Yes, except X had reasons for becoming like it is. But now when computers compute and draw on the same computer, wayland is way better. If only those freedesktop people would finalize this after 3 years of looking at it.
Yes, except X had reasons for becoming like it is. But now when computers compute and draw on the same computer, wayland is way better. If only those freedesktop people would finalize this after 3 years of looking at it.
Reply was to you, but it’s still a public forum with a topic.
Hmm. I can’t find ehere i got that from, other then it being more general. https://cscie26.dce.harvard.edu/lectures/lect02/6_Extras/ch01s06.html
Either way the whole point is to write programs/code that can interoperate and be composed. SysD programs comunicate over an “implementation is the specification” protocol, so they might as well be one blob instead of separate programs.
Systemd hate is about it consuming things, and doing things badly.
Originally it was about code. Split it into reusable functions, and such.
SyStEMd fans don’t understand, per usual.
Lets say you use a variable named abcd in your function. And a variable named abcb in a for loop inside the same function. But because reasons you mistakenly use abcd inside that loop and modify the wrong variable, so that your code sometimes doesnt work properly.
It’s to prevent mistakes like that.
A similar thing is to use const when the variable is not modified.
Somewhat big in Croatia, as well.
Voodoo cards had glide, that ut99 supported. Worked great.
Kubuntu for that win7 similarity. (It’s still official ubuntu)
Wayland is the complete oposite of that crap.
I put -opengl on the end of it and it worked great. Wasn’t on release, but later when dota was popular.
Warcraft 3 worked better then on win. At that time more then half of games worked (newest aaa-est usually had problems). Just before proton almost all games worked (with some winetricks black magic). Valve did help, but there’s more to the story.
Both you and @SaltyIceteaMaker are completely wrong. There is no such thing as “reserving” memory.