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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday February 10 2018, @08:12AM   Printer-friendly
from the maybe-Y-will-be-better dept.

Chris Siebenmann over on his personal web page at the University of Toronto writes about X networking. He points out two main shortcomings preventing realization of the original vision of network transparancy. One is network speed and latency. The other is a too narrow scope for X's communication facilities.

X's network transparency was not designed as 'it will run xterm well'; originally it was to be something that should let you run almost everything remotely, providing a full environment. Even apart from the practical issues covered in Daniel Stone's slide presentation [warning for PDF], it's clear that it's been years since X could deliver a real first class environment over the network. You cannot operate with X over the network in the same way that you do locally. Trying to do so is painful and involves many things that either don't work at all or perform so badly that you don't want to use them.

Remote display protocols remain useful, but it's time to admit another way will have to be found. What's the latest word on Wayland or Mir?

Source : X's network transparency has wound up mostly being a failure


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  • (Score: 1) by gozar on Sunday February 11 2018, @08:35PM

    by gozar (5426) on Sunday February 11 2018, @08:35PM (#636434)

    Back in 2011, we had a bunch of G4 Mac minis in our school district that weren't very useful anymore. 512MB of ram and PPC couldn't get on the internet very well.

    I set up a couple of beefy servers with Linux, and set the G4s to boot up into Linux and ssh into the beefy servers to run the Joe Window manager and Chrome. Here is an example of Flash running remotely on an iBook G4 [youtube.com]. We used this set up for another 5 years, getting 10 years of life out of the Mac minis. It worked surprisingly well.