Gestures With Multitouch In Ubuntu 10.10
jitendraharlalka writes "Mark Shuttleworth recently announced on his blog that the first cut of Canonical's UTouch framework is ready and will be available in Ubuntu Maverick. He goes on to talk about the development of 'touch language' by the design team. The 'touch language' will allow the chaining of basic gestures to create complex gestures. The approach is quite different from the single magic gestures implemented elsewhere. In Maverick, a few Gtk applications will support gesture-based scrolling."
http://www.apple.com/magictrackpad/
They mention "for your Mac" but a quick search shows that Apple has Windows drivers available.
where I can buy a USB pad currently to add multi-touch support for a Windows desktop. Thanks
From Wacom. I have one of these, and use it on a Windows system. I haven't plugged it into my Lucid system...yet.
I need trepanation like I need a hole in the head.
I believe it was right around $1000, looked ridiculously like an iMAC and ran Win 7. I remember touching it at the store and being like "wow, now if this was only useful...."
plenty of Macs run Windows.
Plenty of PCs runs Mac OS X too... it just takes a lil' hack.
Circumcision is child abuse.
Then I want some of whatever he is smoking.
Show me ANY Linux where I can take a mix of totally random hardware thrown together and hand my 67 year old clueless dad the disc and have him install it PERFECTLY, without a SINGLE fuckup or hardware issue, and then we'll talk.
True story.
Not long back I tried the Ubuntu Windows Installer
The installer appeared to hang on an indecipherable hard drive error. It could not be closed or canceled short of killing the process in Task Manager.
The Ubuntu site and forums were no help - so on to Google.
A half hour or so later I found a solution. It seems that the installer treats any internal or external, occupied or unoccupied, flash card slot as a hard drive.
The work around is to click "Cancel" as often as necessary to get the job done.
65 clicks later I began to see daylight.
25 clicks later I had 32 bit Unbuntu dual-booting with 64 bit Windows 7.
It did not make a good first impression.
Speaking of drivers, I bought an HP printer with claims to support only Mac and Windows. Lo and behold, turns out there is a 'NIX driver,
Call HP and ask them why it's not printing with the highest DPI setting (even if it is.. humor me). Then you'll learn the meaning of support.