Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a
> Logitech USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB
> headset plugged in. Both devices are detected and I can switch between
> them as expected. If I boot with the USB headset plugged
Erwan David wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> I have a machine with a working bond0 interface
>
Not clear what debian your machine is running
> In my /etc/network/interfaces I have a configuration for a vlan
> subinterface
>
> auto bond0.4011
> address 80.74.78.202/31
> pointtopoint 80.74.78.203
>
> At
Gary Dale wrote:
> Perhaps it only works with virgin drives? Mine had been removed from
> another machine where they had been part of a different array. I zeroed
> the superblocks before creating the new array.
I doubt that - IMO should be either the BIOS or the drives, or a combination
of both
Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> I have seen several references to the Cambridge Radio bug, with at least
> some patches being generated back in 2013 and in 2020, none of which
> seem to have made it to the kernel.
>
> Given how hard it is to compile packages on debian without going down
> never ending rab
Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> Mar 25 15:30:46 client.bronzemail.com kernel: usb 1-3.2: new full-speed
> USB device number 7 using xhci_hcd
> Mar 25 15:30:47 client.bronzemail.com kernel: usb 1-3.2: New USB device
> found, idVendor=0a12, idProduct=0001, bcdDevice=88.91
> Mar 25 15:30:47 client.bronzemail.
Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> sudo rfkill
> ID TYPE DEVICE SOFT HARD
> 2 bluetooth hci0 unblocked unblocked
what says dmesg -T when you plugin the dongle?
what says syslog (journalctl)?
Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> Bus 001 Device 006: ID 0a12:0001 Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth
> Dongle (HCI mode)
these are widely spread I have the same (at least from the usb id)
Bus 002 Device 004: ID 0a12:0001 Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth
Dongle (HCI mode)
what says rfkill list ?
deloptes wrote:
> A friend told me that he found out it is a problem in some BIOSes with
> UEFI that can not handle a boot of md UEFI partition.
> Perhaps it also depends how they handle the raid of a whole disk.
> Are you trying to boot from that raid?
Forgot to ask what is in you
Gary Dale wrote:
> It's not just me but a lot of other people have been having the same
> problem. It's been reported many times as I discovered after trying to
> use whole disks. Moreover, the fixes that I'd used in the past don't
> seem to work reliably without partitions.
A friend told me that
Weaver wrote:
> Not an easy language to learn, however, unless you already have Slavic
> roots.
You mean Chinese is easier than Russian and Russian is harder than French?
And I mean not only speaking, but also writing
Richard Forst wrote:
> all:
> $(eval svnbin=$(shell basename $(shell which svn)))
> $(info X$(svnbin)Y)
> $(echo X$(svnbin)Y)
> ifneq ($(strip $(svnbin)),svn)
> @echo "$(svnbin)=/=svn"
> endif
all:
$(eval svnbin=$(basename $(shell which svn)))
@echo $(svnbin)
ifeq ("$(svnbin)","sv
Weaver wrote:
> Yes.
> But, once there, far better to learn the language.
> The resultant experience is well worth it.
> The money is not the same, but the cost of living is much lower.
> Cheers!
I was thinking to go to Chech Republic or Russia - found the language
easier, but thanks anyway - wil
Weaver wrote:
> They have some excellent language schools and, being surrounded by it,
> it's a fast way to learn.
you mean I can look for a position in China without knowing Chinese?
Long Wind wrote:
> where do you live? most rich Chinese are considering emigration to West,
> this is called vote by feet. how many people in West come to live in
> china?
my problem is the language, otherwise we could switch for couple of years to
exchange experience
Long Wind wrote:
> term Chinese government is quite misleadingit's used as if it's same as
> other legitimate government, i.e. elected by people its true nature is
> criminal group, as described in bill by US senator
The difference as said is, that you know what China is doing, but you do not
kn
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> "debian" is obviously put there by the Debian installer. There may
> be other entries as well, which were put there by other entities.
you are right, but OP said he left Windows months ago
Weaver wrote:
> On 21-03-2021 20:39, deloptes wrote:
>> Andrei POPESCU wrote:
>>
>>> In hindsight, what was meant as a joke probably came out as mocking, I
>>> apologise for that.
