Yes, I made it using a laptop’s trackpad, how could you tell?

[Image description: Panel 1: Young man confidently walking, his vest bears the Wayland logo. Behind him is a grunt with the Gnome logo on his face holding a katana. The young man says: “It’s high time you retire, old man!” Panel 2: An old man with a long beard and the Xorg logo on his chest is sitting on a throne and petting a rat, the XFCE mascot. He says: “It’s still a hundred years too early for you to defeat me!” ]

  • @KISSmyOS@feddit.de
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    764 months ago

    Today, X is like the horse and buggy proponents, claiming the car isn’t feasible cause you can’t get gasoline in every town.

  • Bob
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    4 months ago

    Wayland gets so many more of the basics so much better than X11 it’s not even funny anymore. X11 is stuttery, unsecure, unmaintaned, can’t really be updated for new features that are pretty important in 2024 (VRR, HDR). For now with my usage, the only big disadvantage I saw from Wayland is that you can’t restart it like X11 when something goes wrong, but that’s the thing, I haven’t had to restart it like I had to often with X11. Even on Nvidia Wayland is better now, except maybe for gaming but that’s Nvidia for you.

    • @Aganim@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      X11 is stuttery

      Not for me

      unsecure

      Source?

      unmaintaned

      Received a number of commits just last week: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg

      can’t really be updated for new features that are pretty important in 2024 (VRR, HDR).

      VRR is supported, at least on AMD: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Variable_refresh_rate

      For HDR you have a point, afaik.

      Wayland gets so many more of the basics so much better than X11 it’s not even funny anymore.

      And yet X11 works rock solid for me, while Wayland still crashes whenever I so much as look at it wrong. The amount of time and work I’ve lost because of Wayland crapping out on me isn’t even funny anymore. On AMD by the way, so no blaming Nvidia’s crappy Linux support.

      Wayland will probably be the better product one day, but this day is not that day, at least not for every use-case. Great that it works fantastically for you, I genuinely advise you to keep using it, but keep in mind that ‘mileage may vary’ from person to person. Personally for now I’ll stick to X11, as I need to get work done and unfortunately don’t have time to muck around with Wayland’s antics.

      • @Pantherina@feddit.de
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        104 months ago

        X11 is insecure. Any program can read any keystroke, any windows contents, can input anything anywhere etc.

        The concept of separate apps basically doesnt exist.

        • @WaterWaiver@aussie.zone
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          4 months ago

          Those security features are misleading.

          A second app can already read all of your files, modify the first app, modify $PATH to replace your display server and do anything it wants as your user. Running wayland instead of Xorg provides no tangible benefits in security.

          • @Pantherina@feddit.de
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            64 months ago

            Yes and wayland is a puzzle piece of fixing that.

            The other one is containerized apps that use a trusted system portal to get opt-in filesystem access to actually needed directories.

    • @mlg@lemmy.world
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      34 months ago

      10% FPS drop compared to X11 because of perfect frame requirements

      X11 has literally never stuttered even on the hack that is WSL

      The only time I have actually gotten X11 to crash was an unrelated kernel panic.

      Also no one uses X11 networking by default lmao, its always X forward over SSH, that is definitely secure and still something wayland can’t do.

      • @feral_hedgehog@pawb.social
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        44 months ago

        Also no one uses X11 networking by default lmao, its always X forward over SSH, that is definitely secure and still something wayland can’t do.

        Sure it can, with waypipe (like, for a while now…)
        Just waypipe ssh [command]

        You can even run X apps over this through cage even when X11 forwarding is disabled by the host (because, you know, the security issues…)

    • @nxdefiant@startrek.website
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      4 months ago

      No.

      System D was/Is a philosophical debate.

      Wayland vs X is a mortal attempting to summit Mt. Everest naked. Everyone is cheering Wayland on, no one believes it’ll succeed.

