I’ve been on Wayland for the past two years exclusively (Nvidia).

I thought it was okay for the most part but then I had to switch to an X session recently. The experience felt about the same. Out of curiosity, I played a couple of games and realized they worked much better. Steam doesn’t go nuts either.

Made me think maybe people aren’t actually adopting it that aggressively despite the constant coverage in the community. And that maybe I should just go back.

    • @Mereo@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      For NVIDIA users, that’s the right answer. For AMD users, it’s already ready. No problems here (6700xt)

      • @balancedchaos@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        Yeah, it was ready for my old AMD machine. My new Nvidia box…nah.

        But since I’ve switched to XFCE, I don’t need to worry so much about new-fangled things like Wayland…for now.

      • @penquin@lemm.ee
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        61 year ago

        All AMD here and I can’t have it as a daily driver. So many issues made me hate my PC. Back to X11.

          • @penquin@lemm.ee
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            11 year ago

            Plasma 6. I’m going through a very busy time at work at the moment. Once it’s done, I’ll just reinstall the whole system and see if that helps.

      • @mb_@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        On nvidia, there are still too many edge cases involving Wayland that are just crippled. Orca slicer doesn’t work for me for example, you are completely missing any of the 3d accelerated graphics in there.

        On the other hand, the AMD 7x00 series have different kind of bugs, with ring0 errors leading to full resets.

        I think once nvidia drivers are squared out (the proprietary ones) it will be smooth sailing.

  • @AMDIsOurLord@lemmy.ml
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    301 year ago

    Yes. I’ve used X11 for far too long to have any rose tinted glasses for the piece of fucking broken shit it always was. a LOT of people don’t realize how many hacks, workarounds and sheer tears and duct tape goes into making the piece of shit render the smallest line on the screen.

    That’s also why Phoronix comment section neckbeards are so infuriating for me. They talk like X.Org works like at all.

    • @azvasKvklenko@sh.itjust.works
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      161 year ago

      That’s because their mid-2000’s setup with single 1024x768 screen works just fine with compositing disabled, 24bit color depth via VGA connector.

      I had to switch to Wayland the moment I tried to run simple 4K@60 on my old RX570, and Xorg was just refusing to set the mode, or produced some colorful vomit garbage when forced to do so, no matter what. And Wayland (just like Windows) simply worked.

      Was it perfectly ready back then? Heck no. Is it ready now? Maybe not for everyone, but it’s getting there and time is telling us that the missing parts on Wayland side are fixable.

      Criticism is viable to some degree, though. Because from the very beginning there were certain assumptions made, and creators of the base protocol didn’t care about real world use on desktop as much as they cared about the security model, it takes a lot of time to solve some of those. The development is slow and there are always some gaps here and there, but I watch it long enough (17 years) to know that to some degree it is like that with the entire ecosystem, let alone Xorg that no programmer wants to touch anymore for anything but simple bugfix or security patching.

  • @bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world
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    121 year ago

    Since I switched to AMD about a month ago. Literally every naggling issue I had with NVidia is gone. Only complaint is that I didn’t switch sooner.

  • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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    101 year ago

    Every day on all my computers. No interest in going back to X11, things work better on wayland, multimonitor doesn’t shit itself randomly anymore.

  • @protosevn@sh.itjust.works
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    91 year ago

    I mainly use Wayland(nvidia) and have been using it for the last couple of years. Only switch to X11 when there is a game that absolutely won’t work with Wayland.

    As I see it both display servers are ass.

    X11 just being old and crusty, maintainers don’t really wanna deal with it. Vsync in general has problems so you usually just turn it off in hope of your software running fast enough(or you could lock fps lower than display hz) so you won’t get screen tearing.

    Wayland being new and has active development is great but now we have a very opinionated dev team. It took until Valve came along for them to actually listen to complaints, I guess if Valve is knocking at your door you would answer.

    Some days I’m pretty close to going back to Windows, then I remember how ass windows is and I just deal with it. And for anyone saying “just buy AMD” I had a AMD card before this and I couldn’t even use Linux, it would just constantly crash.

