Wayland doesn't, and will not depend on systemd. XWayland may use systemd in the future, but that doesn't stop you from not using that dependency and manually opening an X server yourself. In other words, I'm sure it'll be an optional dependency, if it's ever depended on at all.
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X/Wayland Is Coming Along Nicely, But Work Is Left
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Originally posted by dacresbu View PostIt will provide a more direct path to the rendering hardware instead of having to go through X. it just opens a display and puts up a GL context and pushes frames (i think)
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Originally posted by elanthis View PostHe also has news about Unigine, Valve, and a boatload of other proprietary software.
Open Source advocates generally prefer whatever software does the best job, believing that Open development processes produce better software. The iOS hardware and OS still beat the Android OS (which is also not fully Free) and other OSes hands-down (a bit subjective, yes, I admit), so even if Open Source is better in general, in the specific case of phone OSes the proprietary iOS may (again, somewhat subjectively) still be the better choice for real-world products.
If Linux is so useless that everyone uses OSX/iOS or Windows in the real world, and if it has usage statistics that are so hopelessly low, I'm wondering why Valve plans to port Steam over it... I really don't get it.
Does at least Torvalds use his creature? or even he lives in the Mac world? at this point it wouldn't surprise me...
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Speaking of the Wayland clipboard, did they fix this X design flaw where you close a window and your clipboard is gone? This bug have been open for years and no one have been able to fix is simply because it's the way it works in Xorg.
Wayland seems like the perfect opportunity to do such a thing, let's just hove they do.
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Originally posted by VictoireDuPeuple View PostSpeaking of the Wayland clipboard, did they fix this X design flaw where you close a window and your clipboard is gone? This bug have been open for years and no one have been able to fix is simply because it's the way it works in Xorg.
Wayland seems like the perfect opportunity to do such a thing, let's just hove they do.
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Originally posted by bug77 View PostI've been using Linux for years and not once have I stumbled upon this bug
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Oh my
Originally posted by Teho View PostThat's probably because you aren't using X.org's clipboard manager but something different like Klipper (KDE) or Gnome clipboard manager. It's kinda easy to imagine how annoying it can be: You copy an url from a browser and close it and then try to paste it but woops... you can't. You try to go back but you can't remember what the url was. Have fun finding it again.
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Originally posted by Teho View PostThat's probably because you aren't using X.org's clipboard manager but something different like Klipper (KDE) or Gnome clipboard manager. It's kinda easy to imagine how annoying it can be: You copy an url from a browser and close it and then try to paste it but woops... you can't. You try to go back but you can't remember what the url was. Have fun finding it again.
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Originally posted by asdxToo much hype but very little action.
Don't get me wrong, I know things are currently being developed, but when are we going to be able to run things like KDE and Gnome on Wayland?
some -if not all- apps run but we haven't seen a full desktop.
if someone knows whats keeping the DEs back he can write
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