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plembo / pointerlocationvsfirefox.md
Last active May 23, 2024 14:10
When good ideas go bad: Ubuntu Desktop and the Left Control key

Gnome Pointer Location v. Firefox

Gnome Tweaks for Ubuntu Desktop 22.04 LTS has a useful feature under Keyboard & Mouse called "Pointer Location". This highlights the location of the mouse cursor when you press the left Control key.

On my system, this feature causes extension windows to close whenever the left Control key is pressed: for example when I try to use left Control v to paste a password string into a Bitwarden login profile. Unsurprisingly, Chrome doesn't exhibit this behavior.

So for now I've turned the Pointer Location feature off, at least until the next time I switch back to a Chromium based browser.

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plembo / tpmsecbootwinkvm.md
Last active April 25, 2024 14:37
KVM libvirt qemu tpm secure boot Windows install

TPM and Secure Boot for Windows 11 guests on KVM

The latest KVM on Ubuntu Desktop 22.04 supports both TPM2.0 and Secure Boot for Windows 11 guests. To use it you'll need to make sure the ovmf package is installed.

If using Virtual Machine Manager (VMM, or virt-manager) to install Windows 11 from a Microsoft iso, be sure to check "Customize configuration before install" before clicking on the "Finish" button. While VMM will automatically detect the operating system version and customize many things, including TPM, it will not choose the correct setting for Secure Boot.

When you get to the VM's configuration screen in VMM, you'll find that a TPM vNone device has already been added. Setting up Secure Boot properly will require manually selecting the correct firmware. To do that:

  1. Select Overview
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plembo / virgl3d-ubuntu.md
Last active April 25, 2024 16:59
3d acceleration for Linux guests in KVM on Ubuntu Desktop

VirGL for Linux KVM guests on Ubuntu Desktop

NOTE: Please don't ask for help here, it was a miracle that I got it to work at all. Seek answers in the usual places (yes, even Stackoverflow knows more than I do).

The question: How can I get 3d accelerated graphics for Linux guests in KVM without using PCI passthrough?

The short answer is: Use VirGL. The long answer is more complicated, because the VirGL project has had slow but steady progress towards actually working reliably, but the degree to which any given Linux distribution (or related driver project) is in sync has varied greatly over time. Even if it works right now, today, on your machine, it might not tomorrow. Note that even when it works, graphics performance is mediocre to downright painful.

Tested on Ubuntu Desktop 22.04.04 LTS with qemu-kvm, in an "Ubuntu on Xorg" session (not Wayland). Linux quests must have spice-vdagent installed (Ubuntu installs this by default). The hardware is a AMD 5600G d

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plembo / newmutternostutter.md
Last active May 25, 2024 16:04
Upgrade mutter to eliminate stutter in Gnome terminal on Ubuntu

Upgrade mutter to eliminate stutter

System impacted is a AMD workstation with NVIDIA graphics, running Gnome desktop on X11. The operating system is Ubuntu Desktop 22.04.4 LTS.

The latest mutter update causes stutter and lagging in Gnome terminal sessions. Switching to xterm relieves the problem, but not a real solution.

The problem was finally identified as a bug in the code to Canonical's latest update for Gnome's mutter window manager and compositor (Bug #2059847). A preliminary workaround PPA from mutter maintainer Daniel Van Vugt (vanvugt) stopped working after a new official update that retained the original bug. In a 15 May 2024 comment to the bug report (#135), Daniel posted links to corrected packages that fix the issue:

You don't really need to enable jammy-proposed. Just download the 3 proposed packages:
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plembo / shrinkpdfsize.md
Last active March 27, 2024 15:18
Massively shrink PDF size

Massively shrink the size of a PDF file

Use ghostscript:

$ gs -sDEVICE=pdfwrite \
-dCompatibilityLevel=1.4 \
-dPDFSETTINGS=/ebook \
-dNOPAUSE \
-dBATCH \
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plembo / dellchromelinux.md
Last active May 23, 2024 14:11
Linux on a Dell Chromebook 11

Linux on a Dell Chromebook 11

My retail (not enterprise) Dell Chromebook 11 (an Inspiron model 3181, not the 3180 or 3189) went EOL shortly after I purchased it new from Best Buy. Since then it saw some hard use in the family kitchen as a recipe lookup device, but was finally retired when replaced by a (relatively) newer Android tablet (that also reached EOL shortly thereafter).

NOTE: Ridiculously short lifespans for hardware devices definitely suck, as do all the manufacturers who make them. There should be a law against it.

With an overseas trip looming, I decided to look into refurbishing the Chromebook for use as a privacy hardened travel laptop. Frankly, the thought of TSA and Customs manhandling my trusty portable workstation was too much to bear.

I mostly followed the detailed instructions in the Chrultrabook Docs, using the firmware supplied by MrChromebox. As it turns out, the process was fairly painless, and seemed much more straig

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plembo / debiangnome.md
Last active February 16, 2024 16:43
Notes on Debian Gnome Desktop

Notes on Debian Gnome Desktop

Some notes on setting up the Gnome desktop on Debian.

This is only for Debian, not Ubuntu.

Base system is Debian 12 Stable (Bookworm).

No joy installing nvidia drivers. Sorry.

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plembo / ffoxandroidconfig.md
Last active February 12, 2024 14:25
Configuration checklist for Firefox on Android

Firefox on Android configuration checklist

All this is in Settings:

  1. Account > Manage account
  2. Account > Choose what to sync > Uncheck all but Bookmarks
  3. Search > DuckDuckGo
  4. Tabs > Close after one day
  5. Homepage > Shortcuts > Turn off all
  6. Homepage > Wallpapers > Select one
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plembo / firefox-install-checklist.md
Last active May 25, 2024 21:57
firefox new install customization checklist desktop (linux)

Firefox on Desktop new install checklist (Linux)

Installation

The following procedure was tested with Firefox 120.0.1 (64-bit) on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS running the default Gnome desktop.

For Ubuntu Desktop I use the Mozilla Team PPA (add-apt-repository ppa:mozillateam/ppa) to install Firefox.

Post install customization

After installation, I usually make the following changes in the browser's Settings:

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plembo / ubuntudesktopprint.md
Last active December 11, 2023 16:14
Printing on Ubuntu desktop

Printing on Ubuntu Desktop

Some notes I've brought back from the gist graveyard to address the finer points of printing with Ubuntu desktop.

Zeroconf and Printing

Zeroconf, or Zero Configuration may be a dream for developers: but can be an absolute nightmare for sysadmins and users. Zeroconf aims to allow the system to configure itself automatically for all kinds of external devices, from music players to printers. For many of the latest releases of Ubuntu Desktop, the system is designed to detect any and all printers on the local subnet that are advertising using a number of Zeroconf protocols, and automatically set them up for immediate use.

This is bad for so many reasons, but I'll posit one scenario that should give anyone pause: you sit down in your local coffee shop, acquire and Internet connection and then accidentally hit "print" on an Evince (PDF reader) window open to your