this post was submitted on 06 Jun 2025
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Amount of contributions doesn't equal quality, mind that. RedHat also does work to sink projects which don't fit their strategy for Linux development, and I want to ask by what right they even have such a strategy and try to impose it upon others.
I'm interested in any examples you can provide of this
The way they promoted PulseAudio, SystemD, Gnome 3, now Wayland. All that.
Say, they do almost no development of Xorg, but they don't surrender the control of the project to someone who'd want to. They don't accept PR's, sometimes with responses that the project itself is deprecated or something.
They intentionally keep control, to avoid someone picking it up.
I agree Gnome 3+ is bad, but we do need modern components and honestly when the next biggest player in these things in Canonical with there NIH / throw it over the fence and like it attitude, I know which I'd prefer. Especially when these components truly are upstream projects, and they do indeed take community contributions.
Yeah the xorg thing is shit for those that feel they still need it, but no one else really had the resources to maintain it. Its critical infrstructure, they can't just hand it off until they're done with it (RH10). Xlibre is happening by one of the biggest community contributors, but honestly it'll end up like KwinFT.
That's what I'm saying to not be true. Right now the project is controlled by RH, and they are not interested, but also don't leave it. Maybe if this weren't so, we'd see changes.
Yes they can, the same way they ship kernels full of backported stuff and patches.
The guy is unfortunately accompanying his fork with anti-vaxxer and alt-right statements.
I think Xorg will keep existing. There are a few projects buried many times and still alive, one more.
But RH is intentionally blocking the good things that could have happened without their "leadership" and imposing opinion that it's deprecated and on life support.
Its not like they're blocking all contributions, if it was more than niche, they wouldnt ignore the needs of other big players. I'm not fully across it, but the BSDs still make more use of xorg and maintain their own trees IIRC.
I really only saw headlines about Xlibre, hadnt followed up on it