The hardware reset button just let the keyboard boot into flash mode. If nothing is done, you can simply unplug and replug so the keyboard would boot into normal mode again
Source: I uses qmk from the terminal
The hardware reset button just let the keyboard boot into flash mode. If nothing is done, you can simply unplug and replug so the keyboard would boot into normal mode again
Source: I uses qmk from the terminal
That’s amazing! May I suggest using space as a terminator instead of =? We do that all the time in Pinyin Input method and it’s quite convenient
Even if it is still a thing, kinda aus when the command modifies the Firewall like that
TBF I found the first party packaging tools for Debian are very hard to use. I always end up using nFPM or makedeb anyway
Well good thing is your Firefox profile should still be on the disk?
Not really Fedora is Red Hat’s upstream, and about 30% of contribution comes from Red Hat. It is a community project after all.
The similarity is really only superficial. You would have to learn about the OS one way or the other, even if some distro has Interfaces similar to Windows. You might need to find software alternatives for example, or be comfortable with package manager.
For gaming, you want to checkout Steam w/ Proton and Heroic Game Launcher
What does the MD file look like? Wonder if I can use it with logseq
Ah I see there is a confusion. The button under the space bar is the flashing mode button, only for flashing new firmware. The factory reset is for when you brick the keyboard.
When I flash firmwares I use the button under the space bar. I remembered screwed up once , but I forgot which key combo I used to reset it.