![]() ![]() ![]() As davids45 remarked, this seems to be a problem specific to Samsung laptops/netbooks and Bionic Puppy 8.0 x32 as I've not encountered it on my other machines nor earlier Puppy versions running on the machine in question. ![]() ![]() I install from a USB stick using (the most excellent) WinSetUpFromUSB which defragments the ISO after copying it onto the USB stick. This also applies to installing Puppy to a fragmented fat32 or ntfs partition.īest to do a fresh format of partition, before installing Puppy. Need to defrag the partition before, downloading the iso to it. It could be fragmented and that will cause the iso to be fragmented. If you download the iso to a partition formatted fat32 or ntfs. Make sure you get the latest version of Bionicpup32 8.0 I have seen a fresh download of the iso and a completely new fresh install fix stuff like this. But each re-boot of a recent Ubuntu Pup on the laptop, it's there again (or not there, to be pedantic).īigpup wrote:I am using Bionicpup32 8.0 and not having this problem. Once you restart-X, is everything then OK? For my laptop, it's only a ONE-OFF first-start issue. My 'xwin' console method would be equivalent to your 'Leave' then 'Restart-X'. Have you tried a different, non-Ubuntu Pup on your laptop? Or a much earlier Ubuntu Pup (Xenial or Tahr, say)? The cursor is still "there" as clicking the mouse will get a response corresponding to wherever the invisible cursor is. On recent Ubuntu Pups from peebee (Bionic, Cosmo, Dingo, Ermine - not just Bionic), after several seconds of desktop displaying, only the cursor "arrow" disappears. Cursor comes back when the desktop re-appears. On this laptop for older Ubuntu Pups, the desktop will go black then almost immediately re-appear after several seconds as though there is a quick restart of X. I do not have any 64-bit Ubuntu Pups on this laptop so I don't know if this odd behaviour is restricted to recent 32-bit Ubuntu Pups on this Samsung laptop. It looks to be a Samsung problem as we both have Samsung laptops - Bigpup, what hardware are you using? My remembered experience is this disappearing cursor only happens on my laptop. Make it executable: sudo chmod +x /etc/rc.Trying to concentrate on this while watching grandchildren attack presents. Community 2019.2.3 on Ubuntu 18.04.3 LTS on a Dell XPS.the right-click button on the. # In order to enable or disable this script just change the execution IDEA-258131 Mouse cursor get locked in select text state in IDE. # Make sure that the script will "exit 0" on success or any other # This script is executed at the end of each multiuser runlevel. If you don't have /etc/rc.local, create it like this: cat<<EOF | sudo tee /etc/rc.local Repeat this for the setting of your touchpad Powertop displays a command in the upper left corner more or less like this:Įcho 'on' > '/sys/bus/usb/devices/1-5/power/control' Ĭopy that command and paste it in /etc/rc.local, just above exit 0 The moment that you toggle a setting, preferably the setting of your mouse, This settings will have immediate effect but won't survive a reboot Good Autosuspend for USB device Corsair Gaming K55 RGB Keyboard Good Runtime PM for I2C Adapter i2c-6 (AMDGPU DM i2c hw bus 3) Good Autosuspend for USB device USB Receiver Good Autosuspend for USB device MYSTIC LIGHT On the tab-page 'tunables' you will see things like: Good Enable SATA link power management for host2 Start powertop in a terminal with: sudo powertop You could install 'powertop' to check this: So, yeah, well.a non working mouse or touchpad can be the side effect of it. I suspect your USB ports are powered down after a while by the energysaving features of the kernel, all for the good of energysaving and the longevity of your laptop battery. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |