Just sharing what I've found for the next guy. This isn't exactly a request for technical support-I think this is just something that needs work in proton, maybe RDR2, maybe steam. Just a wired mouse with a lot of programmable buttons. Quality, build of course, but I don't need wireless, cools lights and a light-weight, 3-d printed, ventilated, turbo-charged, carbonite cover. I'm looking for a wired mouse with the most programmable buttons. Recommendations for my right-handed mouse? I currently have a Naga classic but it's not supported by Polychrome, so, the programmable buttons aren't.Has anyone had experience with these or found a good review/video on it? So far, I've just found their website and an unboxing video that is, literally, merely taking it out of the box. The MoveMaster is the closest thing I've seen on the market today, but info out there is very thin.Would consider if Linux compatible, but only as a last resort. But you can find them from private sellers for about $250. MS no longer makes the Sidewinder and hasn't supported it for several Win versions.I'm looking for a desktop controller designed such that a right-handed person has an additional left-handed non-mouse controller. Oh, btw, is there a term for this type of peripheral? A search on "mouse" isn't narrow enough and "game pad" returns console-type controllers. Also, any recommendations for a wired mouse with a lot of programmable buttons are appreciated. I really loved that dual-handed keyboard-free approach and want to do it again but in Linux-land. I had a Microsoft Sidewinder Strategic Commander that I wore out a few years ago.
If osu opens, you know that you did everything correctly. To test if everything worked out the way they should, you can run xdg-open 'osu://'. Now you need to put this in your ~/.local/share/applications/mimeapps.list file: Īll you need to do is run these commands, and voila', you're done: $ chmod +x ~/.local/share/applications/osu.desktop Icon=`absolute path to your preferred icon.` # NOTE: optional The contents of the file should look somewhat similar to this: Įxec=`absolute path to osuhandler.sh` %u # NOTE: you can't use "~" here
Now you need to create a file called osu.desktop inside of ~/.local/share/applications/. To be able to create a custom protocol, you will need to create a.
You should run this file to double check if your paths are valid. Now, run this in your terminal to make osuhandler.sh executable: $ chmod ~/.osu/osuhandler.sh Please note, that you need matching wine versions if you're opening osu from somewhere else(for example lutris). Wine `path to osu!.exe` # NOTE: you need to escape the exclamation mark like this: osu\!.exe The contents of that should look something like the following: #!/usr/bin/bashĮxport WINEPREFIX=`path to your wineprefix` After that, create a shell file called osuhandler.sh inside of your. Most browsers will use xdg-open for protocols. The reason behind this is that the website uses a custom protocol, and sometimes you need to manually create those on linux. Recently I noticed that the buttons like the osu!direct one on the website won't work out-of-the-box if you're using wine.