I started the video thinking “huh, that’s neat I guess” and then I was more and more impressed as the video went on. This would be pretty revolutionary in how it could change your workflow. It’s the kind of feature that would get me to switch from Gnome to KDE if it was only supported fully in the latter.
Hell, the current Plasma and its compositor are far more stable in Wayland than Gnome. It amazes me that Wayland can actually be usable when using a desktop that is stable.
Gnome is pretty stable for me, unless extensions are involved, because then it’s unusably buggy.
The problem is that Gnome vanilla is too vanilla, even compared to MacOS. Extensions are an absolute must for Gnome to be a functional DE. But as you said, once extensions are involved, it becomes buggy.
I’ve been maining Wayland ever since the big push for fixes in kwin-wayland (what is that, like 6 or 8 months ago now?)
It’s been a little bumpy but no major complaints, and very solid otherwise. I can still play VR games, even!
This would be an incredible QoL improvement for gaming, at least until all compositors reach feature parity. Imagine using your preferred compositor for everyday tasks, quick-switching to another one that supports VRR and/or HDR while gaming, and then back again, all without logging out and logging in again.
It’s a nice feature in theory. In practice, the sort of crash this guards against happens to me no more than once a year. Often more rarely. And I’m including all my machines in this anecdata - my personal desktop, laptop, corporate workstation, with Intel and NVIDIA GPUs in the mix. 😄
I believe it’s possible to turn this into a very robust hibernation feature.
In addition this feature makes debugging and developing KWin much easier because you can just restart the compositor without interrupting your workflow.
Well, that’s probably because you’re running XOrg.
Badum-bum-tish I’ll be here all night.
Hahaha. You know what, I thought that’d be the case but I’ve been on Wayland on my Framework since Ubuntu 20.04 LTS and I’m baffled at the stability of the stack. I thought it’d be a shit show, and it wasn’t. I guess a decade of development didn’t go in vain. 😄
There was also a talk at GUADEC that discussed this exact feature but even more fleshed out, I believe for GNOME. It was reminiscent of iOS or Android’s sleep and resume capabilities for apps.
@Bro666@lemmy.kde.social See that? Someone else dissing on “the fiasco” known as KDE 4 within the first 30 seconds of their excited statement about the upcoming KDE Plasma 6. You want to rush over there and call them rude? Want to rush over there and proactively ban them from your joke of a KDE lemmy channel and instance that cannot tolerate feedback? You stood up for KDE 4, “Bro”… you’re on the wrong side of history. Now, go do your wounded pride thing and tell him to go code it for himself. Go on. It’s your one move.
I don’t have any idea what you’re on about and I want to call you rude.
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I mean it’s good rule of thumb, but if someone I trust specifically recommends a video it’s silly to still push the rule of thumb
You’re mean.
How many inches deep does that stick have to be for you to be this pointlessly butt hurt? 🤔










