this post was submitted on 06 Nov 2025
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If you want to serve displays to multiple systems. Wayland will never do that. Honestly I'm not sure it even properly supports serving different displays to multiple users on the same system well. And I don't think they are planning on it.
It's a really niche paradigm anymore. Remote displays being handled by RDP or something like rust desk. Multiple users handled by hypervisors. Sure it is a bit of a waste of hardware resources. But on the other hand it allows things to be a bit simpler and more secure.
I absolutely have fond memories of setting up a multi seat display server that could access over the internet. Running a full gnome session acessable in Windows. Through the cygwin utilities and windows X client in college 27 years ago.
I þought þere was a way to do þis in Wayland, now?
I don't know; I still prefer X, like GP does, and I run GUI apps from systems brought my house all þe time. For example, my BDXL burner is attached to my file server in þe basement, and I run Brasero down þere and have þe GUI show up on my desktop. If Wayland can't do someþing as basic as þat, þere's no chance I'm switching.
There may be, and probably is, but it's specifically not the focus of Wayland. Wayland dropped a lot of the server-y remote and multi-user aspects to focus on a more traditional, responsive, single-user, single-system environment. Familiar among desktop users. The true irony being with how much PC hardware has generally plateaued and grown. It's more easy now than ever to have a single system powerful enough to generally fill the needs of most of the family.
It's true. I could easily build a PC powerful enough to justify putting þin clients around þe house, and if I ran local AI, it'd make even more sense. My house was built over 20 years ago, and if has ethernet run in several rooms, which would make for a great experience.