With ubuntu 15.10, full clickpad support is provided by xserver-xorg-input-libinput. No further configuration needed. Tested with a T440s. (According to this)
#include <cs50.h> | |
#include <stdio.h> | |
#include <string.h> | |
#include <unistd.h> | |
#define _XOPEN_SOURCE | |
char *crypt(const char *key, const char *salt); | |
long long count = 0; |
Ad-free time!, UnoTelly etc. services provide a nice way to unblock regions for Netflix and others using their custom DNS servers.
But I don't want to direct all my DNS traffic to them and I'm too lazy to manually configure all my devices (phones, tablets, media center boxes etc.). So here's how to transparently unblock Netflix for all your devices using the [Asuswrt Merlin][merlin] firmware. It's a custom router firmware which can be used on the Asus RT-N66U router for example.
Enable JFFS partition and SSH login from http://<ROUTER-IP>/Advanced_System_Content.asp
lsusb
lists the fingerprint reader in the x240 as follows:
Bus 002 Device 003: ID 138a:0017 Validity Sensors, Inc.
There exists experimental driver support for this in a fork of libfprint for vfs5011 sensors, however you'll need to compile the driver yourself. To get the fingerprint sensor to work for lightdm login, su etc, follow these steps.
-
Install fingerprint-gui:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:fingerprint/fingerprint-gui
javascript:(function()%7Bwindow.addEventListener(%20'scroll'%2C%20(e)%20%3D%3E%20%7B%20localStorage.setItem('scrollY'%2C%20scrollY)%3B%20localStorage.setItem('zoom'%2C%20document.body.style.zoom)%3B%20%7D%20)%3Bwindow.addEventListener(%20'storage'%2C%20(e)%20%3D%3E%20%7B%20if%20(e.key%20%3D%3D%3D%20%22scrollY%22)%20%7B%20y%3DparseInt(e.newValue)%3B%20window.scrollTo(0%2C%20y)%3B%20%7D%3B%20if%20(e.key%20%3D%3D%3D%20%22zoom%22)%20%7B%20document.body.style.zoom%3De.newValue%3B%20%7D%3B%20%7D%20)%7D)() |
This is my personal guide for installing pfSense. Hope you find it useful. I made these notes to capture the details of my "install from scratch" to ensure I didn't miss important details. Also, I'm trying build my network with discrete "disposable" components that make the system mutable and less rigid. It does not cover installing any packages like Squid or Suricata as that's way beyond the scope of a basic, functional install.
I migrated from an environment that was at various times running Tomato Toastman 1.28 or Asuswrt-Merlin on Netgear and ASUS routers across four "access points" (one always acting as the firewall/gateway, the rest as APs). It was OK pre-gigabit, but had roaming problems, and I was using large Wifi routers with most of the features disabled. Also, I found that I could easily swamp the network and tank VOIP and Wifi Calling without even trying. The only fix was to throttle everything by using Bandwidth Limit
remote-control: | |
control-enable: yes | |
server: | |
do-ip6: no | |
do-ip4: yes | |
do-udp: yes | |
tls-cert-bundle: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt | |
num-threads: 4 | |
# Enable logs | |
verbosity: 1 |