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73.
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With the mass amount of various keyboards, mice, and keyboard and mouse combos, your options in Kubuntu are near endless. Whether you use <acronym>QWERTY</acronym> or Dvorak, Logitech or Microsoft, 5-button or 7-button, there are options for you. Due to the mass amount of options, more information on this subject is available on the Ubuntu community documentation site at <ulink url="https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Peripherals"/>.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
hardware/C/hardware.xml:531(para)
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85.
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<acronym>ATI</acronym>, Nvidia, Intel, Matrox, or even those of you using Voodoo graphics cards are going to have either some issues or no issues at all. A majority of these cards may not offer rendering support without the use of what is known as a binary or restricted driver. <acronym>ATI</acronym> and Nvidia both require binary drivers for accelerated rendering support. Integrated Intel cards, when paired with a wide screen display normally need an extra utility in order to achieve proper resolutions and refresh rates. These options will be explained further in the following subsections.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
hardware/C/hardware.xml:603(para)
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89.
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The <application>Hardware Drivers</application> can be opened by going to <menuchoice><guimenu>Application Launcher</guimenu><guisubmenu>System</guisubmenu><guimenuitem>Hardware Drivers</guimenuitem></menuchoice>. Once there, if your system has proprietary devices, you will see a list of those devices as well as the available drivers. Highlight the driver you want to use and press the <guibutton>Enable</guibutton> button. Follow any further instructions such as entering your user password or rebooting your system.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
hardware/C/hardware.xml:664(para) hardware/C/hardware.xml:678(para)
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