Richmond wrote:
> At the risk of throwing a spanner in the works I want to refer you
> to this:
>
> http://lists.runrev.com/pipermail/use-livecode/2014-January/196782.html
>
> "Hi all, Some weeks ago,
> I reported that windowShape was not working in my Lubuntu Linux setup.
> After looking around and testing many recipes,
> finally I found the program that works in my setup.
> The windowshape property was not working in Lubuntu Linux because it
> does not include,
> by default a composite manager."
>
> posted by someone wiser than me.

That was Alejandro, and AFAIK he and I are among the very few people in the LC community using Lubuntu specifically (and in all fairness I only run it on my oldest computer; everything else runs Ubuntu which includes the Compiz compositor).

If the chart showing number of users running different Linux distros in the middle of this page is any guide, not much of an issue:
<https://brashear.me/blog/2015/08/24/results-of-the-2015-slash-r-slash-linux-distribution-survey/>

Of the ones shown there, AFAIK only Xubuntu lacks a compositor; Lubuntu isn't even on the list. Like Puppy Linux and other slim distros, both Xubuntu and Lubuntu are designed to run on older machines or in configurations that don't meet the minimum requirements for more fully-features distros like Fedora, Ubuntu, or Mint. Of the two Lubuntu is slightly leaner in its disk and RAM requirements, so I'm not sure why Xubuntu is more popular, but regardless consider them both in the bigger picture:

Windows: ~85%
Mac:     ~10%
Linux:    ~5%

With Xubuntu at probably less than 5% of Linux' 5% of desktop computers, the number of affected users among the total addressable market is very, very small.

If we were to look at Xubuntu, Lubuntu, Puppy Linux, and other such distros combined, I'd be surprised if the lot of them totaled more than 0.01% of desktops in use.

And even then, not much to worry about since we choose these lightweight distros for specific reasons, and we know what we're in for. Software that requires compositing generally only runs on beefier hardware, so when we choose a lightweight distro we understand we're not going to have as many apps available to us, and that's generally okay for the cases where we want a light OS.

When we need a compositor we know where to get it - after all, how else could we run the cube? :)
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4QokOwvPxrE>

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World Systems
 Software Design and Development for the Desktop, Mobile, and the Web
 ____________________________________________________________________
 ambassa...@fourthworld.com                http://www.FourthWorld.com


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