this post was submitted on 12 Jan 2024
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There are pros and cons.
Total centralization of the Linux Eco system isn't good for anyone. But total fragmentation where there's a million different distros that can all do basically the same thing isn't good either.
Wayland and Flatpak are great projects though. Love seeing them get more adoption.
Great projects, but far from a finished product.
I mean, they're never gonna be finished if people don't migrate to them and work on them. A lot of the wayland issues like "wayland breaks X" is because of the devs of said app rather than wayland itself. Kinda like adobe products and Linux, it ain't linux that's breaking them.
Yeah this thread is full of people expecting the new thing to immediately surpass the old, ignoring the decades of development and refinement that went into the old solution.
I get that, I really do, but don't try and push a product that isn't usable for everyone to everyone. Sure, whoever wants to use it, they can, report bugs, open PRs, whatever, but don't push this thing like it's the second comming to everyone out there. One, not everyone needs the features it has, X11 works fine for most people. Two, it's not backwards compatible, meaning they'd have to abandon a lot of software that just doesn't work with it (waypipe doesn't work all the time and with every piece of software there is).
The transition is rushed, everyone feels that. Why? Because a lot of new features that new hardware had couldn't be implemented in X11. And let's be honest, this rushing to switch to Wayland is mostly because of gamers. Regarding a lot of things Linux related, they are the de facto standard that dictates whether somethings get's changed or upgraded. I'm sorry, but not everyone is a gamer. Most people just need a working PC to do whatever. If you can't be backwards compatible completely with the old UIs, I'm sorry, but that's a deal breaker for me and I believe most regular users.
Xwayland is a thing, and nobody stops you from installing Xorg if you wanted. They're just dropping official support so they can focus that energy to Wayland instead.
Also not all Xorg features should be ported.
I have found Wayland will work for 99% of users who aren't gamers, all the major programs work well, ironically Wayland has been worse for gaming so far for me on the underpowered laptop, but that's due to it having to run also through xwayland, which will be a problem solved by Valve pretty soon as they don't have to worry about Xorg anymore and can make proton work better for Wayland.
do you really expect people, who do this work in their free time out of the goodness of their heart, to release fully finished products that are supposed to work 100% flawlessly right from the get-go? maybe FOSS isn't the right space for you then.
There are projects that beg to differ. PipeWire, a perfect example. The author thought it wasn't stable enough even though some distros addopted it as default. He switched to version 1.0 a few months ago.
And I do also use non-FOSS software. I use whatever I like, I don't discriminate, FOSS or not. Sure, it'd be great if every piece of software was open source, but hey, things are what they are 🤷. DaVinci Resolve is closed source, but there are a lot of things NLE video editors can learn from it.