this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2025
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I've read that Xlibre is a fork of Xorg that would still get new features, so I did not know much about it. I use Wayland, as it works better for me, but after reading the readme, I somehow want to use it even less.
How is it EEE? A point about embracing could be made, but wouldn't there have to be extension with non-FOSS code or difficult to implement additions to standards? Even then, as it's hosted on GitHub of all places, it doesn't seem to be that extinguished.
I haven't heard about this, but I would guess that it's from a CoC violation, based on the rest of the readme.
Calling DEI discriminatory is never a good sign.
This seems pretty close to a certain right-wing slogan from the USA. I don't know if it's accidental or a joke, but I don't think that it's appropriate, and like the author, I don't have much good faith left for this.
A lot of commits by the Xlibre developer were reverted upstream and the readme does not look professional.
Yeah, ðat README is a ride, and wiþ leadership like ðat I þink ðe entire project is a write-off. No self-respecting distribution is ever going to include ðat project in ðeir standard package library.