>>>
>>> I'm sure you do know that the public key needs to
Morgan Read wrote:
> I had a punt that 'Boot0001* Solid State Disk' /boot/efi/EFI/BOOT and
> the Boot Options' menu entry 'Windows Boot Manager' might be related so
> did 'efibootmgr -b 1 -B' and that removed the 'Boot Options' menu entry
> 'Windows Boot Manager' but not /boot/efi/EFI/BOOT. So, I
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> In hindsight, what was meant as a joke probably came out as mocking, I
> apologise for that.
>
> I'm sure you do know that the public key needs to be made available for
> others to be able to send you encrypted messages.
>
> Of course the *primary* private key should be p
Stefan Monnier wrote:
> Reminds me of the saying that the difference between USA and USSR was
> that in USSR the population knew that it was propaganda.
Exactly - this part is absolutely the same.
The difference is in the methods. There it was wellknown, here - not until
internet came out ... or
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> In my (not so humble) opinion, this level of security could make sense
> for a disident in a totalitarian state, less so for regular users in
> democratic country.
>
And you disappoint me here too - you believe in illusion of democracy, which
is not so obvious as i.e. in
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Good luck in doing public key cryptography without publishing the public
> key :)
Andrei - you disappoint me here!
Celejar wrote:
> I certainly agree that they aren't "perfectly comparable or even the
> same," and I certainly do trust open source software considerably more.
> I was just objecting to absolutist claims that non-open source software
> is completely untrustworthy - claims such as yours that trusti
Stefan Monnier wrote:
> I hear there's a lot of interesting discussions there about how to
> communicate safely, but sadly so far I haven't managed to configure my
> safe not-internet-connected machine to participate.
do you think it is possible to have public & encrypted discussion, when we
do n
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Come on, as soon as you go out to the street you can be run over by a
> bus...
>
> You'll still take some precautions, as it might enhance your odds of
> survival :)
>
>> Why should I bother with your encryption efforts, when I can read your
>> screen?
>
> This is a go
Celejar wrote:
> I'm not sure whether you're being serious or facetious, but WhatsApp
> apparently has genuine end-to-end encryption, using the Signal protocol,
> and neither of the ends is Facebook.
>
> Of course, it's closed source, so we can't know for sure what's really
> in there, and I cert
Kamil Jońca wrote:
>
> Does somebody can recomend graphical tablet to use with debian (I mean
> device to drawing conenected by usb/bluetooth)
> I thought about HUION 1060p, but there are different opinions (for
> example
> https://www.reddit.com/r/huion/comments/eqricq/huion_1060p_drivers_linux/
Joe wrote:
> It may not be long before vendors are ranked or even excluded according
> to their virtue-signalling activities rather than their products.
Yes, I also think this might be the next step ... cause no one is biting on
the adds anyway and there are also too many people trying to manipul
ghe2001 wrote:
> How about DDG as the default, and Google when necessary.
yes - this is the present setting here
Things I found yesterday in Google, I can not find today and DDG anyway :)
I guess Google has already lost track of the data and may be algorithm long
time ago, but it's still workin
Celejar wrote:
>> Hm. Good point. Of course, Google has a lot more resources than DDG.
>> My hypothesis is that the advantage from that is rather marginal and
>> that they get most of their advantage from search context. Of course,
>> I may be wrong (as nearly always ;-)
>
> It's certainly hard t
Felix Miata wrote:
>
> https://www.newtube.app/
Is it a parody?
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> This is nonsense. "The best" without any context is just meaningless.
>
Come on, you yourself write below why.
> Let me put an example: a friend of mine is doing biological research
> (mRNA and that kind of stuff).
>
> She relies totally on Google to keep the research
Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> I find that Google has bias and censorhip in some topics, particularly
> those where Google has a certain point of view, or the US government
> does (and this is in areas unrelated to current medical topics).
>
> When I suspect I'm not getting the full results I also check
Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> Now what this entails is to be guided to run some prescribed tests on
> my laptop, particularly for the package pulseaudio, and file the
> outputs of those tests as a Bug Report.
>
No one will pay attention as you are far behind the current stable version.
As mentioned I r
pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> My previous message was meant for another list. Apology for the
> disturbance.
>
> I've set aside the instructions for qemu. Trying to understand how a
> tap device is created. "man ip" has minimal explanation of "ip tuntap".
>
>
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Interestingly, for my searches recently I've seldom got really better
> hits on Google.
