Hi Anthony, Thank you for your work on this.
Anthony Perkins <anth...@acperkins.com> writes: > Package: wnpp > Severity: wishlist > Owner: Anthony Perkins <anth...@acperkins.com> > > * Package name : ltunify > Version : 0.2 > Upstream Author : Peter Wu <lekenst...@gmail.com> > * URL : https://lekensteyn.nl/logitech-unifying.html > * License : GPL-3.0+ > Programming Lang: C > Description : Pair and manage Logitech devices that use the unifying > receiver > > Logitech wireless peripherals use a 'Unifying' receiver. This > utility manages the receiver, allowing the user to pair new > devices and remove unwanted ones. > > I require a sponsor, but intend to maintain the package myself. > > It had a release v0.2 roughly six years ago, and had a few > additional patches in the following year but no new release. I > will include a few of these patches as they fix bugs in the > application. Please add to the Debian description a comparison between ltunify and existing packages in Debian that provide this functionality. eg: Why should people who use these existing packages try ltunify? Solaar-cli is deprecated, so maybe that? When I look at the existing description, I think "neat, someone reinvented the wheel", and see nothing that convinces me to migrate to ltunify. It's also worth mentioning that ltunify doesn't support HID++ 2.0 whereas Solaar does, and possibly adding an example of the newest Logitech device that ltunify supports. Thank you for documenting everything at the upstream website :-) Reading that document I get a clear sense of your enthusiasm for this work, and I wonder if ltunify's Debian description could be framed in a way that spoke to those who share a similar passion for reverse engineering protocols? There are enough people using Logitech peripherals that we really ought to have native-desktop-integrated pairing for GNOME and KDE Plasma by now, rather than a tray application. I wonder if the missing piece is a libsolaar or libltunify... Thanks, Nicholas
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature