[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 1 points 2 months ago

Very good point, I will do so indeed and post the link to the issue here when I do. Thanks for the assist.

[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago

Currently I am playing round with the clock and timer settings hoping to get this working as close to 'real time' as possible.

[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago

Whelp, it plays a 48000Hz sine wave through aplay just fine... I used sox to generate it. I'll be frank, I am not entirely sure how else to test the audio system aside from just playing something. I believe pipewire being chosen as the default audio subsystem means pulse audio itself inst even needed or installed by arch install since pipewire has inbuilt compatibility with it, right? If this is the case, then I do not have pulse audio installed separately.

I would post my VM config but for some reason it's not working? Ill try a pastebin...

[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago

Funny you mentioned that, I was just doing that exact thing for the third time about 3 minutes before I posted this. I guess I must have forgotten to clarify that it had been tried. Thanks for the tip.

[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 1 points 5 months ago

Yeah, Multiviewer is a huge PITA to use on steam deck since it gets wiped on updates, Brave, my browser of choice is explicitly blocked from the web version and I'm used to the android interface so it seemed right on my main PC since I already needed to do it this way on my deck.

[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 1 points 5 months ago

Sorry it took me so long to test this all out, thanks a bunch, this seems to have solved the issue. I guess I did indeed miss a step. There are certainly some weird bugs I'm getting right now with flickery apps and such but that's sorta what I expected. HDR even works which is very nice to see. Regardless, I appreciate you taking the time to assist me here, I will have a play around and get my Waydroid config all sorted now.

Thank you!

[-] cammelspit@lemm.ee 1 points 8 months ago

Thanks! Yeah, I have noticed a lot of places where the location of things is not necessarily a requirement but it is considered "proper". It's a whole different paradigm compared to the rather severely rigid requirements of Windows. I went through a lot of documentation about services and the real eureka moment was when I realized it was more or less just a command being run with extra fluff around it like environment variables and such. I have the service placed in the /etc/systemd/system directory, where all the other ones valve made are. I have seen how powerful systemd can be when leveraged well but for the moment I'm pleased with the results. Thanks for the encouragement!

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cammelspit

joined 8 months ago