It only had two modes for the VGA source, 16:9 and 4:3. The 16:9 is the right ratio for the laptop but had the offset issue. The 4:3 makes it stretched out / squashed, but it doesn’t have the offset issue.
Everyday is TAURSday!
It only had two modes for the VGA source, 16:9 and 4:3. The 16:9 is the right ratio for the laptop but had the offset issue. The 4:3 makes it stretched out / squashed, but it doesn’t have the offset issue.
I was looking into this earlier to try fixing a display that was being offset on an old tv screen. The display was going off the left side of the TV, causing a black bar on the right side.
I was trying xrandr
, and fixed it somewhat by offsetting the display back, but somehow it did not fix the right side - it seemed as if the display had went under the black bar.
But yeah you can offset, stretch, skew and rotate with xrandr
Things gonna do their own thing. You can only handle the direct consequences, and work towards influencing the outcomes.
Last one is the biggest one for me. Everything else might follow once you master that.
My guess would be the sense of fulfilment.
At work you have a purpose, and so you fulfil it.
At home, to motivate myself to do the chores, is to find a rationale for it to be done.
Etc. Etc. Plus it helps to enforce the thought that I’m “adulting”, like the kid in me and others would say.
This’d explain why inexperienced users of ai would inevitably get mediocre results. Still takes creativity to get stolen mediocrity.
Scrcpy now has audio forwarding too.
Hell yeah.
It’s a lot more frustrating if they make it impossible to fix but it is damn satisfying when you’ve prevented something from going to the trash.
I’ve also used this sort of work to create a spliced power cord for a two monitor setup but I could only spare one plug.
You can also press and hold the arrow key on the Desktop. I assume this works because of keyboard based navigation