And at this point, I guess folks who think Wayland is some kind of big tech conspiracy being forced on users without good reason might want to rethink that stance.
Unfortunately, Wayland still lacks some functionality that Xorg has, so switching would be a step backward for some people. Snarkily dismissing them as conspiracy theorists is wrong in several ways.
Unfortunately, Wayland still lacks some things that Xorg offers, so switching would be a step backward for some people. Snarkily dismissing them as conspiracy theorists is wrong in several ways.
I think the intersection between those who have valid reasons to use X11, e.g. missing features of Wayland, and those wo think Wayland is a ‘big tech conspiracy’ is small.
Unfortunately, Wayland still lacks some functionality that Xorg has, so switching would be a step backward for some people. Snarkily dismissing them as conspiracy theorists is wrong in several ways.
I think the intersection between those who have valid reasons to use X11, e.g. missing features of Wayland, and those wo think Wayland is a ‘big tech conspiracy’ is small.
Does the latter group exist?
Iirc, this was recently claimed in the initial release statement of the Xlibre fork of Xorg that wants to ‘make X great again’