"Perhaps we'll become so awesome that it'll make sense for GNOME or KDE to rebase their compositors on Mir, but that's a long way away."
This is priceless. It's been a long day and I needed a laugh.
Phoronix: Differences Between X.Org, Wayland & Mir
Canonical's Christopher Halse Rogers has blogged some more about their views on the Mir Display Server and its design relative to X11/X.Org and Wayland...
http://www.phoronix.com/vr.php?view=MTMzMTQ
"Perhaps we'll become so awesome that it'll make sense for GNOME or KDE to rebase their compositors on Mir, but that's a long way away."
This is priceless. It's been a long day and I needed a laugh.
The proof will be in the pudding...and right now that pudding needs to be put together, chilled, and perhaps seasoned a bit before we can try it out, let alone call it "good enough".![]()
The writer is up front about the fact that they're just doing it for themselves and not Community, which is good. They aren't claiming to be the end-all-be-all, they are claiming "This is what we felt we needed to do for us." End of story. Not happg about mir, don't like the idea. But if it gets Wayland kicked into gear and the two projects can learn from eachother... I say let Canonical do whatever they want.
When I first heard of Mir, I was unsure what to think. I was hoping that Canonical was promoting this because Mir was going to be far more awesome than Wayland, and thus every Linux user would want it. However, this story seems to indicate that Mir is mostly about making Unity awesome. Well, I appreciate that Canonical is at least coming clean now. The developers of KDE, Gnome, LXDE, XFCE and other desktop environments will have to make a decision on which path to follow. Unless Mir can offer something great that Wayland doesn't, I suspect Mir will probably become an Ubuntu-only feature. But we'll see.
RedHat employs a lot of gnome developers, and Red Hat and Intel are pushing Wayland so that's a non-issue
XFCE uses GTK so they'll follow the gnome guys.
LXDE is on their own.
Martin (Kwin upstream maintainer) practically told Ubuntu to go fsck themselves.
EFL and Enlightenment are backing Wayland.
The lines in the sand have been drawn, the sides have been chosen. Ubuntu stands alone.
I do wish the people at Canonical could turn down the marketing speak at least once in their lives when they are trying to make a point. The word "awesome" hardly inspires confidence.
They use GTK as well, so they pretty much would have to go with Gnome and Xfce I wager. They will need to get Openbox working on Wayland though probably.
Neither Nvidia nor AMD are developing their drivers for the consumer, both companies are developing for the professional user in the first place, having support for consumer cards mostly as a byproduct (this may change with more games coming to Linux, but we have to wait and see). Professional users tend to be more conservative and are, AFAIK, rather running distributions like RHEL or SLED/S, so it is more likely that Wayland will be the first target for proprietary drivers. But since both solutions, Wayland and Mir, seem to use EGL drivers this shouldn't be a major problem.