I'm trying DuckDuckGo for 2 weeks now - it's not bad, but Google is (still)
the best
Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> No, that is about recording audio stream as an audio file. Mic is
> muted, had you noticed carefully. My other HP laptop does this
> seamlessly.
yes noticed, is the software version on both the same?
did you try to unmute mic in ALSA?
Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> So Mr. Tomas, is your distracted :-) email supposed to mean that
> installing Realtek drivers separately isn't a possibility in Debian,
> but a newer installation of Debian should be sought for?
>
> Please... I am trying to find a solution, as some work isn't possible
> for
Anssi Saari wrote:
> udevadm trigger is the command to run to simulate plugging in the wifi
> adapter after you have the firmware available. I don't think modprobe
> loads firmware.
loading the driver, loads the firmware
unloading the driver, unloads the firmware
both done with modprobe. How do
Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> Thank you for replying to my query.
>
> Expectation is enabling Duplex audio. Record while playing AV stream.
> With pulseaudio Volume Control. Isn't possible presently.
>
I am not sure what you mean - the use case "Record while playing AV stream"
seems trivial.
You shoul
Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> I am searching for Realtek audio drivers for Linux for the Hardware
> details: "Lenovo ideapad 320-15ISK" LNVNB161216, and "Realtek
> Audio_6.0.1.8652.A.",otherwise, I am afraid that the audio won't be be
> to operate in duplex mode, i.e., won't record audio while playing i
Victor Sudakov wrote:
> Well, to search Duckduckgo for wipefs, you need to know about wipefs :-)
> I found it from reading man blkid and lsblk, after that the information
> from wipefs(8) turned out sufficient (and the howto above did not add
> any new knowledge).
I searched for "linux file syste
Felix Miata wrote:
> Several months ago FB turned nearly useless with sloth. I have a sense
> what happened is it started screening everything for potential to censor.
> I can type nearly a sentence before any characters appear on screen.
> Anything serious I wish to post has to be composed elsewh
Victor Sudakov wrote:
> "wipefs -t btrfs -f -a /dev/nvme1n1" did the job.
>
> Still wondering where those labels are stored on disk in Linux.
>
FS Superblock?
> In FreeBSD, GEOM(4) usually keeps such stuff in the last sector of a
> volume/device.
I think it depends on the FS not on the OS.
William Torrez Corea wrote:
> The problem occur when i execute different process at the same time. In
> this case i execute the following program: firefox, facebook, libreoffice.
the partitioning looks normal. you better post output of top. it gives more
information related to applications.
face
pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> Will be happy with telnet or ssh or ftp from the guest to the host. (I
> know telnet and ftp aren't secure but all is within one machine which
> runs shorewall.) No other machine is involved, for now at least.
>
> Thanks again,
https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Netw
Cmdte Alpha Tigre Z wrote:
> I think too that it could be better than both Debian and Windows are
> today. In Windows, if you look under C:\Windows\System32\ it becomes
> scary.
Same when you open the hood of your car, no?
Not to mention aircraft engine ... so to put it short - in life a lot of
t
Felix Miata wrote:
> KDE is one of the oldest DEs, thus has acquired more features. They need
> not be used all at once, so need not generate the giant monolith feeling
> many would have you believe. It need not use any more RAM than XFCE:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrvJOXypAbk
There is a
Cmdte Alpha Tigre Z wrote:
> I would like to install Debian 10 with the KDE Plasma task
> on a PC with 4 GB of RAM and Intel Core 2 Duo E6550 @ 2.33 GHz,
> it doesn't have a GPU.
> Do you think it would run without problems
> or would it be slow and laggy?
Yes, I think it will not work - better t
Pankaj Jangid wrote:
> But anyway, I have some spare GPUs from AMD (Radeon RX580) and am
> planning go via Ryzen way. So I guess, I will be able to utilize the
> things nicely now. Thanks.
Keep in mind that AMD dropped support for their older card models.
IL Ka wrote:
> By the way: some people use bare window managers instead of full-fledged
> desktop environments.
>
>> Some window managers (like TWM) can run on 8MB of RAM:). The smallest one
> is called CWM (created by OpenBSD).
> https://packages.debian.org/buster/cwm
>
> but it is for these ol
Felix Miata wrote:
> Clear as mud.
>
> Monitor = display. This is physical.
>
> Screen for X purposes is comprised of from 1 to N displays aka 1 to N
> monitors, and most often is. It's a logical construct in which displayed
> output can be either mirrored (cloned) or discrete (unique).
