Thanks but that doesn't really help. The gestures do work fine, it's just that they also cause random things to be clicked when using gestures on a touchscreen.
mellejwz
So what's the known issue?
Can't you change to a normal user with become? We do lots of stuff with Ansible as normal user. You should be able to create tasks that get executed as normal user and install yay and run makepkg, and then run yay to install packages.
That's bullshit, it's still free for the normal lts support. Only if you want support after that you'll have to pay, or upgrade to the next version for free.
It's because most banks support Google Pay instead of using their own app. It's perfectly possible for banks to not use Google Pay. A few banks here don't support Google Pay, instead you have to download their app to use nfc payments.
They just don't care about their citizens.
It won't mess with anything, but it does require to be set up on every pc you want to use it.
If you don't use a semicolon directly in MySQL it won't do anything until you add it.
Same, many elements are blurry when I use scaling in Arch with KDE.
I didn't say I couldn't fix the issues, but the fact that some of those issues exist even since XP is pretty bad. Just search around online and you'll find many posts about these driver issues. And then there's all of the ui inconsistencies and issues. Most of those are small, but still annoying once you see them. Especially when using Windows on a tablet, even Microsoft's own Surface line.
For HP ZBooks for example there was an issue that completely prevented you from installing some updates like Windows 10 20H2 without any warning as to why it wouldn't install. It just failed at 61%. It turned out to be audio drivers for the audio chip in the dock. The only way to get it updated was to connect the dock, finding the audio device in device management and removing it. Then disconnect before Windows reinstalls the driver again.
This has happened for multiple versions.
Try Windows. It regularly breaks drivers (not only WiFi) on some hardware (mostly HP). I've never had issues with WiFi on Linux on HP, Dell, Microsoft Surface and even a Macbook.
This has nothing to do with secureboot, as the system boots fine according to the explanation.