Developers behind Redox OS, the original open-source operating system written from scratch in the Rust programming language, have ported Wayland to it with initially getting the Smallvil Wayland compositor up and running along with the Smithay framework and the Wayland version of the GTK toolkit.

The Redox OS project published their November 2025 status update where one of their main accomplishments for the past month is getting these initial Wayland components up and running on it. Before getting too excited though, they note that the Wayland compositor’s performance is “not adequate” and thus more work to do on their Wayland support but an exciting first milestone

      • mholiv@lemmy.world
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        16 minutes ago

        I know I do.

        GPL forces mega corps to give back when they use community code.

        MIT just lets companies take community code without giving anything back.

        GPL code is code for the community by the community. Meta crops can use the code too but they have to give back.

        Choosing MIT over GPL, LGPL, or MPL (all community oriented) in my book is pretty close to corporate bootlicking.

  • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    On a technical level, that’s cool.

    On a practical level MIT-licensed OS better not get much mindshare. Cue everything that happened with important projects under permissive licenses over the last decade. E.g. Android, Chromium. I used to dgaf and was even quite excited about stuff like Fuscia OS. Boy did we dodge a bullet there with Google abandoning it.

    • Piatro@programming.dev
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      1 day ago

      Yeah I’m a recent convert to less permissive licenses and was disappointed to see that redox was MIT. At the same time I know if I was to make anything worth open sourcing I couldn’t fight big tech if they decided to make use of it in a non-compliant way.

      • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        Indeed. The hard lesson that I learned over my 20 years of experience with FOSS is that the social infrastructure around a piece of software is more important than the exact details of the technology itself such as programming languages, frameworks, patterns, etc. And the license is a part of that social infrastructure.