>
Not
Brett Pierce wrote:
> Can I suggest you get a straight-talking non-geek who knows nothing about
> your software and give them several scenarios (eg, A. You want to edit raw
> files for your photos.
Try Ubuntu with Gnome or KDE. It is more user friendly.
Pankaj Jangid wrote:
> Okay. So, this is possible. But my doubt remains. See below.
>
>> Last but not least - why many GPUs but one monitor? It makes no sense. It
>> should use the one where the monitor is attached, but usually monitors
>> have more inputs, which you can utilize.
>
> I’ll be usi
Pankaj Jangid wrote:
> Suppose I have a good motherboard with two GPUs installed in the PCIe
> slots. Now, should I connect the monitor to the motherboard video-out or
> should I use GPU’s output? Suppose the OS (Debian GNU/Linux in this
> case) is fully configured to utilize the GPUs i.e. drivers
Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> If you _are_ using add in graphics, then you'll find that the latest cards
> effectively tie into UEFI. You may possibly find that attempting to use
> legacy/MBR may cause some problems.
It would be good to have more reading on that. I had it on my todo list to
move to
David Christensen wrote:
> UEFI started coming into x86 motherboard firmware ~10 years ago, so a
> BIOS-only machine is going to be at least that old. That is okay for a
> server, but I would want newer Intel integrated graphics for a desktop.
> This implies UEFI firmware.
what has the graphic c
Amuza en Hackea wrote:
> I would like to have an onion service running in the boot partition too,
> that way I could do the same without caring about addresses, ports or
> names. And would add privacy too.
>
> How could I make it?
>
> Any advise, suggestion or step-by-step guide would be very mu
mick crane wrote:
> If it were me I'd get a Dell with a win10 pro licence sticker, and
> download the windows installer.
> You can select not to install the "helpful" stuff and there's
> destructions on the net for disabling Cortina and the like with Group
> Policy editor or something. Might be si
IL Ka wrote:
> If so, I believe this info is worth adding to the Debian installation
> guide somewhere in the wiki, so we can give a link to this wiki to
> newbies.
newbies use ubuntu :)
Mark Fletcher wrote:
> There is a switch on the back of the old router, with 2 settings, "AP"
> and "WB". "AP" is obviously "Access Point". Not sure yet what "WB"
> stands for but I suspect some of the links you guys supplied will help
> me figure that out. The router is set to "AP" -- I _think_ i
Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
> Probably you haven't installed "mdadm" package on Stretch.
> Also it is generally a good idea to create a configuration file
> "/etc/mdadm/mdadm.conf" [1] on Stretch.
> You can use this command to create array configuration string from
> metadata on disks:
> # mdadm
Darac Marjal wrote:
> And, for the D part in DHCP, the ArchWiki has as recipe for how to do
> this automatically using NetworkManager's dispatcher scripts. OP hasn't
> said what DHCP client they use, so some adaption might be required.
I am afraid I missed that part. Indeed it seems to be the bug
basti wrote:
> Hello,
> I use a up to date debian. As I can see now timedatectl seems *not*
> using the NTP Server provide by DHCP. I have configure a NTP server in
> LAN.
>
> timedatectl timesync-status
>Server: 167.86.86.192 (0.debian.pool.ntp.org)
> Poll interval: 1min 4s (min: 32s;
Peter Ehlert wrote:
> we have several HP 820 Elitebooks. like a rock.
> 10" but no touch screen. I think they sold for +/- $1000 when new.
> all of these were eBay finds, probably paid less than $250 each 4 or 5
> years ago.
Yes I also tend to buy used (better refurbished) when I know the make an
Nicolas George wrote:
> This does not look compatible with "I need it to be not expensive,
> because that's for taking in transports daily and sometimes leaving
> unsupervised in classrooms".
>
It is good quality for the money - what means expensive?! My advise is buy
good hardware - and it is u
Gene Heskett wrote:
> Because synaptic says what is it the debian repo's is 10 years old?
Well, at some point of time you stop repairing the car, you just drive it to
the grave yard, no?
It would be cheaper to upgrade because if you upgrade at the end you will
have up to date system.
Gene Heskett wrote:
> But I figured my luck would run out before I did.
