> > 3. Canonical also has tools built around Mir that could enable us (and > others) to easily “flash” our builds onto mobile devices using an > Android/Mir base. This is probably the most unique/enticing part about > using Mir.
Mer also provides this, and more. This is yet another thing that they "borrowed" from Mer/Sailfish and now are advertising as their own creation ("yet another" because the whole "nextgen display server on Android drivers" thing was developed by Sailfish developer for Wayland and Mer). > I think the only thing we know 100% (even if we do have some other > opinions) is that X is dying. We need to make an effort to remove any > x-specific code from our apps and our shell and to move away from any > libraries that we know won’t exist in a post-X world (like BAMF and WNCK). > The problem with this is that we cannot just move *away* and forget about the functionality these libraries provide, we have move *to* something else as well to provide that functionality. And it's not clear where we should move until we make the display server choice. The thing I'm 100% sure of is that we're sticking to X until at least Ubuntu 14.04. It doesn't matter for applications if it will be with or without XMir as system compositor, they're still interfacing with X. We have a conservative and iterative cycle ahead of us. Let's wait and see which of the display servers prevails, and make an *educated* decision for L+2. We know very little about what either of the display severs will be in a year from now, so any decision we make now is not a decision but prejudice. -- Sergey "Shnatsel" Davidoff OS architect @ elementary
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