      Even the X people are like “Honestly it’d be a relief if you pulled this off, we’re so tired, please end us

      • Cris
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        334 months ago

        No one thinks it’ll succeed? Obviously you and I exist in very different parts of the linux sphere, cause I’m pretty sure X11 is all but dead as a project and its kinda just a question of how long it takes for Wayland to be feature complete enough to reach a critical mass of adoption. And its kinda feeling like we’re currently on the cusp of being there with the major DEs moving towards discontinuing X11 support 😅

        • @nxdefiant@startrek.website
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          134 months ago

          X is 36 years old. Wayland is 15. Wayland was not the first attempt at unseating that throne and for the sake of all our sanity, I hope it’s the last. I don’t want Wayland to win because it’s better, I want Wayland to win because I’m tired of trying to use it and having to go back to X because it broke something.

        • @azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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          124 months ago

          This software has been in development for a long time and still doesn’t work for my niche usecase and this therefore UNUSABLE and DOOMED TO FAIL

          • Actual Linux users, completely oblivious to the irony of that sentence
          • @acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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            34 months ago

            That’s a weird take. You have a software that you use and suits your needs. It’s showing its age, but still tricks along. Then there’s this other software that’s gaining spotlight, but it does not suit all your needs. You point out the regression. Some rando makes fun of your valid point.

            • @azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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              34 months ago

              I agree with what you’re saying, but you’re shifting the goalpost.

              Everyone is cheering Wayland on, no one believes it’ll succeed

              That parent comment (and other comments like it in these threads) are what I take issue with. You can make the exact same argument why people should stick with Windows and not bother with Linux.

              • @acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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                24 months ago

                But… You didn’t take issue with that. You ridicularized a completely different statement, one that was valid even. You pulled a reverse strawman on yourself. If you’d made a counterpoint to original post, I’d have agreed with you.

      • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        204 months ago

        Everyone is cheering Wayland on, no one believes it’ll succeed.

        Uhhmm. I think by now most see it inevitable with distros and DEs switching on increasing pace

  • Possibly linux
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    104 months ago

    Honestly it will never die but it will be a terrible idea to use it. I wouldn’t be surprised if all of the major software drops support eventually

  • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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    94 months ago

    Very true. Like I would love it if something worked as solidly as X but Wayland has had like 15 years to get it’s shit together and it’s still not there. There are plenty of people for who it does work too but 2 out of the 3 computers I use regularly have issues with Wayland.

    • Synapse
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      14 months ago

      I have 4 computers, all run Wayland, none have issue. If you have some nVidia or otherwise exotic Hw you may have issues, but Wayland is already very mature for regular use.

      • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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        14 months ago

        On my old laptop with a dedicated Nvidia card and integrated AMD Wayland works as long as you only use integrated graphics otherwise crashes are common.

        On my new laptop with both integrated and dedicated AMD graphics it works without issue.

        On my desktop with a 5800x3d and 7900XT it’s usable but on Wayland hardware acceleration of video just does not work for some reason. About half of more demanding games have a very noticeable stutter and there is a full system freeze every week or so. With X those issues aren’t present on that machine.

        As I said: Works for some people but not for others.

  • Chemical Wonka
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    84 months ago

    Nice reference as Xfce still not implemented Wayland support as far as I know.

  • @TotalSonic@lemmy.world
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    54 months ago

    As far as tablet usage goes - with Ubuntu 23.10 running the latest “Surface Linux” kernel on my Surface Go gen 1, Wayland is finally buttery smooth. Screen rotation with Wayland is near instant, where as on xorg takes a couple seconds.

    I can’t say the same for my dual boot desktop that has an Nvidia 1050ti in it going to a 55" tv monitor via HDMI though - had to hook up a second monitor from dvi just to be able to login - which was not the case on Xorg.

    Oh well, baby steps, but Wayland is definitely growing up fast and getting closer to being daily dtiver ready for nearly all use cases.

  • @Corr@lemm.ee
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    44 months ago

    One of the main issues blocking me from going to Wayland is an app (cursr) that lets me move my cursor between different resolution displays only runs in X. Is there a solution in Wayland for this? I can post elsewhere but thought this seemed like a decent first step