VMs on Fedora Workstation
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Seem to have found a temp fix from here:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2016/10/msg00199.htmlFortunately, I found a hacky solution in VMM: Add Hardware --> Input --> EvTouch USB Graphics Tablet
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Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
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@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
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@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
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@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
How come?
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@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
How come?
I tried it once. It was not very elegant. Using KVM was far superior. No idea why Boxes is even being promoted, it seems like a hokey solution to a problem that no one has.
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@scottalanmiller said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
How come?
I tried it once. It was not very elegant. Using KVM was far superior. No idea why Boxes is even being promoted, it seems like a hokey solution to a problem that no one has.
Boxes suppose to be user-friendly for those use to using those type 2 hypervisor UI.
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@black3dynamite said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@scottalanmiller said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
How come?
I tried it once. It was not very elegant. Using KVM was far superior. No idea why Boxes is even being promoted, it seems like a hokey solution to a problem that no one has.
Boxes suppose to be user-friendly for those use to using those type 2 hypervisor UI.
I don't think it is, though. KVM already makes it "feel" like a traditional type 2, Boxes only takes away from that experience.
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@scottalanmiller said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@black3dynamite said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@scottalanmiller said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
How come?
I tried it once. It was not very elegant. Using KVM was far superior. No idea why Boxes is even being promoted, it seems like a hokey solution to a problem that no one has.
Boxes suppose to be user-friendly for those use to using those type 2 hypervisor UI.
I don't think it is, though. KVM already makes it "feel" like a traditional type 2, Boxes only takes away from that experience.
I was more confused using Boxes UI compared to Virtual Machine Manager.
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@black3dynamite said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@scottalanmiller said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@black3dynamite said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@scottalanmiller said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@siringo said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
@obsolesce said in VMs on Fedora Workstation:
Did you install THIS inside of your Windows VM?
I changed my 'Display' setting from Spice to VNC, that gave me 2 mouse cursors. Then I added a Tablet, that got rid of the extra cursor and everything now seems to work OK.
No, I wouldn't have been able to install anything into the VM before the changes mentioned above as the mouse was unusable.
I'll do it now and see what happens.
I also built a VM using Boxes. That was going OK, but now I've lost video all together.
I don't like or ever use boxes.
How come?
I tried it once. It was not very elegant. Using KVM was far superior. No idea why Boxes is even being promoted, it seems like a hokey solution to a problem that no one has.
Boxes suppose to be user-friendly for those use to using those type 2 hypervisor UI.
I don't think it is, though. KVM already makes it "feel" like a traditional type 2, Boxes only takes away from that experience.
I was more confused using Boxes UI compared to Virtual Machine Manager.
Oh yeah, I tried it and could not figure out what was going on.