Almost entirely misinformation. Saying that Xorg only used one protocol is amazing. X11 has a billion extensions. It is unusable without them.
Saying that X11 had feature parity with other desktop operating systems is delusional.
But the craziest argument is fragmentation.
Wayland is already on over 50% of Linux desktops. The two most popular desktop environments default to it. The most popular desktop environment is about to remove support for X11. The most popular desktop Linux distribution is dropping support for Xorg in October.
The only popular distro that does not default to Wayland is Mint as Cinnamon is not ready. But it too will default to Wayland within a year at most.
Even Debian Stable defaults to Wayland now.
If you want to minimize fragmentation on Linux, use Wayland.
Almost entirely misinformation. Saying that Xorg only used one protocol is amazing. X11 has a billion extensions. It is unusable without them.
Saying that X11 had feature parity with other desktop operating systems is delusional.
But the craziest argument is fragmentation.
Wayland is already on over 50% of Linux desktops. The two most popular desktop environments default to it. The most popular desktop environment is about to remove support for X11. The most popular desktop Linux distribution is dropping support for Xorg in October.
The only popular distro that does not default to Wayland is Mint as Cinnamon is not ready. But it too will default to Wayland within a year at most.
Even Debian Stable defaults to Wayland now.
If you want to minimize fragmentation on Linux, use Wayland.
Excellent comment, I completely agree.
Anyway I want to add that Linux does not seek market share, it’s an escape hatch for those of us fed up with commercial software.
Linux is used to build plenty of commercial distros like Ubuntu and rhel that do seek market share which is something their companies can worry about.
Plus, more Wayland support won’t break existing X software. If you want to use old systems, don’t expect new software to run on it.