As we start the new year what are you hoping for in the Linux ecosystem?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    7
    edit-2
    3 days ago

    Please for all that is good in the world, let the Linux foundation invest the majority of their funds in the Linux kernel first. Then please have a marketing budget bigger than what’s left… A paltry 2% of their funding going to kernel stuff is an absolute joke.

    The kernel also badly needs to be rewritten in rust. Not all at once but piecemeal. The rust tooling is lightyears ahead of whatever is being used now, getting into a rust project is also so much easier. There’s another project, the name of which I can remember, doing a rewrite and building it is a simple as cargo build. Seriously, that’s the level of simplicity I want, not whatever bullshit I have to do now and follow a guide, take my own notes on how to make it work on my specific distro, fail a few times, and stare at unreadable GCC errors.

    Also please please please stop using a mailing list (or at least make it optional). Holy moly are you losing a bunch of next gen devs through that. Regardless of how controversial the CoC was, it finally changed the tone a little, which is nice, but mailing lists are seriously archaic. The absolute minority uses them. It’s another big thing hampering kernel development (at least to me). They are a terrible experience through and through that make it difficult to follow discussions, diffs difficult to read and interact with (leave comments on lines and respond to them), and spams the inbox.

    Please let kernel development move into this century.

    Anti Commercial-AI license

  • Sunshine (she/her)
    link
    fedilink
    English
    93 days ago

    Rainbow six siege support, GOG Linux program, SteamOS publicly released and 7% marketshare.

  • Sickday
    link
    fedilink
    113 days ago

    No particular order to these.

    • A full XFCE release with wayland support
    • HDR on DEs other than Plasma
    • More support for Snapdragon X laptops and ARM64 platforms
    • NVK support for Maxwell GPUs
  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    204 days ago

    Updates to SteamVR to fix their Linux-specific bugs, like broken room view, lighthouse power management/firmware update, inconsistent performance and reprojection issues

    OpenComposite to have a longer list of working games through it

    More polished Wine/Proton Wayland driver

    Implementation of Windows Spatial Audio in Wine

    Better handling of audio sample rates/allowing adjustment of sample rate per device

    Hardware video acceleration in Electron, ex. when screen-sharing on Discord

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      13 days ago

      This would be amazing! I’m currently testing the waters on Manjaro having only ever used Ubuntu years ago in college, and currently the abysmal VR support is preventing me from switching over full time.

      Would you happen to know if there is a different Linux distro I should be using for better VR support or are they all equally screwed right now?

      The lack of asynchronous reprojection is nausea central for me. I read you can use a super old version of steam VR, which has an older worse form of reprojection that works, but I haven’t looked into it further.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    204 days ago

    In no particular order:

    • PikaOS 5. I want to see this project flourish, and I think they bring some much-need UX innovations to certain GUI tools (their system update interface is the best I’ve seen so far). I also love that they’ve dumped Ubuntu in order to do the CachyOS optimization thing upon a Debian base while still keeping everything bleeding edge.

    • Improved default keyring services in KDE. kwallet is kinda messy, and some people have pointed out that their use of blowfish is behind current best practices. On the flipside, using PGP means entering your password twice to unlock your keyring, so the experience is just not great out of the box.

      • I’m aware you can use third party tools like KeePass, but a user should not have to use something else to get a good experience.
    • Total Linux desktop share at 3%.

    • More/Frequent upstream gaming improvements from the Valve x Arch joint effort.

    • Nvidia integration parity with AMD

    • Open source Nvidia driver (as long as we’re wishing)

  • kadup
    link
    115 days ago

    deleted by creator

    • Possibly linux
      link
      fedilink
      English
      23 days ago

      Maintainers are hard to come by especially for a lot of the older projects.

    • @hellofriend
      link
      44 days ago

      Doesn’t KDE have HDR support in Wayland?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        34 days ago

        Afaik the HDR support is experimental and not universal yet. I think it would be nice to have it finished for those rich folks.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        24 days ago

        Last time I tried it around 3-4 months ago I still had to use Gamescope as a layer between Proton and Plasma in order to get the colours/brightness right

  • I’d like to see herbstluftwm ported to Wayland, so I can do an apples-to-apples comparison, and be ready to switch should I ever need to. It’d also be nice if, when I did try Wayland, there wasn’t something completely borked about it that causes me to switch back within a day.

    While I’m wishing for impossible things, for Linus to admit he was wrong, and that there next major release will be a proper microkernel, where module crashes don’t force reboots and zombie processes can be cleaned out.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      23 days ago

      I think more progress around stuff like confidential compute, zero knowledge proofs, or homeographic encryption may provide a better avenue where we can see ways for software manipulation to be caught but without giving total ownership over to some random game.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      45 days ago

      I am conflicted about this one. I really miss playing Rust (uses EAC)… wish there was a way to toggle the kernel level anticheat when I wanted to play.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        115 days ago

        To my limited knowledge. EAC (Easy Anti Cheat) is Linux compatible, it just has a setting that needs to be toggled by the game devs and pushed out in an update.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          44 days ago

          But then developers refuse to support that. With missing kernel-level stuff just being an excuse for being intentionally Linux-hostile…

          • Possibly linux
            link
            fedilink
            English
            53 days ago

            You would seriously want to give some game studio kernel level access? That seems like a extreme risk for not a lot of gain. If nothing else there is a high chance of it being spyware. More likely they would pull a crowdstruck and kill your machine by wiping out the firmware.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          45 days ago

          That’s what I’ve read as well. The real kicker is Rust runs better for me on Linux. I’m pretty sure Facepunch heavily funded EAC’s development too. Garry’s kind of a bitter cunt about playing on Linux for whatever reason.