The amazingly useful SC Controller [GitHub] project, a third-party open source driver and user interface for the Steam Controller has a new release out. Sadly, the last for a while.
Here's what's new in 0.4.5:
- On-screen keyboard can be now used with DS4 gamepad
- Improved editing profile using controller
- Allowed SVG custom menu icons
- Allowed displaying multiple OSD messages, with different font size and display time
- Bug fixes
In the release notes, the developer Kozec said this:
This is last SC-Controller release for a while. With all that mess happening around Linux this week, I've decided to move away as far as possible. I plan to finish all "enhancements" eventually, just not right now.
They went into further detail in a Patreon post, here's the gist of it:
As you probably already heard, earlier this week, Linux became part of political movement. It's movement that I strongly disagree with and wish to not be associated with in any way. Because of that, I don't feel welcomed in Linux community anymore.
Or, to write it like human being, with all this mess, coding is not fun at all.
So I'm throwing hands up and walking through the middle.
For those who don't really understand, it's likely as a result of the new Code of Conduct for the Linux Kernel. Something that has become a hot sticky mess in the wider community. Regardless of my own feelings about the CoC, I just hope people can find a way to get along and treat everyone with respect, regardless of who they are and where they come from.
I'm pretty sad about this, I use SC Controller practically every day for taming the Steam Controller outside of Steam and for those Steam games that don't detect it normally.
Quoting: tonRIt's a million shades of grey.
I thought they were 50 only :P
Quoting: PinballWizardThis is a big deal- also, why on earth doesn't the steam controller configuration work on the linux client for steam? They have their own Ubuntu-based distribution this is meant to run on so why on earth doesn't it work in Ubuntu itself?
What? Steam Controller on Linux Steam works perfectly well, at least for native games. This tool is helpful for games outside of Steam, for those people who don’t want to use Steam client (the other way to get SC working for non-Steam games is to add them to the Steam library, like one would probably do eg. on Windows).
EDIT: OK, one exception to the perfectly well part. For some reason there is no force-feedback available for Steam Controller on Linux with the Steam client.
Last edited by silmeth on 24 September 2018 at 2:03 pm UTC
Quoting: silmethQuoting: PinballWizardThis is a big deal- also, why on earth doesn't the steam controller configuration work on the linux client for steam? They have their own Ubuntu-based distribution this is meant to run on so why on earth doesn't it work in Ubuntu itself?
What? Steam Controller on Linux Steam works perfectly well, at least for native games. This tool is helpful for games outside of Steam, for those people who don’t want to use Steam client (the other way to get SC working for non-Steam games is to add them to the Steam library, like one would probably do eg. on Windows).
EDIT: OK, one exception to the perfectly well part. For some reason there is no force-feedback available for Steam Controller on Linux with the Steam client.
So when I was trying to get the controller set up for Dead Cells it just kept defaulting back to the controller's default configuration. I tried a lot of different things but the only answer was using the sc controller UI to configure the buttons. When researching why I was told basically that programming the buttons via big picture mode in Ubuntu just doesn't work; that was basically my experience with it too.
I only used sc-controller while experimanting with a few non-Steam and wine games. As I hardly play anything outside of Steam now, I haven’t really use sc-controller for half a year now.
Quoting: tuubiWhat happened almost immediately after the CoC being adopted? SJWs going after people they don't like: https://twitter.com/_sagesharp_/status/1042769399596437504?lang=enQuoting: XicronicIf the author of the CoC admitting it is a political documentThere. I struck out the part she clearly didn't say or mean. As if this would even give her the power to "out" anyone.made to out people she doesn't like
And yes, anything that concerns project policy is political by definition.
Sure, he didn't explicitly state that it is a political document for outing political opponents, but it's what's happened everytime a CoC is adopted, and it's what's happening with Linux now.
Quoting: tuubiIn any case, you can all relax. The CoC doesn't give any power to anyone who isn't a maintainer of a Linux subsystem or module, and then only within their domain, and becoming a maintainer requires the same amount of expertise as ever. Nothing has changed with regard to meritocracy or the lack of.People who do not contribute to the project at all use this as an opportunity to attack maintainers they don't like. Opal example: https://i.imgtc.com/1gasSBZ.png
Really? Take a look at https://postmeritocracy.org/ (written by none other than Coraline himself)
Last edited by Xicronic on 24 September 2018 at 10:35 pm UTC
Quoting: DolusHere, is a little something that might blow your mind: I do not care. I do not care about a contributors sexuality, religion or political affiliation. If their contributions make Linux a better kernel, they should be allowed to contribute. That is how it should be. Instead we now have these neon haired puritansSo, not their sexuality, religion or political affiliation, but you do care about the colour of their hair.
Quoting: PatolaA small example is using the code of conduct to try and implement the same compelled speech that was attempted in Canada: if you refer to a person by a pronoun he or she disagrees, you might face jail time.I'm Canadian and that is nonsense. I've seen a lot of people here, wittingly and unwittingly, making a lot of dubious references in their attempts to pump the "SJWs are coming for us!" narrative. A lot of quotes taken out of context and twisted, a lot of skews from what really happened. This is one of them.
http://sds.utoronto.ca/blog/bill-c-16-no-its-not-about-criminalizing-pronoun-misuse/
IMO, if the SJW conspiracy scare had much to it there would be no need for this sort of spin. It's probably true that any given progressive bunch, like any other bunch, has some dorks in it. Big deal--some people are dorks, film at 11.
But also, as a Canadian, I would like to mention where the real threat lies in some of this scaremongering rhetoric. So, the current premier of Ontario is Doug Ford--brother of the now-deceased ex-mayor of Toronto, Rob Ford, who was best known for doing crack with gangers. Anyway, he too is deeply upset about the supposed anti-free-speech ways of SJWs, specifically on university campuses. So in the name of free speech, he says he's going to cut funding from universities if they don't discipline students and de-fund student unions which protest displays by such groups as anti-abortion campaigners or alt-right speakers. He's given them four months to get the policies in place. So, banning protest in the name of free speech--that is where the right wing backlash against "SJWs" wants to go. I'm waiting cynically for the "anti-SJW" forces to start jailing protestors in the name of free speech.
There's a lot more people been jailed, kicked off campuses, denied jobs or tenure et cetera et cetera (not to mention assassinated--Martin Luther King anyone?) for being in favour of social justice than for being against it. But I think in the old days they at least didn't try to pretend they were doing it to defend free speech.
But does there need to be some sort of Code of Conduct taken fairly seriously at the Linux kernel? Oh hell yeah. Come on, could we get real?
I am against this code of conduct but I am not against code of conducts in general.
The main issue is that it is vague. That enables one to break a basic principal of justice:
Quote"It is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer" ~ Sir William BlackstoneIf they decide to rewrite this code of conduct, they should word is so that earlier wrongs cannot be repeated with the new CoC. I am especially talking about the cases like James Damore and Theo Ts'o. In both cases, they spent some time in researching something before talking about it. In case of James Damore, he lost his job. This CoC would also have allowed something like that too. A CoC, which allows something like this is not OK. If I spend even 5 minutes in researching something, even if I conclude wrongly in your opinion, I shouldn't be vilified.
Another issue is that lately there is a tendency to do away with proportionality between the crime and the punishment. Going after someones careers is a big thing!
See more from me