08-08-2020, 06:32 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-08-2020, 06:37 AM by User 18618.)
Great!
The Manjaro Pinebook image likely comes with support for more hotkeys than Debian - Debian typically doesn't include extraneous configurations. Try evaluating keycodes with xev, then plug them into the XFCE settings.
You should be able to adjust the touchpad's sensitivity using libinput or xinput.
Frankly, I would opt for the same as you - Debian with a lightweight desktop environment or window manager. Fedora is another good choice on paper, but I don't have any experience with Fedora / CentOS / RHEL.
I believe there are other threads in the forum regarding DRM content in the web browser. If Widevine is available in the browser, I'd say you're most of the way there - bearing in mind that Linux has spotty DRM support on amd64, never mind arm64.
I don't believe Skype and Zoom are compiled for arm64 - have you looked on Flathub or Snapcraft? You should still be able to use the web client for Zoom. Skype is an enigma; if you are referring to Skype for Business, you're out of luck on any architecture.
Good luck
I didn't mention containers (Docker) or virtualisation (QEMU) as solutions to DRM or running binaries from another architecture, but these are avenues you can explore if you're feeling adventurous.
The Manjaro Pinebook image likely comes with support for more hotkeys than Debian - Debian typically doesn't include extraneous configurations. Try evaluating keycodes with xev, then plug them into the XFCE settings.
You should be able to adjust the touchpad's sensitivity using libinput or xinput.
Frankly, I would opt for the same as you - Debian with a lightweight desktop environment or window manager. Fedora is another good choice on paper, but I don't have any experience with Fedora / CentOS / RHEL.
I believe there are other threads in the forum regarding DRM content in the web browser. If Widevine is available in the browser, I'd say you're most of the way there - bearing in mind that Linux has spotty DRM support on amd64, never mind arm64.
I don't believe Skype and Zoom are compiled for arm64 - have you looked on Flathub or Snapcraft? You should still be able to use the web client for Zoom. Skype is an enigma; if you are referring to Skype for Business, you're out of luck on any architecture.
Good luck
I didn't mention containers (Docker) or virtualisation (QEMU) as solutions to DRM or running binaries from another architecture, but these are avenues you can explore if you're feeling adventurous.