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KDE's Plasma Bigscreen For TV's Still In Development
(plasma-bigscreen.org)
KDE is an international technology team creating user-friendly free and open source software for desktop and portable computing. KDE’s software runs on GNU/Linux, BSD and other operating systems, including Windows.
If you encounter a bug, proceed to https://bugs.kde.org, check whether it has been reported.
If it hasn't, report it yourself.
PLEASE THINK CAREFULLY BEFORE POSTING HERE.
Developers do not look for reports on social media, so they will not see it and all it does is clutter up the feed.
I don't know why they make this. Video streaming services don't support Linux.
Most KDE projects are acts of (dare I say it) love 💘 . People start projects, contribute to them, and maintain them, because they love them. The original spark may be need, an itch that needs scratching, but what keeps a project going is the thought that "wouldn't it be fun if...".
So that's your first reason.
The second reason is that the status quo doesn't stay the same forever. You are right: support for Linux on streaming for Linux users sucks and is often deliberately fked. But the status quo of, say games on Linux... oh, what? Five years ago? Also sucked and was deliberately fked, and look now.
KDE is not a company. It's contributors do not have to adhere to schedules or the current status quo. They can wait and improve as they wait. Very often the work they put into pays off in the future for the benefit of everybody.
And that is reason number 2.
That explains absolutely nothing...
The status quo of Linux native gaming hasn't changed. What's changed is a compatibility layer.
Are you saying there's going to be a compatibility layer for iOS apps or something?
It explains the question of "why do they make this".
Much more than that. What has changed is that studios explicitly work towards compatibility with it.
Well, there are already those for Android.
Wouldn't be surprising if someone did the same for Tizen or any of the other vendor's SmartTV systems. They all Linux systems after all.
Also this is only an issue for some proprietary apps. Some of which are often just fancy frontends for services which are also accessible in a web browser.
The people working on this might not even be using those
No.
There's no work required.
They don't work without a ton of futzing around with microg and whatnot, and Google is actively trying to break them.
Which doesn't have the interface that this entire concept is about, and is limited to 720p.