Originally posted by dee.
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Jolla Brings Wayland Atop Android GPU Drivers
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Originally posted by log0 View Post"Earlier this year however, I discovered that a well-known company had taken the code - disappeared underground with it for several months, improved upon it, utilized the capability in their advertisements and demos and in the end posted the code utilizing their own source control system, detached from any state of that of the upstream project's. Even to the extent some posters around the web thought libhybris was done by that company itself." - or how to pull a Canonical. ROFL.
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Originally posted by talvik View PostWTF. Canonical has been deliberately and constantly omitting and lying.All opinions are my own not those of my employer if you know who they are.
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Originally posted by talvik View PostOn several occasions one or two Mir main developers stated they didn't participate in the decision to create Mir. And Mir is developed under CLA and GPLv3(fact: a lot of companies avoid GPLv3 in their products or simply ban it).
<tinfoil> I bet the reasons aren't technical at all. They want control and a restrictive license, so they can sell proprietary licenses to manufacturers. Google sells services and Canonical sells proprietary license to GLPv3 code. </tinfoil>
One such example is Qt, I don't see many companies avoiding that in their products.
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Originally posted by varikonniemi View PostMy thoughts exactly. Why did they even create Mir, if it was that easy to make wayland run on android drivers also?
1) Control of the project
2) They don't know how Wayland works
One reason can be understandable, the other a bit less
In any case, I had followed Wayland from the mailing list from one year so far, and the things became to be more interesting every day.
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Originally posted by intellivision View PostActually it's LGPLv3, and many companies leverage their software against LGPL libraries.
One such example is Qt, I don't see many companies avoiding that in their products.
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Originally posted by Krysto View PostGetting unified Android/Linux/ChromeOS drivers would be ideal, whoever manages to bring us that. It should've been Google's project from day one of Android, but I guess it wasn't their priority, which is too bad because that has led to some of the biggest fragmentation issues of Android.
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Originally posted by Teho View PostThere's big difference between LGPLv3 and LGPLv2.1 (used by Qt for example). Especially embedded industry avoids L/GPLv3 licenses because its anti-tivoization clause and such. MeeGo/Tizen and various other projects forbid L/GPLv3 in their core and projects like Yocto have no-L/GPLv3 build switches.
Your argument really holds no water here.
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Wayland is actually making some progress, perhaps the announcement of Mir made the Wayland guys move a bit faster. Hopefully we will have a fully functional Wayland desktop BEFORE the year 2025 now! I would like to see Wayland overtake X instead of Mir, but seriously it's all going to come down to performance & stability and not open source politics.
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Did everyone miss this part from the blogpost?
Earlier this year however, I discovered that a well-known company had taken the code - disappeared underground with it for several months, improved upon it, utilized the capability in their advertisements and demos and in the end posted the code utilizing their own source control system, detached from any state of that of the upstream project's. Even to the extent some posters around the web thought libhybris was done by that company itself.
That kind of behavior ruined the initial reason I open sourced libhybris in the first place and I was shocked to the point that I contemplated to by default not open source my hobby projects any more. It's not cool for companies to do things like this, no matter your commercial reasons. It ruins it for all of us who want to strengthen the open source ecosystem. We could have really used your improvements and patches earlier on instead of struggling with some of these issues.
But, I will say that their behavior has improved - they are now participating in the project, discussing, upstreaming patches that are useful. And I forgive them because they've changed their ways and are participating sanely now.
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