohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13531086773075444614noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post-43585377776527340442018-08-17T04:30:47.827+10:002018-08-17T04:30:47.827+10:00I have the following currently installed on a Leno...I have the following currently installed on a Lenovo W541 <br /><br />[508:]>rpm -qa '*libinput*'<br />libinput-1.11.901-201808130836git1668cd5.fc28.x86_64<br />libinput-debuginfo-1.11.901-201808130836git1668cd5.fc28.x86_64<br />libinput-debugsource-1.11.901-201808130836git1668cd5.fc28.x86_64<br /><br /><br />I've been using this with both the trackpoint and the touchpad without issues for a couple of weeks. The trackpoint seems intuitive and mostly does what I need. I'm on the fence on the acceleration - a more gradual acceleration ramp might be nicer. The current behaviour certainly helps get into the corners of the screen quickly.Toby Hayneshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12843981581002490982noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post-82056679640727598002018-08-17T03:19:52.862+10:002018-08-17T03:19:52.862+10:00Used the Copr to givt it a try with F28 on my XPS1...Used the Copr to givt it a try with F28 on my XPS13 (9360), works fine so farThorsten Leemhuishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12285919704852601523noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6112936277054198647.post-22047425192224226782018-08-16T21:25:13.065+10:002018-08-16T21:25:13.065+10:00I tested new libinput on T480s running F29 (instal...I tested new libinput on T480s running F29 (installed the Rawhide package from COPR). It works fine, but I had to change the mouse speed to about -0.25 to make it comfortable (it was way too fast). (Gnome control center is terrible, doesn't show any numbers). It think it would be even better if the acceleration ramped up a bit more gradually (it speeds up too quickly), but it's definitely usable as it is now.<br /><br />My major problem is now with GNOME UI. Because I can't configure trackpoint speed separately from mouse speed, I must choose just one device to configure properly, and the other one will be uncomfortable (and I'm really not going to adjust the slider every time I dock the laptop) :-/Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02183187219134565261noreply@blogger.com