As an alternative to specifying a binary EDID file, you can set the configuration file with the plain text parts that you're interested in. Details, for example, here. X configuration is kinda crufty...
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As an alternative to specifying a binary EDID file, you can set the configuration file with the plain text parts that you're interested in. Details, for example, here. X configuration is kinda crufty...
No commands. Even if you'd described your setup enough so that we could give them to you, which you haven't. There are two computer tasks where just the idea of them gives me chills: letting Windows...
Linux doesn't deal in drives. Linux deals in filesystems and mount points. You can essentially mount any filesystem anywhere, for any purpose.
The quick and easy method is to, at install time,...
The mechanism is called EDID. You can tell X to ignore all or part of the information it gets through EDID. Your computer's only being fed the EDID of your adaptor rather than the EDID of your...
That's a shame; if it was something you did, it would be something you could undo. Still, that's the place to look. That's the mechanism through which, amongst other things, the OS sends the signal...
Did you - maybe about three months ago - fiddle with your ACPI settings?
No.
https://snapcraft.io/blog/chromium-in-ubuntu-deb-to-snap-transition
It's not "packages like Chromium," it's just Chromium. You can add a PPA and get Chromium as a deb maintained by...
Just one is fine :) And you're welcome.
It's the line that says
load-module module-suspend-on-idle
Just comment that out and then restart PulseAudio (pulseaudio -k is the quick way).
https://ubuntu.com/download/flavours
I would also recommend Kubuntu.
As well as the official flavours, there are community-made ones, and you can just install additional desktop environments...
If you want to stay on the 5.4 branch you'll want to install the linux-generic and remove the linux-generic-hwe-20.04 metapackages, as well as removing your 5.8 kernels. It's the Hardware Enablement...
There's a setting in the PulseAudio config file for whether you want devices to automatically mute when they aren't being used. You could try turning that off.
A much better approach would be to use the native resolution and just make things twice as big. High DPI scaling has been a thing for a while, and just making things individually bigger manually was...
PulseAudio was an improvement on ALSA's dmix: it did things the things dmix could do better than dmix did, and could do a bunch of things that dmix couldn't - unfortunately also including exposing...
I would generally recommend that new users stick to the LTS releases rather than using the guinea pig interim releases. The important stuff gets backported to the LTS releases.
It...
It sounds to me like you're running out of RAM during the resume process for some reason.
And I'm not sure which part you're having trouble with.
If Gnome's Settings widget has the ability to change the default device, and they haven't called it "Set Default," they'll likely have...
PulseAudio's terminology for the default device is "fallback device." Whether audio streams should be moved to a new device when it appears is also a module that you can choose to enable or not.
...
The packages for Ubuntu (aside from snaps, which are a parallel self-contained sandboxed thing) are distributed from Ubuntu's package repositories. Canonical takes a fairly conservative approach to...
Not as such, depending on your definitions.
Each DE will come with its own default settings, and its own set of applications, like file browsers, text editors, and so on. So for each DE that you...
So what you're saying is that your desktop is showing the contents of your Home directory rather than the contents of ~/Desktop.
I mentioned it so that you'd know what to look for.
It's...
https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton
Your description is not at all clear, but it sounds like the issue is that your desktop is showing the contents of your Home directory rather than the contents of ~/Desktop.
FWIW, this isn't quite correct. For hibernate to work, there needs to be enough space to store what's currently in RAM so that it can be reloaded at a later time when the computer is turned on again....
Just so that you're aware of what that means,
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Repositories/Ubuntu