Are the Gnome devs going to be there?
Thanks for sharing
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What you’re describing used to be right under X11, but under Wayland the compositor handles all rendering itself. For Gnome that’s mutter, which is also maintained by the gnome project.
…hosting this year’s display hackfest… They hope to better collaborate over future display stack improvements around HDR, VRR, and related topics… There’s also ongoing work within the GNOME camp around VRR, enabling HDR on the desktop, etc.
Had nothing to do with Gnome
Did you even read it?
Apparently you don’t understand the difference between rendering and a desktop environment. Sad
Mutter, word of advice; next time lookup the topic before you make a massive asshole in a clown costume out of yourself.
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"There’s also ongoing work within the GNOME camp around VRR, enabling HDR on the desktop, etc. "
Right there. Right in the article dog. You think desktops dont render or something? And even without that you think they could have absolutely no valuable input being there?
All I gotta say is I only see one moron in this comment section and it ain’t the root comment
❤️
Please for the love of everything, a full, working color management stack.
Why is the Steam Deck the cover image? It does quite well for those things.
Melissa and Igalia have been working with AMD and Valve in particular a lot on the AMD color management support, enabling HDR use-cases for Valve with the Steam Deck (OLED), and more. There’s also ongoing work within the GNOME camp around VRR, enabling HDR on the desktop, etc.
The pic of the Decks appear below that.
Not for me
I’m sceptical that Phoronix is sending you a different version of their article than what everybody else is seeing.
Err… no it doesn’t. There are so many bug reports of neither HDR nor VRR working properly with the steam deck. My deck won’t even dock properly with my TV after recent updates.
It’s better than most other linuxes in the sense that it works sometimes I guess.
The problem is color management.
Apple solved it by taking control over both the display and the software stack that drives it.
Linux developers only have access to half of that.
are they having problems?