@aral Peeking at their GitHub page, I see the software is 87% python, so is it just picking a GUI engine and finding programmers who want to do the work that's keeping it from being ported to Linux?
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@aral Peeking at their GitHub page, I see the software is 87% python, so is it just picking a GUI engine and finding programmers who want to do the work that's keeping it from being ported to Linux? 4 comments
@MichaelTBacon I trialed Linux about two years ago for a year and, even as a fully abled person, it was a complete uphill battle and a struggle fighting my system over small paper cuts and tiny deficiencies. I’ve always felt it was almost there, but still not quite there, yet. There are great developments all the time, but it’s always too little too late. The fragmentation is a bug and a feature simultaneously. @LinuxAndYarn @aral @apollon @MichaelTBacon I've been using Linux for over 20 years, and have spent most of them wishing that gnome and KDE could get it together amongst themselves to have a common UI library for developers to define interfaces that the rendering engines could just be skins on top of. So I do understand the pain @apollon I think this is a matter of what you are used to. I have been using some flavor of Unix (mostly linux recently) as my desktop for about 20 years and I am extremely uncomfortable when I have to use Windows. That being said, I understand why people find it inaccessible. @MichaelTBacon @LinuxAndYarn |
@LinuxAndYarn @aral At a quick look there's some API calls to Windows that are going to be extremely platform specific and are pretty crucial to operation. So, no, I guess not.
(Insert my rant about how Linux on the desktop has been "just about ready for most users, just another year or two" since roughly 1994. I've given up waiting.)