07-29-2020, 03:31 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-29-2020, 03:33 PM by bcnaz.)
There was a long thread on this back when they first suggested doing the firmware update.
I imagine there are some good ideas posted there that should still be helpful today.
Just sometimes it can be frustrating trying to look up older threads.
+1, Just flashed this custom firmware, and the trackpad is much more usable. I'm a happy camper.
IIRC the trackpad isn't improved, just the keyboard -- however the perception/experience is often connected.
@
xmixahlx
On the other hand, I think Jack's replacement firmware has a small modification or 2 for the trackpad. It's not in the trackpad software it's self. Just that the keyboard controller has the connection to the trackpad. So, some communication modifications on the keyboard controller's software, (for the trackpad), has improved the trackpad slightly.
Got my ANSI keyboard replacement for my ISO Pinebook Pro. So I may move to Jack's keyboard firmware on both my ISO and ANSI.
--
Arwen Evenstar
Princess of Rivendale
Hello,
Am I the only one who can't change the sensitivity parameters in the touchpad settings?
I've been using the firmware update from jackhumbert, and it vastly improves my touchpad experience, but it doesn't seem to persist a reboot. Has anyone else experienced this?
I'm using debian from the pinebook pro installer. Its not like the firmware somehow is getting reverted, because if I modify the updater to purely enter boot mode and then do a reset (skipping the actual firmware flashing), the touchpad is suddenly usable and great again. As far as I can tell, nothing is different when Xorg detects the device the second time -- the logs indicate the same parameters with respect to acceleration, the only thing that changes is the ID (event11 instead of event7 in my case), probably because its rediscovered.
I'm tempted to just trigger this on my xsession.