And user Piper because I’m not on Windows.įunniest part? Razer’s keyboard and mice often have this too, and you can get at it with OpenRGB and OpenRazer on the Linux side and I think it’s out for Windows as well idk, but Razer’s own programs can’t find it and so you continue to get rainbowvomit without their drivers.Īnyway, I’m glad you found the solution, I’m just chatting at this point. Of course they really want you to get their weird driver program but I just ignore it.
No need to install anything at all - the program that sets it up is portable with no installer. On Logitech mice you’ve got memory built into the mouse. In the case of Razer they put a backup image on the disk which I of course nuked as well. The only exception to this is when I bought a Mac because literally no matter what it’s gonna have Apple’s software, so… Whenever I buy a laptop usually the first thing I do is drop a nuke on the SSD and reinstall Windows or Linux to get rid of the bloat and ads and other things. I can respect patience with poor features when you want good stuff as well. So you cite two absolutely bonkers things that should never be done by default as things that bother you and otherwise it doesn’t bother you. It also created it’s own power plan for some reason and kept auto switching to it by itself, and caused my CPU fans to randomly go absolutely bonkers, so I had to delete the power plan.īut other than that it doesn’t really bother me running on the background. I was just caught bit off guard with the new widget in the corner of my screen, but it didn’t take very long to figure out what it is and turn it off.
I’m using a Razer mouse and I need some of the software to set up the many buttons and check the battery status since it’s wireless, so I kind have to keep it.