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The technical merits of Wayland are mostly irrelevant
(utcc.utoronto.ca)
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Also better isolation of applications and better support for multiple screens.
I'll give you the multiple screens (not a use case I have myself, so I don't pay attention to support quality). Isolation of applications is another thing that most users don't really care that much about, I would say.
It's legitimately important if you want to be able to pull random software from places and not have your system compromised, a la smartphone OSes.
It's not the whole story -- things still aren't entirely sandboxed aside from that -- but without it, the GUI is a big security hole.
users shouldn't have to care about security. it should be the baseline.
You never care about security until you get your credentials stolen
And don't forget 1:1 gestures and the Crash-Resilient Wayland Compositing that keep the application alive even tho the "compositor" crash, so it does restart without any data loss.
Edit: forgot to mention the lockscreen protocol, because on xorg if the lockscreen crash then you view the desktop and you have the device unlocked!