• brian
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    10 months ago

    This is just misinformed.

    Sure your favorite apps may not use it, but Wayland does provide protocols for drawing things over other apps. https://wayland.app/protocols/wlr-layer-shell-unstable-v1

    I never used guake with i3 since scratchpads exist and are the general solution, and sway works fine there.

    and there’s plenty of screenshot apps that work. I haven’t tried gnome-screenshot, but I find it hard to believe that it or some alternative gnome one doesn’t work given the effort the project has put into Wayland

    nvidia support isn’t great but it is getting better. I haven’t bought nvidia in forever but I know plasma and gnome both say they have support for Wayland on nvidia now.

    For gaming amd is great, for real work I’d just rent time on some cloud service lol. If I’m that worried about performance my one consumer gpu isn’t going to make a dent either

    • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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      10 months ago

      He’s wrong all of this works on Wayland.

      I used a 3080 on Wayland and the only thing that didn’t work was night light (red tint mode). At this time nvidia-open was marked as not viable for desktop. In 6.7 noveau has gsp support so the open source path has improved rapidly.

      It was shortly after their hack that they announced partnership with RedHat / Canonical devs to make their graphics driver better. It’s going to have a similar arch to how the AMD drive is under the name nvidia-open. However the proprietary driver does work on Wayland at this point in time.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      I’m using Fedora, which has both gnome-screenshot and wayland. Been about 2-3y now and idfk what he’s talking about, never had an issue.

      • brian
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        10 months ago

        yeah that’s weird, and I can’t really tell why, but then that’s a gnome problem not a Wayland problem. they’re explicitly choosing to not support it.

        I did find this though which seems to imply that it could be supported in mutter, but it’d take a fork if you wanted to implement it in gnome shell https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/973

        anyway, there’s choice. if you need these features use something that supports them

          • brian
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            10 months ago

            fork gnome then, idk what to tell you

            • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              How about I just continue to use X which will be getting security updates for the next decade and was feature complete many many years prior.

    • daqqad@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Nvidia works great on Wayland. Even unusual configuration I’m running with egpu hooked up to a laptop with another Nvidia card built in. Zero issues. I’m allergic to Gnome, but KDE works beautifully.

      • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        I’m running with egpu hooked up to a laptop with another Nvidia card built in.

        Hey could you please point me to some resources to wrap my head around what I need to know to consider an egpu setup with Linux? Just looking for something that will overview of requirements and pain points, all the better if I can try to figure out what a good bang for the buck rig looks like right now.

        This is something I’ve been curious about for awhile, but most of the articles I’ve found seem to assume I’ve got some egpu knowhow already.

        • daqqad@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I found almost no resources for this but it was mostly plug and play.

          One thing I can suggest is keep everything same brand. My laptop has an Nvidia gpu built in and I tried using amd gpu without success. Spent about a week on it and tried various combination of drivers and settings. Nvidia just works.

          Also Intel gpus require rebar enabled which almost none of the laptops support so I did not really consider them even though they were super attractive because of pricing.

          The way I use it is set prime-select to Intel2 which disables built in Nvidia gpu and then I activate external gpu after login by running nvidia-smi as root after login. Then you just launch apps you want to use Nvidia gpu with

          __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD=1 __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia command_name arguments

          • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            Thank you! So it sounds like I just need to find a GPU and enclosure combo that fits my budget (TBD) , and it’s like adding any other bit of hardware. I do have an intel-only system currently (integrated Iris XE), so I’ll have to dig in on that. Thanks!

    • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      So no apps worth mentioning work, and only gaming (which doesn’t work on Linux) is benefitted? Sway is dead and most of those other replacements are just worse. Yeah DOA like I said.

      • brian
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        10 months ago

        have you seen steam deck sales? linux gaming is mainstream. everything I’ve tried recently just works.

        When would you think sway is dead lol? it has way more commits than i3, same number of contributors, and the last commit was 7 minutes ago. i3 hasn’t been touched in months. i3 is dead, contributors have jumped to sway

        also, even if you aren’t using scratchpads over guake, guake runs on Wayland. https://github.com/Guake/guake/issues/1934

        idk why all the people against Wayland are so clueless lol, it feels intentionally ignorant at this point

        • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          i3wm is a 15 year old feature complete window manager not a JavaScript framework. It isn’t dead if it hasn’t had a new release this month.

          The last commit was 4 days ago the last release 4 months or so ago. It has again seen continuous development for 15 years.