Anyone rocking the SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless on Linux?
There is a pretty good deal atm on this headset and been thinking about getting my first wireless headset for a while. Am curious about how it runs on Linux, as I've seen some controversy on this headset on website that shall not be named, but that was 3 years ago now. I dont expect to be running their propriety software for equalizing sound - but would like to know if the headset performs as it should out of the box and if the additional sound system works well. If anyone has any experience with this i'd be more than happy to hear about it. Other headset recommendations welcome to (wireless though) :)
The volume wheel definitely works on mine, so something is wrong. I encountered the developer that added driver support for GSP headsets back in a conversation abut them on reddit, so I can say for a fact they are explicitly supported.
Linux drivers are usually part of the kernel nowadays, or sometimes get loaded as kernel modules.
Either way, most distros should just come with the audio drivers that implements the support for these. Generally, being open source, linux drivers implement support for everything the devs can figure out, rather than making a separate one for each piece of hardware that's out there.
If you're on an older kernel, that might be it. I remember when I got a DS5 controller I had to use a kernel newer than 5.15 because that's when support for it was added to the game controller driver.
Endeavour OS, here. I didn't have do anything in particular to get mine working.
You might need to use a windows system to verify that it's working at all, could simply be broken.
The other option is that they're on an old firmware that works differently for some reason. You'd need the EPOS software on a windows install to do an update.
Wine unfortunately can't be used for that kind of stuff. Programs run in wine cannot communicate directly with hardware in the way they can on windows.
Not yet, at least, but the implementation is in very, very, very early stages. As in, people have just about started figuring out how it could theoretically be done.