Hi I’ve been dealing with some of issues you mentioned as well. The fractional scaling support has been the killer app for me that converted me (because I really do need my system to play nice with monitors with upredictable scalings) Wayland may not be your first choice of display manager, but with active development of X11 having come to a halt, it is now on its way to becoming a legacy system. Many applications, including chromium and electron, can now run quite well on wayland natively but may not yet do so by default (chromium as packaged with Fedora recently switched its default) and figuring out how to change this setting may require some searching. I’d say this is the first concrete benefit of Wayland over X11. So I think there is actually a very clear solution in sight and that is that applications get ported to run on wayland natively. In the past half year that blur has actually improved considerably to a point now where I find it acceptable for occasional use (but not for something like an editor window), but that will be subjective. If you’re running an application that needs X11 then indeed fractional scaling incurs some blur. On native wayland, fractional scaling looks absolutely perfectly sharp and, even better, multiple monitors with different scaling work great together. That really depends on the applications you use. That is a fact and it is honestly no where near anything looking like a solution. Fractional scaling really does not work well on Linux. The Framework laptop will never be a great Linux laptop so long as the current display is the only option.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |