While we wait to see what comes of the new X.Org Server Git branch plans and a possible X.Org Server 26.1 release, several X.Org libraries saw new point releases this weekend. These seldom-updated libraries saw new releases to ship various build fixes and other minor improvements.

Alan Coopersmith of Oracle’s Solaris team and long-time X.Org release wrangler spent a lot of time this weekend shipping new upstream X.Org library updates

  • Successful_Try543@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    As long as you’re running a version that ships an X11 session, yes, but from KDE 6.8 onwards there will be no KDE X11 session anymore and thus, no KDE X11 option available to select on the login screen.

    blogs.kde.org

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Why are they doing this when Wayland sucks on 60% of graphics cards? Right when we’re catching Microsoft in a vulnerable state and more people are fleeing to Linux than ever?

      • piccolo@sh.itjust.works
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        17 hours ago

        Nvidia just sucks on linux. They put all their development effort in CUDA, and their general stuff focuses windows.

          • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Ah, if it’s not working right for you, it obviously means it’s not working right for 60% of people.

            What’s that? The situation has improved dramatically over the last two years, and many happily use Nvidia cards with Wayland without issues, me included? No, can’t be the case, you still have issues.

            • Yoddel_Hickory@piefed.ca
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              1 day ago

              They are probably running a system full of “workaround” environment variables that are not needed anymore or something like that, and seeing issues because of it.

              I’ve also had a flawless experience with Nvidia & Wayland recently.

                • LeFantome@programming.dev
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                  22 hours ago

                  This has been so much of the problem. The only light at the end of the tunnel is that it is literally just a matter of time until these users catch up and stop complaining.

                • Die4Ever@retrolemmy.com
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                  20 hours ago

                  Or how far behind is Mint on the updates for kernel, Nvidia drivers, KDE, etc? I remember them being really far behind on some things. It confuses me how Mint is suggested so often.

                  • NekuSoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de
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                    16 hours ago

                    Oh yeah, Mint is also pretty special. It’s pretty good for non-gaming “it just works” purposes, but recommending it blind for gaming is just straight up evil: No Gnome. No KDE. Just three niche DEs that are still mostly stuck on X11. Meaning, that if you want to properly make use any recent monitor features (as in, decade old features) your only option is to switch to another distro.

                    It’s a surefire way to get someone to switch back to Windows.

            • Samueru_sama@programming.dev
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              19 hours ago

              Ah, if it’s not working right for you, it obviously means it’s not working right for 60% of people.

              Actually that is not too far off from being true.

              mesa right now has this massive regression on wayland: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/14674

              And not long ago all gtk4 apps were totally broken on intel with wayland, this was recently fixed on mesa but that change has only hit people using archlinux and other rolling release distros.

              • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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                17 hours ago

                Actually that is not too far off from being true.

                No, it absolutely is very far off, unless you find actual studies & user feedback. Lets not do weird mental gymnastics to find logic in pure hyperbole. You gotta give me way more than one 1-week-old bug, and one bug that was quickly caught and fixed. Bugs are going to happen in software that is worked on.

                The reason X was stable for a long time is because many new & nowadays important features (like fractional scaling) weren’t being worked on, the ecosystem was mostly frozen. There’s more churn around Wayland because it’s newer & supports more (and often structurally much better) approaches to solving its problems. Don’t want to get caught in that? Maybe don’t use a distro that is specifically known for shipping new software very quickly.

                • Samueru_sama@programming.dev
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                  16 hours ago

                  and one bug that was quickly caught and fixed

                  The performance regression? It hasn’t been fixed.

                  Maybe don’t use a distro that is specifically known for shipping new software very quickly.

                  You will run into old wayland bugs lol, like GTK4 apps being totally broken on intel.

                  https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/38373

                  and often structurally much better

                  On wayland even getting apps to draw their own icons is a total disaster, and doesn’t help the constant sabotage from gnome of refusing to fix those issues, and don’t get me started on the csd mess which is another source of nightmares.

                  Wayland suffers a lot of internal fragmentation, we didn’t see these kind of issues in the move from pulseaudio to pipewire because there is really only one implemenation of pipewire, guess what would have happened a bunch of DEs decided to make their own implementations of pipewire instead?

                  • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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                    8 hours ago

                    and one bug that was quickly caught and fixed

                    The performance regression? It hasn’t been fixed.

                    You know - when you list two points, and I refer to those two points in my response, maybe assume that I’m responding in the same order you listed?