Personally, I’m looking forward to native Wayland support for Wine and KDE’s port to Qt 6.

8 points
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Personally, I’m looking forward to native Wayland support for Wine and KDE’s port to Qt 6.

Well, I think a lot of us are in the same boat.

Also, the flatpak development (Im not included in this but a lot of ppl is)

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0 points

There is more big improvement development for flatpaks?

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1 point

For me the console API is just horrible. Also idk if it is a packaging problem but a lot of things I tried in the past were a lot bugier than my distro package

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14 points

I can’t wait for HDR support so I can finally fully ditch windows. I’ve become so used to it that I can’t go without it.

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Wine + Wayland for sure. It’s time to let X11 rest, it’s earned it.

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0 points

What do you mean? I play games with Lutris on Wayland without issues.

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16 points
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It goes through XWayland, whereas Wine on Wayland would do away with that later

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9 points

Its all finished, the main developer is porting the source code by patches so its easier for the MR to get accepted by the Wine devs.

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49 points

Two things at completely opposite ends of the “Linux world”:

  • eBPF. It seems super promising for improving observability and security; especially performance of these concerns. It also strikes me as a risky architectural decision. Programmable privileged kernel code + JIT. What could go wrong… that validator sure is doing heavy lifting.

  • Valve flexing more muscle in developing Proton as it comes to terms with the fact Microsoft’s vertical integration (and monopolistic practices increasingly unfettered by government) will eventually be an existential risk to it. It is now ridiculously easy to install and run so many games on Linux, so long as you accept the devil you know and it’s DRMy platform. Definitely not perfect but it’s so vastly improved I’m comfortable calling it “night and day”

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22 points

The Valve one has been the most exciting for me. AFAIK Valve has been thinking about the issues with Windows controlling PC gaming since Windows 8 first came out. The Steam Machines were a flop at the time but in recent years they’ve been able to maks big moves for Linux gaming and instead of giving up has been doubling down on the importance of it.

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10 points

Ahh yes the Steam Machines. Definitely contemporaneous with windows 8.

I think it’s likely Valve have intensified efforts recently for a number of reasons but not least of which is the ongoing encroachment of Microsoft turning the Windows PC experience into more of a walled garden across more segments. It can’t have gone unnoticed that Microsoft are 1) selling games on the Microsoft Store and 2) are normalising the concept of hardware root of trust etc with the windows 11 TPM requirement.

EFI secure boot was one thing. Setting conditions up so every PC in the world has hardware support for verifying that user space programs are signed by Microsoft is another. I’m not saying overnight they’ll flick a switch and every windows installation in the world is on S mode. But it’s clearly trending that way. That would be good night for Steam if they so chose. And clearly Microsoft believe they can fob off regulators well enough

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20 points

HDR and HDMI 2.1 support would be nice.

Some TVs don’t have display ports eh.

And maybe we wanna enjoy 7.1 audio on our fancy ATMOS setups.

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