    • @Auli@lemmy.ca
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      11 year ago

      Maintainers don’t want to support it? Because the code is shit and they developed a new product Wayland. I mean when the people who develop it think the code is unmaintainable.

  • Atemu
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    61 year ago

    I’ve got three hard problems preventing me from using Wayland (sway/wlroots) right now:

    1. No global shortcuts for applications, especially legacy applications; I need teamspeak3 to be able to read my PTT keys in any application. Yes I know that could be used to keylog (the default should be off) but let me make that decision.
    2. Button to pixel latency is significantly worse. I don’t need V-Sync in the terminal or Emacs. Let me use immediate presentation in those applications.
    3. VRR is weird. I’d love if desktop apps were V-sync’d via VRR but the way it currently works is that apps make the display go down to 48Hz (because they don’t refresh) but the refresh rate never goes up when typing; further exacerbating button to pixel delay.
      • Atemu
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        31 year ago

        If I can get the portal to just forward every keypress (or a configurable subset) to an xwayland window, that’d work for me. (I am aware of the security implications.)

        • @jokeyrhyme@lemmy.ml
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          11 year ago

          I’m not an expert, but my understanding of the Global Shortcuts portal is that it’s very much designed for the push-to-talk use case where an app is not focused but still receives button events for exactly the keys its interested in and no other keys: I think this would cause problems if an app requested every key (e.g. if the request was approved then no keys would work in every other app)

          It’ll be interesting to see how the remaining compatibility/accessibility issues are tackled, either in portals or in wayland protocols

          • Atemu
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            11 year ago

            Yeah and that’s great but my point is that I don’t see an obvious way to use it for that in its current implementation. I’m sure you could build it but it’s simply not built yet.

  • ye. i’ve been using wayland since forever.

    started on hyprland, and then moved to sway, but it’s been an almost perfect experience for me

    sometimes i have to install a different version of a package or smth, but otherwise everything works fine.

    • @Pantherina@feddit.de
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      21 year ago

      Why did you switch from hyprland to sway?

      I have no experience with both, but to my knowledge they are similar, but hyprland is aheads of wlroots

      • they are very similar. my only problem with hyprland was that the mouse is still required for some things, and it’s a bit annoying having to switch back and forth.

        on sway, everything can be done by keyboard. i still use the mouse a lot, but there’s less switching in the middle of tasks.

        it’s a little difference, but it was worth it for me.

        there’s also the drama about some people being transphobic (i think?) in the hyprland discord, but i try not to pay too much attention to that.

        hyprland accomplishes it’s goal of being pretty (and i got some really cool screenshots), but sway is pure functionality, and it’s damn good at it.

        • Lol, hyprland has been partially hijacked by trans furries with tentacle fascinations and it is ridiculous. I disable the anime wallpapers but hyprland and its stack of hyprextras is a refreshing change from your classic OS’s

  • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I’ve used it for about a year on a laptop with an 8th gen i7 and Intel graphics. It works well there.

  • Lippy
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    51 year ago

    I’ll try again once Nvidia’s 555 series drivers are released which should support explicit sync. Right now it’s too unstable under Wayland even though I gave it a shot once KDE Plasma 6 released.

  • Avid Amoeba
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    51 year ago

    Yes, on my laptop where it works well and it allows for nice fractional scaling.

    It works on my desktop too but I can’t stand vsync while playing CS so it’s Xorg for now.

  • yeehaw
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    41 year ago

    I don’t know lol. I running Manjaro right now, not a clue if it’s x or wayland

  • @pr06lefs@lemmy.ml
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    41 year ago

    I use xmonad/xfce which is not available on wayland, and I have no real desire to research alternatives and config them/learn their keyboard shortcuts/etc. Its unclear to me what the benefit is from switching, from a UI perspective. Probably nothing.

    But I’ll probably give it a try anyway in a few months maybe, I hear they merged something to make nvidia less glitchy, so maybe wait for that to be in my distro.