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"Bluetooth on Fedora: joypads and (more) security"

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20 September 2017 at 17:05

Blogger Unknown said...

Wow! I didn't know that I could use the PS3 Controller so easily with Fedora 26! That's great!
But there is a serious flaw: Somehow the Gnome Desktop recognizes the position sensors in the Controller as if I would have a tablet! So when I turn the controller, my desktop rotates! I guess that I can disable rotation altogether, but that shouldn't be necessary.
Thank you for this post/feature!

EDIT: On a sidenote, as this is gaming related: Do you know what the status of GNOME Games for Fedora is? Will this be available at some point? I am running Retroarch right now, but I would prefer nice native GTK software :)

20 September 2017 at 17:10

Blogger Bastien Nocera said...

> But there is a serious flaw: Somehow the Gnome Desktop recognizes the position sensors in the Controller as if I would have a tablet!

That's fixed in iio-sensor-proxy:
https://github.com/hadess/iio-sensor-proxy/commit/401d59e54b3123860180d4401e09df8a1e1bc6c3
and just needs a release.

> Do you know what the status of GNOME Games for Fedora is?

The recommendation is to use the Flatpak for GNOME Games.

20 September 2017 at 17:16

Blogger Jared said...

I think it is odd that the dialogs have the options to either "Dismiss" or "Allow". Isn't the opposite of "Allow" to "Deny"? I can "Dismiss" the dialog, but that doesn't really tell me what choice I'm making.

20 September 2017 at 19:17

Blogger djb said...

^ Also, it seems weird to me that the cancel action has the destructive-action style class, when all it does is to continue *not* doing something, which isn't an action. I'd expect to see that class on Delete buttons and whatnot, but not cancel type ones. The HIG is brief but seems to agree on this point.

20 September 2017 at 21:46

Blogger Bastien Nocera said...

File bugs if you have concerns about them. The buttons match the mockups which were made by the same person that wrote the HIG, and we already implemented in gnome-bluetooth's code base for 4 years. So not anything new there :)

22 September 2017 at 12:03

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