The thing that matters most is that apps work on the chosen desktop.
Just swapped 32-bit Bullseye with 64bit Bookworm on a Pi400 (and although not precisely measurable, things look a lot snappier).
To name an example, Octave on Bullseye had a nasty issue with Qt and OpenGL, that required switching graphics output to gnuplot or fltk.
Now it's fixed! Don't know if they just recompiled Octave for opengles, added an emulation layer or fixed Qt, all it matters is that the bug is gone.
There is still an issue with the panel: The lack of a keyboard layout indicator, when multiple ones are in use.
This may seem to be like trivial pursuit, but is actually a big PITA when entering passwords and you are still in the wrong layout.
That was addressed for wayfire by avarvit.
What says Simon?
Will he keep wf-panel-pi or ditch it for a redesigned component?
Just swapped 32-bit Bullseye with 64bit Bookworm on a Pi400 (and although not precisely measurable, things look a lot snappier).
To name an example, Octave on Bullseye had a nasty issue with Qt and OpenGL, that required switching graphics output to gnuplot or fltk.
Now it's fixed! Don't know if they just recompiled Octave for opengles, added an emulation layer or fixed Qt, all it matters is that the bug is gone.
There is still an issue with the panel: The lack of a keyboard layout indicator, when multiple ones are in use.
This may seem to be like trivial pursuit, but is actually a big PITA when entering passwords and you are still in the wrong layout.
That was addressed for wayfire by avarvit.
What says Simon?
Will he keep wf-panel-pi or ditch it for a redesigned component?
Statistics: Posted by koge — Tue Nov 19, 2024 6:01 pm