> From 97% done in contributed:
> [ 97%] Building CXX object
> modules/python2/CMakeFiles/opencv_python2.dir/__/src2/cv2.cpp.o
> In file included
> from
> /home/gene/src/build/modules/python_bindings_generator/pyopencv_custom_
Nicolas George wrote:
> As I said, I do not want second-hand, and Lenovo has lost my trust.
Meanwhile I guess all of them are maid in China.
What I recommend (even second hand) but let it be Business Class Notebook.
I use Latitude from Dell and Probook by HP.
The Latitudes I had 34xx - was a cr
mick crane wrote:
> I think I'll go with the first and last suggestion to just have 2 disks
> in raid1.
> It seems that properly you'd want 2 disks in raid for the OS, 2 at least
> for the pool and maybe 1 for the cache.
> Don't have anything big enough I could put 5 disks in.
> I could probably g
Pankaj Jangid wrote:
> 3. I’ll also put these machine to serve local copy of all my data. I’ll
> synchronize it with some cloud space. I need recommendations for
> reliable hard disks. A combination of SSD/HDD to balance between
> cost, performance and reliability will probably be best. But I real
brainf...@posteo.net wrote:
> why is the speed 3.0 gbs
> i have 4 other drive i have tested with this device and they all use
> 6.0 gbs
check cables, connectors and controller - here 2TB WD20EFRX is on LSI that
supports only SATA 2
Brian wrote:
> Not even reputationally?
>
disputable
>> He's just saying look there is a good cheep HW for sale.
>
> We can all do it on -user? Anything goes?
if it is one time ... I'd (how do you say?) shut one eye maybe
I was intrigued - saved me a lot of time. I'm looking from time to time
Long Wind wrote:
> this is really advertisementis it ok to post ad on debian list?
It is not advertisement, because rhkramer does not benefit from it.
He's just saying look there is a good cheep HW for sale.
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Try comparing kernel messages (dmesg).
Or install the old kernel image into the buster and try to eliminate or
confirm it depends on library or on kernel driver.
>From what I read it is kernel driver issue and it was fixed, then broken
then fixed, then broken etc.
Gene Heskett wrote:
>> vcgencmd get_throttled
> 0x0
means no trottle occured (see below)
>> https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=190584
>
> That "forum" is NOT a list. And I've changed browsers, losing all my
> passwds. So while I can read it, I can't post.
>
I mean the raspberr
Gene Heskett wrote:
> ISTR there is a "vcg*" sort of thing to read that stuff, but have lost it
> in the fog of time.
>
> Cheers, Gene Heskett
Hi Gene,
why not ask on the RPI list - I think you are subscribed there. Actually at
the moment there is a discussion around this topic going on.
vcgenc
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> One of the bigger hosting providers here in Germany, for its admin
> interface, has one of those cookies thingy: either you say "accept all"
> (that's the bright green button) or you say "edit preferences" (the light
> grey button which nearly fades into the background).
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> A friend of mine once suggested to return /dev/random to a site's
> cookie request. I'm tempted to try that :-)
>
sounds funny indeed
> This is one good effect of EU's GDPR: the data-sucking machines are
> running around like beheaded chicken: fun to watch ;-D
>
I ac
didier gaumet wrote:
> It is probably related to your Android settings and independant of your
> PC OS (Debian):
>
>
https://android.gadgethacks.com/how-to/make-usb-connection-your-android-phone-default-file-transfer-mode-0234540/
sorry but this is site is crap
Consent Denied
You have not agr
Rob Hurle wrote:
> *Bibus*
> I'm using Debian Stretch and have been for some time. For bibliographic
> work, I want to use Bibus. If anyone else out there is using this useful
> bit of software I'd like to know, or if anyone knows of a mailing list to
> discuss issues, I'd also like to know. My
Carl Fink wrote:
> The recommendation is to reinstall instead. It's easier and doesn't
> take much more time.
Please do not share your personal thoughts as recommendations. I would never
reinstall my system.
The OP is asking specifically for help on upgrade and obviously showing the
kernel versi
Yvan Masson wrote:
> Or, if you did a "standard" install, a more friendly solution if you
> don't like using the terminal:
> - logout
> - before login, click on the toothed wheel and choose Gnome on Xorg or
> similar (I don't recall exactly)
> - log back
> You will then be using Gnome without Wayl
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> Thanks. So, this is the list of all linux-image-amd64:
> https://snapshot.debian.org/binary/linux-image-amd64/
>
> Which one should I install? Which was the first kernel that came with
> Stretch?
