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KDE Should Be Fully Running On Wayland Next Summer
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Originally posted by boast View PostAnd based on what I read on the mir thread, everyone needs to dump their poverty DE's and switch to KDE to stop linux fragmentation.
If you don't use KDE, you don't support the FOSS community
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Looks like we're going to have a fully working desktop using Wayland before the year 2046. I guess I owe my friend a beer!
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Originally posted by boast View PostAnd based on what I read on the mir thread, everyone needs to dump their poverty DE's and switch to KDE to stop linux fragmentation.
If you don't use KDE, you don't support the FOSS community
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by boast View PostAnd based on what I read on the mir thread, everyone needs to dump their poverty DE's and switch to KDE to stop linux fragmentation.
If you don't use KDE, you don't support the FOSS community
Leave a comment:
-
And based on what I read on the mir thread, everyone needs to dump their poverty DE's and switch to KDE to stop linux fragmentation.
If you don't use KDE, you don't support the FOSS community
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by GreatEmerald View PostI suspected as such, but nice to have official confirmation.
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Originally posted by dee. View PostTry soaking your monitor in citric acid and sticking it to the oven. That should do the trick.
Originally posted by Sebastian K?glerWe can compare them (Mir and Wayland) right now, and this is what we base our planning on. If the situation changes dramatically, be sure that we’ll react to these changes. As it looks like right now, users are simply better off with this roadmap as it aims at stability, not disrupting the user experience, while making technological progress.
Mir targets one desktop as a design decision from day one, not a decision that has been made after upstream projects have expressed their reservations. The barriers for Mir adoption are not purely technical, however. For upstreams, that means: it’s inferior in its development process, in its ability to be interfaces from third party projects, in its licensing and from a development status point of view. These points make the decision fairly straightforward.
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