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by oriesdan
2069 days ago
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This sounds like a bad case of Cult of Release. X works perfectly for me, and there is nothing I would want it to do that it doesn't do now. Why should it change? I have many programs I wrote years ago that I don't change and I use every day. Constant changes are not a measure of utility. But again and again, you'll find users looking at repositories and deciding that something is "dead" because there isn't any recent commit, often blaming developers for not doing more free work for them. This is a toxic attitude. When we have a software that works well and solves our problems, we should celebrate it, not complain it doesn't find new problems to solve. |
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I'm not sure whether a program that works for you is a good indication that it no longer needs to change.
> When we have a software that works well and solves our problems, we should celebrate it, not complain it doesn't find new problems to solve.
I think anyone can agree that, at the very least, screen tearing and proper support for mixed DPI setups are problems that fall squarely in the responsibilities of X and yet it still didn't manage to solve them after so many years.
So it's hardly the case that X is just so good that users nowadays have to try really hard to find new problems for it to solve.