Otavio, come on, does google not work on your PC?
https://wiki.debian.org/De
David Wright wrote:
> I'm unconvinced with the Noob explanation. My search engine corrects
> wyland→wayland itself, whether I prefix the search with teamviewer,
> gnome, or x11. Searching for 'buster wyland' suggests 'buster wiand',
> but the first hit is still 'Wayland - Debian Wiki', and there a
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Duh. Don't be a prick over typos.
Sorry guys, I don't know the beast and don't use it. I just watched a
presentation about it once.
I did not cross check how it is exactly spelled. So it was more of an
ignorance than a typo.
And thank you for the hints
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Either run GNOME in an X11 session, or run someting other than GNOME.
Thank you - how do I let Gnome run in X11 session? I am afraid the user
would stick to Gnome.
Hi,
after upgrading one machine from Stretch to Buster Teamviewer told me that
it does not support remote control with Wyland.
What should I use to get remote control (occasionally) in this
configuration?
thank in advance
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Typically a Debian release should run with the kernel from the previous
> release (makes dist-upgrade easier), specific exceptions are mentioned
> in the Release Notes.
>
> If possible you should stick with kernels from the LTS project (as far
> as I know stretch is still
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> No, I mean the opposite. The oldest that can be installed on Stretch
> Because I didn't have a problem with older kernels. I must have
> uninstalled some of the oldest kernel I had. At the moment I have:
>
from what I read you need a 3.x kernel to be sure it works.
Last
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Some of us do need the webcam for video calls / conferences ;)
> (family, friends or work)
>
Andrei, forgive me the the joke, but I doubt you are a model or movie star,
I would insist looking at :D - same for me :D.
I understand this but do not understand completely why w
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> In this case, what's the oldest kernel I can install on Stretch?
you mean the most recent?
I don't know - it looks like there is no solution though as even in later
5.6 similar issues are reported. The latest stable kernel is 5.10.5
https://www.kernel.org/
Better think
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> [18820.144438] uvcvideo: Found UVC 1.00 device Integrated Camera
> [(5986:0299) 18820.147743] uvcvideo 2-4:1.0: Entity type for entity
> [Processing 2 was
> not initialized!
> [18820.147758] uvcvideo 2-4:1.0: Entity type for entity Camera 1 was not
> initialized!
> [18820.1
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> Thanks. This is the dmesg log while giving the 2 commands as above:
>
> After `sudo rmmod uvcvideo`:
> [15630.304614] usbcore: deregistering interface driver uvcvideo
>
> After `sudo modprobe -v uvcvideo`:
>
> [15651.636552] uvcvideo: Found UVC 1.00 device Integrated Cam
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> I have installed uvcdynctrl, but I don't know what to make of its output:
>
> $ sudo uvcdynctrl -l
> Listing available devices:
> video0 Integrated Camera: Integrated C
> Media controller device: /dev/media0
> Entity 1: Integrated Camera: Integrated C. Type: 65537, Revis
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> I've added the stretch-backports repos and installed the new kernel and
> headers:
>
> $ uname -r
> 4.19.0-0.bpo.9-amd64
>
> But it doesn't seem to have sorted much out. The camera gets recognised
> for a few minutes and then it stops.
>
I just did a search in google fo
Tom Browder wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 4, 2021 at 12:57 PM Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
>> I have had good success with a Dymo LabelWriter 450.
>
> USB connection?
yes
LuKaRo wrote:
> I'd be comfortable with blacklisting the NVidia graphics and just using
> the Intel one for example. I just don't know how to do this. Maybe with
> some kind of special Xorg config?
nowdays Xorg does automatic configuration. You could bypass this by saving
the configuration adjust
Dan Ritter wrote:
> If you absolutely need a working camera as soon as possible, buy
> a new USB camera.
but the subject says it is integrated. I suggest just install a new kernel
(may be from back ports if available and you want to stay on stretch)
you can compile new kernel or simply upgrade to
Kamil Jońca wrote:
> cc -fPIE -DPIE -std=gnu99 -Wall -m64 -mcx16 -D_GNU_SOURCE
> -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -Wstrict-prototypes
> -Wredundant-decls -Wundef -Wwrite-strings -Wmissing-prototypes
> -fno-strict-aliasing -fno-common -fwrapv -g -O2
> -fdebug-prefix-map=/home/kjonca/tmp/d
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