Tea to Linux@lemmy.mlEnglish • 7 days agoWayland has a bright future ahead: The move from Xorg to Wayland had a rough start, but things have improved, and there is an exciting roadmap for the future.thelibre.newsexternal-linkmessage-square115fedilinkarrow-up1305arrow-down15cross-posted to: linux@programming.dev
arrow-up1300arrow-down1external-linkWayland has a bright future ahead: The move from Xorg to Wayland had a rough start, but things have improved, and there is an exciting roadmap for the future.thelibre.newsTea to Linux@lemmy.mlEnglish • 7 days agomessage-square115fedilinkcross-posted to: linux@programming.dev
minus-squareWilmo BoneslinkfedilinkEnglish6•6 days agoYeah AFAIK the only two DEs that fully support Wayland are the big two - Gnome and KDE. and a few tiling window managers like Sway and Hyprland. I look forward to a world where all modern DEs are fully supportive of Wayland like Cinnamon and Budgie and I know people love their xfce.
minus-square@procapra@lemm.eelinkfedilink2•5 days agoYeah, i can’t explain why I love xfce so much. It’s very much like a windows 9x style desktop with some QOL improvements (press alt to click drag a window is such a great feature)
Yeah AFAIK the only two DEs that fully support Wayland are the big two - Gnome and KDE. and a few tiling window managers like Sway and Hyprland.
I look forward to a world where all modern DEs are fully supportive of Wayland like Cinnamon and Budgie and I know people love their xfce.
Yeah, i can’t explain why I love xfce so much. It’s very much like a windows 9x style desktop with some QOL improvements (press alt to click drag a window is such a great feature)