Digi Pro Wp5540 Drivers
Home » Tablet WP5540 HID Use the links on this page to download the latest version of Tablet WP5540 HID drivers. All drivers available for download have been scanned by antivirus program. DigiPro WP5540 5'x4' USB Graphics Drawing Tablet & Cordless Pen FREE SHIP - NEW The WP5540 is Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7, 8, 10 compatible.Change the way you interact with your PC! DigiPro WP5540 Graphics Tablet with Cordless Stylus General Features: White tablet and Stylus.
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Xcom wrote: I just did a new install after breaking Solydxk and spend a lot of time configuring every thing again, can you create a backup state that you can revert to?See my last comment. If you have an external drive of sufficient size you can use a backup tool to backup your / and /home partitions. I've also, recently, read where the btrfs file system facilitates system snap-shots.
But I don't know anything more about that - it's another research project that I stacked on top of all the others I have. Another idea is maybe install VirtualBox and then install a Solyd VM and do your work in there. What I do is create a SolydK and SolydX VM and remove all packages I know I won't need for development (ie. Amarok, multimedia stuff, etc.) Then, when I need to do a compile, I simply fully clone (not link-clone) that VM and run the clone and do what I need to, install what I need to.
I install guest additions in both and set them both up to automount read/right a shared directory so when I'm done compiling something, I can save it to the shared directory (then go into your shared directory in dolphin on the host and move your package to a safe place). This way I never touch/potentially ruin (believe me, I have a propensity to do that!) my host machine. When done, I make sure I got the files from the guest (via shared directory) and then just delete the cloned VM.
This way you still have the 'master' VM installation that is clean to re-clone and have a fresh system to develop on again. If you compile the graphic driver on the guest and make a debian package from that compile (someone here may be able to chime in on how to do that - I forgot how), then you can move that driver package to the host and install it on the host using gdebi (you may have to get that from the repo). The thing to be sure is that you have the same solyd on the guest as you'll be using on the host (ie.
If host is SolydK 64-bit then you'll want to use a SolydK 64-bit guest to compile and create the package on). Once you make the package you can keep the package backed up in a save place (and source in case you ever need to recompile) and that way you just install the package if you need to reinstall the driver.
After doing more research I found why the wizardpen package is old. It was replaced by that is sent upstream so all distros with a new kernel will have graphic tablet support out of the box. For kernels newer than 2.6 and evdev newer than 2.5.99 and looking in the software manager I see that the xserver-xorg-input-evdev driver (2.8.2) is install by default in Solydx so it should work out of the box without me having to do or install anything. I try in gimp and blender and it doesn't work but the tablet is detected., so I still need wizardpen for it, but for blender and gimp evdev should work out of the box now with evdev. So the problem is in Solydx.
One other thing to consider: Is your USB port working? Is your USB port a 1.0, 2.0 or 3.0? If it's say, a 3.0 it should be backwards compatible with 2.0 and 1.0 devices but I'm not sure if Linux supports USB 3.0 yet? I would assume it would. Now, if your device is USB 3.0 and your USB port is 2.0 then well, it won't work.
How would you know? I don't know how to test it. Does anyone here know a way to test USB port version? And you could also test things like Snap suggested: Booting up a live CD and seeing if it works in there. If it does, then you have something wrong in your installation, if not, then maybe it's either hardware, or maybe you don't have the most recent kernel.