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Wayland/Weston Gets Forked As Northfield/Norwood

An anonymous reader writes "Weeks after Canonical announced Mir, Wayland's display server protocol and Weston compositor have been forked. A contributor to Wayland found differing views with the project over desktop eye candy and other technical decisions to the X11 successor, which resulted in forming the Northfield and Norwood projects. The developer, Scott Moreau, has been outted from the project but has provided a lengthy explanation why the fork was needed to advance the Linux desktop."

4 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. Standards by ArhcAngel · · Score: 5, Funny
    --
    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
  2. Re:When are they going to use motion sensing and 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's about time the entire desktop go 3d. It's 2013 and video cards can do it easily. Instead of windows why not just use rotating cubes?

    You can easily do that without some fancy display driver or even 3d glasses. Just strap together 6 monitors into a cube shape and fashion a suitable base that will let it rotate in 3 axes (probably best to put the CPU inside the cube so you only need to provide power to the cube). Then to change desktops just flip the cube in the appropriate direction.

  3. Explanation by Alex+Belits · · Score: 5, Funny

    Once Wayland components developers started trying to implement something practical, they discover, one by one, that they need those "unnecessary" X features after all, however there is no way to explain it to the rest of developers, who still believe that removing everything they don't immediately use in their narrow area is a great design practice.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  4. Re:Just what we need... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd rather take one solid piece of software than 10 which are broken in different ways.

    I believe this distribution is what you're looking for.