Weird that this turned into a Gnome hate thread. Good updates from the Mir team, I'm glad they're still pushing on at a good pace. I still dream of what could have been... but alas. Wayland is here.
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Mir 2.18 Released With Wayland Server-Side Decorations
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Originally posted by Daktyl198 View PostWeird that this turned into a Gnome hate thread. Good updates from the Mir team, I'm glad they're still pushing on at a good pace. I still dream of what could have been... but alas. Wayland is here.
✔️ "Are we talking about SSD or/vs/& CSD?"
Opinions are coming out.... Although I thought I was replying to the comment about if Ubuntu would drop Gnome on page 1. I got called away and hit Post rashly. I don't think they would drop Gnome at least not right now.. I do think they would "look into" making mir a drop in replacement for mutter, support other DE's (that forked from Gnome). They seem like the type of business that wouldn't wanted to be handcuffed to the radical decision of one particular DE opting out of what the rest of the field is doing.
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Originally posted by robojerk View PostMutter, as far as I know is the only compositor that doesn't have any sort of Server Side Decorations (SSD), not even as a fallback.
BTW, adding support for this in mutter wouldn't be as simple as you and others seem to think. It would require a major rework.
There have been some issues with some apps that assume the system will provide decorations.
Why should game devs who want to bring a port to linux now be burdoned to add to their code base by also writing window decorations?
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Originally posted by MrCooper View PostThat's incorrect, e.g. Weston doesn't support the decorations protocol either. I suspect there are others.
Originally posted by MrCooper View PostBTW, adding support for this in mutter wouldn't be as simple as you and others seem to think. It would require a major rework.
Originally posted by MrCooper View PostThat's simply not a valid assumption for a Wayland client which is intended to work with all compositors.
Originally posted by MrCooper View PostThere's no need for that. If they don't use a toolkit which supports drawing decorations, they can use libdecor.
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Originally posted by MrCooper View PostThere's no need for that. If they don't use a toolkit which supports drawing decorations, they can use libdecor.
I do not think anyone would have an issue if Gnome forced all of their own apps to use CSD, and built it into their guidelines for third party apps they promote, while still supporting what EVERYONE else wanted to do. I don't hate CSD. I think it makes total sense in some cases. I also think providing a SSD (even as a backup) also makes very sane sense. I just think it's very hostile to the Linux environment that one group is forcing their wants over everyone else and making claims like it was a universal decision that's widely supported.
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Originally posted by spicfoo View Post
It looks like a pet project. Canonical doesn't make money on the Linux desktop and they figured out as many other vendors before them that desktop users are very demanding while offering very little in actual business value and laid off most off their desktop/mobile team and abandoned Unity at the same time. Since then, they have steadily increased back their participation in GNOME.
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Originally posted by mxan View Post
“Increasingly”? GNOME UI design and workflow hasn’t really changed much over the last few years. BTW Unity was still mostly using GNOME apps and itself was built largely around GNOME-y technologies like Clutter.
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Originally posted by robojerk View PostThis attitude really bugs me. You're literally saying every developer who currently or wishes to write applications for Linux now needs to accommodate a decision by a single radical group ( Gnome ).
I do not think anyone would have an issue if Gnome forced all of their own apps to use CSD, and built it into their guidelines for third party apps they promote, while still supporting what EVERYONE else wanted to do. I don't hate CSD. I think it makes total sense in some cases. I also think providing a SSD (even as a backup) also makes very sane sense. I just think it's very hostile to the Linux environment that one group is forcing their wants over everyone else and making claims like it was a universal decision that's widely supported.
Everyone has a different workflow, Gnome needs to acknowledge that, and adapt. Then and only then will it be a respected DE. For now, everyone except a few kool aid drinkers just laugh about how mediocre it is.
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Originally posted by robojerk View PostThat's a bad example. Weston is a reference compositor meant to be used by Wayland developers. It's not meant to be used as a daily driver.
Enabling the Windows Subsystem for Linux to include support for Wayland and X server related scenarios - microsoft/wslg
x.org X11 server is also a reference implementation so is libreoffice.... There are long list of reference implementations used as daily drivers and weston is no different..
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Originally posted by robojerk View PostThat's a bad example. Weston is a reference compositor meant to be used by Wayland developers. It's not meant to be used as a daily driverEnjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
Weston is used in WSL and millions of production devices. It isn't just for Wayland developers although that is a common myth.
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