Wayland’s fragmentation is less about one problem and more about how the ecosystem grew. Each compositor implements only what it needs, so tools like xdotool run into gaps and inconsistent behavior.
The post highlights a real coordination issue. The protocols exist, but adoption is uneven and expectations differ across compositors. Users see small breaks and developers face a moving target.
Wayland is improving, especially with work from GNOME and KDE, but stronger shared conventions for automation and accessibility are still needed.
Good write-up that shows why experiences on Wayland vary so much depending on the compositor.
The post highlights a real coordination issue. The protocols exist, but adoption is uneven and expectations differ across compositors. Users see small breaks and developers face a moving target.
Wayland is improving, especially with work from GNOME and KDE, but stronger shared conventions for automation and accessibility are still needed.
Good write-up that shows why experiences on Wayland vary so much depending on the compositor.