• @theshatterstone54@feddit.uk
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    1081 year ago

    I firmly believe this will be the year of the Wayland Desktop. Everything is shaping up to finishing off the transition for regular people and further stabilisation of the Wayland desktop space.

    • @misophist@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      This won’t be the year of the Wayland desktop for me unless I can afford to replace my Nvidia card this year. I’ll never buy one again, but I’ve still gotta suffer with the one I have a bit longer.

      • @patatahooligan@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        By the time you’re ready to buy a new card, Nvidia might be working well under wayland. They’ve already made significant changes in the past couple of years, like implementing GBM and hardware accelerated XWayland. To my understanding, this MR will also fix some remaining issues in the future. I don’t know how much more work needs to be done after that, but just the fact they are cooperating with the free software ecosystem is a good sign.

        Perhaps more importantly, the free nouveau driver can now experimentally reclock nvidia gpus from the 2000 series and newer. With this breakthrough it is possible that nouveau + nvk will be able to compete with the proprietary driver in the near future. If/when we have a well-supported free driver, we will probably have proper wayland support as well.

        I’m not really in a hurry to switch to Nvidia. I’ve been quite happy with my AMD cards so far. But it’s definitely a good thing to have the option to buy from any vendor.

        • @misophist@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Oh yeah, I’m also keeping a eye on that. Every time I see nvidia pop up in my updates, I try logging into Wayland and doing my usual tasks. If it starts working, that’ll just let me extend the life of this card. I’ll probably still strongly consider switching flavors with my next card.

    • Amju Wolf
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      241 year ago

      As someone using Wayland on a HiDPI screen it’s not a great experience with legacy apps. You can’t completely rely on application-controlled scaling since not all apps support it and if you switch to system-wide scaling everything looks like crap.

      • @const_void@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Which apps? I’ve discovered recently Electron apps can enable Wayland support with a command line argument.

        • Amju Wolf
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          11 year ago

          Just last time it was free:ac; I had to change to system scaling because it would be unreadable otherwise, and that in turn fucked up Steam that I had managed to configure properly before.

        • Amju Wolf
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          11 year ago

          To be fair I haven’t tried. But I believe even at 2x scaling it looked like shit.

      • exu
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        21 year ago

        *every application using xWayland looks like crap.

        Native Wayland apps work great with fractional scaling.

      • Caveman
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        121 year ago

        KDE 6 will have Wayland by default, on track to release Feb 2024.

      • @azvasKvklenko@sh.itjust.works
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        31 year ago

        nobody would say that one year ago far as my memory goes, and it’s reasonable thing to say now. Personally I expected some break-throughs that have happened in 2023 to take much longer.

      • @LeFantome@programming.dev
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        31 year ago

        Source?

        We have been hearing about “The Year of the Linux Desktop” for 20 years I think and Linux has less than 5% share.

        In contrast, I do not remember hearing “The Year of the Wayland Desktop” until recently. I have been hearing “Wayland is the future” forever but it has been correct the whole time.

        By the time we enter 2025, I am not sure there will be a major desktop environment that does not support Wayland and many distros and DEs will be Wayland by default or even Wayland only. That is already happening. Valve may have ditched X by then and it feels like that is where most new Linux users are going to come from. It seems quite unlikely that Wayland market share on the Linux Desktop will be less than 75%.

        I am not saying this is “The Year of the Wayland Desktop” but I would feel foolish publicly betting against it.

    • @java@beehaw.org
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      -31 year ago

      I don’t understand this fetish. Every day I read about problems people have with Wayland, while I’ve been using X for the past 15 years without any issues.

      • @Loucypher@lemmy.ml
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        71 year ago

        Wayland is better at segmenting each app. On X any app could potentially see/record what happen on the entire screen while on Wayland that requires you do manually grant the rights. Similar to how macOS is requesting you to give each app the possibility to record your screen or not.

        • @java@beehaw.org
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          11 year ago

          That’s an improvement. But risk = impact * probability. Realistically, the probability of installing such an app from repos is virtually non-existent. My point is that Wayland comes with some improvements, but I’ve been seeing comments like the one I replied to for almost 15 years, as if Wayland will revolutionize Linux desktop. It won’t. Probably most users won’t see any difference, except for bugs caused by the migration.

          • @jw13@beehaw.org
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            11 year ago

            The probability of abuse is much higher with closed-source applications though. Almost all popular games are closed-source, and many are riddled with ads and spyware.

      • @LeFantome@programming.dev
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        41 year ago

        I have been using X since 1992 with lots of issues. I do not understand the fetish with X11 and why people cling to it so tightly.

        • @java@beehaw.org
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          21 year ago

          If that was true, we would be on Wayland for years. But in reality, it proves minor improvements versus heavy investments to migrate from X. And that’s why it’s still a fetish and not a standard.

  • SavvyWolf
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    1 year ago

    No no, this year for real! Because (highly technical reason that doesn’t affect most users).

    For real though, how Microsoft plays this year could be interesting considering the lukewarm reception to Win11 and the impending ewaste pile of Win10.

        • @quentangle@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          I’m not going to claim that this year is the year, or that any will be. In regards to gaming though, two years ago the number of games which worked through Proton was quite a bit lower, and the number of anti-cheats which worked was effectively zero.

          Anti-cheat support is still far from 100%, but it is significantly higher than it was even six months ago. It looks like it will only get better from here.

          • silly goose meekah
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            21 year ago

            fair point, there’s probably quite a lot of esport gamers who are just now able to easily switch to linux, not two years ago.

  • @pepperonisalami@lemmy.world
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    141 year ago

    This is for real the Linux desktop year for me, went through the switch just before the new year. Had to reinstall a couple times but no big deal, and I get to learn as well.

    Not sure if out-of-the-box distros are now that user friendly yet or not, but I remember getting Ubuntu running several years ago was frustrating (no sound, bad sound quality etc) and now running EOS was pretty smooth. Pretty sure something like Mint will be user friendly enough for the general population.

  • @wolf@lemmy.zip
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    131 year ago

    It will be a pleasure, like every other year of the Linux Desktop™ for more than 20 years now! :-)

    • TherouxSonfeir
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      51 year ago

      People still use ChromeOS? I just slap Linux on my chromebooks. Cheap new hardware.

        • TherouxSonfeir
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          11 year ago

          Budgie installed fine and had no driver issues at all on the HP Chromebook 11 G5.

      • @drwankingstein@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 year ago

        I actually really like Chrome OS myself. For the people around me who are less tech literate, Chrome OS is actually great. It’s quite easy to support. It’s fast, and it’s got a really good ecosystem now thanks to all the integrations.

    • @LeFantome@programming.dev
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      21 year ago

      I have seen stats that both Linux and ChromeOS have around 3.5% market share.

      If ChromeOS continues to converge with proper desktop Linux, I consider it a distro which makes 10%+ possible this year.

      The wild card for me is Linux gaming. It may not grow fast but it totally could.

      Which had me wondering for the first time I hearing about “The Year of the Linux Desktop”, what percentage do we have to hit for this to be the year?

      I don’t really expect us to hit it but, for the first time, I feel like it is possible.

      • @shrugal@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        Which had me wondering for the first time I hearing about “The Year of the Linux Desktop”, what percentage do we have to hit for this to be the year?

        Imo it’s more of a list of things that need to happen, like some mainstream games, apps and devices getting 1st-party Linux support. I suspect this to start happening around the 20% mark, but ofc that’s just a guess.

  • @sparr@lemmy.world
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    41 year ago

    I just did an OS reinstall for the first time in about 4 years. Moving from Manjaro back to Arch. Happy New Year!