Jokes aside, this has nothing to do with the protocol as much as the fact that there are vast differences in how an open source project is developed vs. how Microsoft develops.
A lot of Wayland development was initially funded by Samsung, which mainly focused on usecases for their smart devices. They then shut down their entire OSS department, so that workforce is out.
Now, finally redhat seems to be gearing up a bit, with GNOME Wayland being default on Fedora, and sponsoring Wayland work on things like Firefox.
But, even then, things are powered by what people want and care about, rather than just trying to tick every previous feature box available.
Apart from stability.
Jokes aside, this has nothing to do with the protocol as much as the fact that there are vast differences in how an open source project is developed vs. how Microsoft develops.
A lot of Wayland development was initially funded by Samsung, which mainly focused on usecases for their smart devices. They then shut down their entire OSS department, so that workforce is out.
Now, finally redhat seems to be gearing up a bit, with GNOME Wayland being default on Fedora, and sponsoring Wayland work on things like Firefox.
But, even then, things are powered by what people want and care about, rather than just trying to tick every previous feature box available.