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I'll invoke Cunningham's Law here. If I remember correctly, Wayland was designed to support a wider range of display targets than X11, such as set-top displays, car dashboards, and other specialized systems. In these cases, the full functionality of a traditional desktop environment isn't required, so it isn't included in the base system.



I kinda had this "wayland was actually designed for embedded use cases and [therefore lots of things don't matter]" also in the back of my mind, but I failed to find any evidence at all for this actually being the case. Nevermind that embedded Linux generally didn't use X11 back then and doesn't use Wayland today.


Automotive infotainment displays are almost entirely Wayland now


Because they don't run any programs and you basically have QT on your automotive screen.




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