And of course they had to shoehorn some AI bullshit in it

(why I installed this driver: because i can remap the two extra buttons as copy/paste)

  • Shanmugha@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Saving this to share at work. What an abomination that, I am sorry you have to deal with it

    • veni_vedi_veni@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      The Internet is so bloated because every page is bursting with telemetry and spa framework bullshit that over engineers a fucking music recital site.

  • KestrelAlex@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    X mouse button control

    It can’t detect some of the fancier buttons and gestures but it can often pickup buttons 4 and 5 for remapping, and it does chording and long press options to give you multiple functions without any AI bullshit.

    • Limonene@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Piper is less than 2MB, and allows reconfiguring Logitech mouse buttons. It’s available in Debian and Ubuntu package managers.

      Screenshot:

      I had to use Piper to get exotic features like having mouse 6, 7, 8 buttons function as mouse 6, 7, 8, rather than the default of alt-tab and ctrl-v.

      • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        This is not a driver. The README itself says:

        Piper is merely a graphical frontend to the ratbagd DBus daemon

        ratbagd itself, BTW, is also not a driver.

        The unofficial open source license is called logiops, and according to the Debian site most of its builds are also under 2MB (and the two builds that aren’t are only slightly bigger)

        There is also RatSlap, which I can’t find information on how big it is (and I’m not going to bother installing it just to find out)

      • Zink@programming.dev
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        11 hours ago

        I never thought to look for something like this, but it looks fantastic so i’m going to try it. Thanks!

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        12 hours ago

        Does it still allow macros? I have a couple of 502s and my older one has fallen victim to the common problem of rhe switch getting bouncey so one click becomes multiple. Supposedly macros can fix this.

        • cacti@ani.social
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          10 hours ago

          If your mouse drivers allow setting the debounce timer, you can set it higher so that your system doesn’t allow the bouncing to register.

        • Sabata@ani.social
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          9 hours ago

          My 903 did that, and so did the one they replaced and now your making me worry about my 502. It’s shitty switches so a macro would hide it for a little at best. I tried to replace them but these are not fun to open up.

        • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          This is a physical defect. Macros make one key press effect one or more action button or key press. For instance if a common operation involves pressing a b and c in sequence you can make one button on your mouse actuate that sequence.

          You can’t bind a macro to left click because then you can’t left click anymore. Even if you bound double clicking to single click (if this is even possible) it would mean every time it single click you would effect nothing which is equally if not more broken.

          You need to either take your mouse apart and fix it or throw it in the trash.

          • cacti@ani.social
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            10 hours ago

            I think he meant as in “if this is the first ever GTK application you install via flatpak”. The “Installed Size” on Flathub only indicates the amount of storage the program itself will take up and doesn’t take into account the libraries it will install alongside it (installing piper via flatpak takes up 400MB on my device).

            I still think it is really negligible because people usually don’t install applications that use such a variety of different graphical frameworks, and also because modern PC disk capacities are so absurdly big compared to past ones. I only have a 256GB drive and have never faced any issues regarding how much storage flatpak apps use.

  • linrilang@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    We detected you moved your mouse. Downloading 1GB of AI telemetry and 3GB of user experience optimizations…

  • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Fuck electron, fuck “web first” apps, fuck the “all application in the future will be websites” mentality.

  • AlteredEgo@lemmy.ml
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    18 hours ago

    +1 for using space sniffer. It’s the best of such apps I’ve found. Unfortunately doesn’t seem to get updated any more.

  • MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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    20 hours ago

    That’s not the driver but some bundled configuration & update bloatware.

    Back in my days, you had to overwrite some .exe with a “0” to disable Nvidia from spying on you. The overwrite, because they would just download it again if you deleted the .exe.

    • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      I remember installing a fresh PC with win98. During installation, I disabled some windows bloatware (Imagine! You actually could do this!), and ended up with an unresponsive, non-windows app blocking the system. I killed that app and removed it from the system. Keep in mind that at this point, no network connection was set up, nor did I install any driver or program yet, this was straight from the windows install medium.

      After reboot, the app was back, and again blocking the system.

      Wiping the harddisk and starting installation over did not help either.

      Turned out this was some bloatware installed by the BIOS whenever it detected at boot that there was a) a Windows installation that was b) “missing” their “register your PC with us” app. This needed some Windows bloatware to work, and thus failed on this machine.

      This was the only time I angrily screamed at a hotline worker.

  • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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    24 hours ago

    The mouse driver used with the Commodore 64’s GEOS operating system uses 3 blocks on disk, less than a kilobyte.

    • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      Most of the reason why the Logitech driver is so gargantuan is a separate Chromium browser instance, because someone thought that apps should be all websites first, which lead to most GUI libraries being developed for javascript and most devs being taught to be web developers.

      • merdaverse@lemmy.zip
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        18 hours ago

        VSCode is also electron with a 100mb download size and 400mb install size. I think it has 1000x more functionality than some shit Logitech UI where you change LED colors. This sounds more like incompetence on the Logitech team than a problem with electron itself.

        It’s not like traditional methods of packing apps are without problems. If I want to install the qbittorrent flatpak on Ubuntu, it pulls in >1gb of KDE depenencies, so I really don’t see how that’s better than these dreaded electron apps.

        • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          15 hours ago

          Or you can use qbittorrent-nox which is a server-only package of qbittorrent and just interact with it via its the web interface from your favorite browser.

          Mind you, I only know this by chance because I explicitly wanted to run qbittorrent as a service on an always on machine which is not supposed to be used with keyboard and mouse.

        • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          The 1gb of KDE dependencies are one time only, but there’s also the option of just using OpenGL + bare x11 or Wayland for GUI. If my game engine could pull it off, if IMGUI apps could pull it off, then everyone could pull it off, we just need a UI framework not ddependent on either GTK or qt.

          • merdaverse@lemmy.zip
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            17 hours ago

            “One time only”? In theory yes, in practice I don’t have anything else that needs those KDE dependencies. When I remove qbittorrent I can safely remove them. This is just a reality check that desktop GUI frameworks and package management are really not much better than Electron/html as lots of comments in this thread seem to suggest.

            • jj4211@lemmy.world
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              11 hours ago

              That is your use case, that relative to your individual usage only one application uses the framework. In that very specific scenario, sure. However with electron it’s forced to be that way for every single application no matter what your scenario is.

              If electron packaged as a dependency, then it would be similar. But it’s always forcibly bundled.

              • merdaverse@lemmy.zip
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                6 hours ago

                Ok, I will just try to install more KDE apps so I can make use of that great dependency so I can join the Electron hating circle jerk next time. But from where I stand now, Electron apps are just like any appimage or snap.

    • Albbi@piefed.ca
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      13 hours ago

      That driver was using 0.5% of system resources! I thought it would be worse when I saw “259 blocks free”, but overall that’s pretty good.

      • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        A lot of fancy early RGB mouse came with a companion app that needed 10MB at most, and that was ridiculed.

  • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    The driver for your mouse occupies a few kilobytes. The shitty app and AI garbage bloatware occupies the rest.

    • herrvogel@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Nvidia drivers at least do something that are fairly complex and heavy, and they’re necessary. Whereas this thing is just some comically overdeveloped and extremely annoying piece of bloatware from Logitech to remap a bunch of buttons.

    • MazonnaCara89@lemmy.ml
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      20 hours ago

      There’s something inside you
      It’s hard to explain
      They’re talking about you, boy
      But you’re still the same