> I am beginning to think that the people who say Wayland was created for a corporate environment first and foremost are correct. Sigh...
There is a giant gap between your use-case (no third-party apps, totally separate machine for accessing sensitive websites, etc) and a "corporate environment".
The vast, vast, majority of users (yes, even Linux users) would like to access their bank's web page without worrying that some security flaw somewhere (maybe even in a "curated" app they installed via official repositories) is allowing someone to upload screenshots of their browser window to some nefarious third-party.
I'm not optimistic about Wayland, either, but I'm sure as hell not satisfied with X.
There is a giant gap between your use-case (no third-party apps, totally separate machine for accessing sensitive websites, etc) and a "corporate environment".
The vast, vast, majority of users (yes, even Linux users) would like to access their bank's web page without worrying that some security flaw somewhere (maybe even in a "curated" app they installed via official repositories) is allowing someone to upload screenshots of their browser window to some nefarious third-party.
I'm not optimistic about Wayland, either, but I'm sure as hell not satisfied with X.