mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u
ddcutil
mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u | ddcutil | |
---|---|---|
3 | 47 | |
- | 862 | |
- | - | |
- | 9.9 | |
- | 7 days ago | |
C | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u
-
Linux Touchpad Like MacBook Update: 2023 Progress on Smooth Scrolling
If you want to have mouse scroll wheel acceleration, you might be interested in a small project of mine: https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u...
I'm using this all the time on non-Mac platforms. Once you get used to this, it's hard to get back.
But I'm still waiting that such a feature gets more built into the core, e.g. libinput or so.
-
Scrollbars Are Becoming a Problem
Regarding quickly scrolling around in a large document, there is also scroll wheel acceleration, i.e. the users finger scroll speed is not just a linear function mapped onto the software scroll speed but rather it can accelerate.
MacOS, iOS and Android have this anyway, and a few custom software as well.
I implemented a cross platform user-space variant of this, to get mouse scroll wheel acceleration. You can even use this in addition to the native scroll wheel acceleration on MacOS.
https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u...
-
Show HN: iPod Clickwheel.js
I never had an iPod, but I wonder, did it use some acceleration scheme? I.e. your physical scroll speed was not just linearly mapped to the virtual scroll speed but some quadratic or even exponential scheme?
Because I know that they do the same on OSX for scrolling, i.e. scrolling has an acceleration scheme, which I very much enjoy, and always miss when I'm on other operating systems.
For that reason, I implemented such scroll acceleration in user space. Some further details and references are in the README. https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u...
ddcutil
-
Show HN: Multi-monitor KVM using just a USB switch
Apologies. I hate when people do that as well.
In addition to the other links posted, ddcutil.org has some more good info: https://www.ddcutil.com/#introduction
- Scrollbars Are Becoming a Problem
- CEC over DisplayPort
-
Recommandations KVM
Sous Linux j'avais utilisé ddcutil
-
Connecting a Display Port 1.4 graphics card to the Dell thunderbolt dock WD22TB4
Most monitors have a Virtual Control Panel (VCP), which implements features defined in the Monitor Control Command Set (MCCS). This is a VESA standard. You can find the Input selection command in table 8-10. You send these commands over an I2C bus called Display Data Channel/Command Interface which is yet another VESA standard. If you are running Windows https://www.nirsoft.net/utils/control_my_monitor.html will let you use every VCP feature your monitor has. For Linux, https://www.ddcutil.com/ does this. For Mac, https://github.com/alin23/Lunar
-
Opinions on functional & performance requirements for a desktop TB/USB4 AIC
The protocol is called DDC , it's a VESA standard. In there, it's called VCP features. If you are running Windows https://www.nirsoft.net/utils/control_my_monitor.html will let you use every VCP feature your monitor has. For Linux, https://www.ddcutil.com/ does this. For Mac, https://github.com/alin23/Lunar note how all three mention input selection.
-
TIL there are apps that can control your monitor without touching the buttons on it
ddcutil (a command-line tool, and what most UI tools are based on)
-
'monitorctl' cli tool to control brightness, contrast and volume of external monitors on linux
A related non rust tool (that also has an optional GUI) is ddcutil. How does this compare to that?
- I built a widget to adjust the brightness of external monitors
-
Brightness issue
I've also used ddcui: https://www.ddcutil.com/#introduction, available as an AUR package: https://github.com/rockowitz/ddcutil. This has a nice GUI: https://www.ddcutil.com/screenshots/ddcui_features.png and works on everything I've tried it on out of the box.
What are some alternatives?
ipod-classic-js - An iPod Classic emulator that connects to Apple Music and Spotify. Built with React & Styled Components
winddcutil - Windows implementation of the ddcutil Linux program for querying and changing monitor settings, such as brightness and color levels.
jQuery-Knob - Nice, downward compatible, touchable, jQuery dial
ddcctl - DDC monitor controls (brightness) for Mac OSX command line
AltSnap - Maintained continuation of Stefan Sundin's AltDrag
Clight - A C daemon that turns your webcam into a light sensor. It will adjust screen backlight based on ambient brightness.
twinkle-tray - Easily manage the brightness of your monitors in Windows from the system tray
MonitorControl - 🖥 Control your display's brightness & volume on your Mac as if it was a native Apple Display. Use Apple Keyboard keys or custom shortcuts. Shows the native macOS OSDs.
clickwheel-js
soft-brightness - Gnome-shell extension to manage your display brightness via an alpha overlay (instead of the backlight).
ddccontrol - DDC Control
open-USB-display-service-utility - Reverse engineering of the apple display service utilty