After doing some deeper reading I've come across this bug via the DisplayLink GitHub Repo.
As a developer, I recognize that this isn't really the responsiblity of the Canonical Ltd. to hunt down issues that don't relate back to the Core OS - to an extent - so it's not really THEIR fault that an unexpected side-effect was introduced in XServer.
That being said, DisplayLink and their "external graphics card" platform powers an overwhelming majority of Home and Office Docking Stations, Conference Rooms, Backpack Adapters, etc.
Ultimately frustrated end-users who don't care to dig deep into what the true issue is (including software developers) will give up and just blame Ubuntu and revert to the excuse "Linux is unstable and not a daily operating system"
I personally think this is a bad look for Canonical and Ubuntu and will cause a loss in market share due to reduced confidence in the stability of the platform.
Basically what I'm saying is - things like this that are glaringly obvious to end-users from the frontend perspective absolutely need to be prioritized and I hope that someone sees this and attempts to get this bug ultimately closed out.
This bug has been open since 2020-04-25.
I am writing this comment as of 2021-12-01.
The bug located over at XServer looks to be closed as of 2020-5-29 - though it's unclear to me if it's completely merged into main.
The two teams need to come together and figure this out because like I said previously - this is an extremely bad look from an end-user perspective and just adds to the invalid argument used for years that people use to complain about Linux instability.
My Comment on DisplayLink GitHub:
- https://github.com/DisplayLink/evdi/issues/61#issuecomment-983603462
- I am on a FRESH install of Ubuntu 20.04 as of October 6th 2021 that I updated many times before actually jumping into using it.
- Reference - I started a new job that day and needed to jump into using Linux full time for the type of Software Development work I'd be doing - naturally I've used DisplayLink adapters flawlessly for years (on Windows) so it came as a shock to me that something so glaringly obvious is a problem in a major distribution like Ubuntu.
After doing some deeper reading I've come across this bug via the DisplayLink GitHub Repo.
As a developer, I recognize that this isn't really the responsiblity of the Canonical Ltd. to hunt down issues that don't relate back to the Core OS - to an extent - so it's not really THEIR fault that an unexpected side-effect was introduced in XServer.
That being said, DisplayLink and their "external graphics card" platform powers an overwhelming majority of Home and Office Docking Stations, Conference Rooms, Backpack Adapters, etc.
Ultimately frustrated end-users who don't care to dig deep into what the true issue is (including software developers) will give up and just blame Ubuntu and revert to the excuse "Linux is unstable and not a daily operating system"
I personally think this is a bad look for Canonical and Ubuntu and will cause a loss in market share due to reduced confidence in the stability of the platform.
Basically what I'm saying is - things like this that are glaringly obvious to end-users from the frontend perspective absolutely need to be prioritized and I hope that someone sees this and attempts to get this bug ultimately closed out.
This bug has been open since 2020-04-25.
I am writing this comment as of 2021-12-01.
The bug located over at XServer looks to be closed as of 2020-5-29 - though it's unclear to me if it's completely merged into main.
The two teams need to come together and figure this out because like I said previously - this is an extremely bad look from an end-user perspective and just adds to the invalid argument used for years that people use to complain about Linux instability.
My Comment on DisplayLink GitHub: /github. com/DisplayLink /evdi/issues/ 61#issuecomment -983603462
- https:/
- I am on a FRESH install of Ubuntu 20.04 as of October 6th 2021 that I updated many times before actually jumping into using it.
- Reference - I started a new job that day and needed to jump into using Linux full time for the type of Software Development work I'd be doing - naturally I've used DisplayLink adapters flawlessly for years (on Windows) so it came as a shock to me that something so glaringly obvious is a problem in a major distribution like Ubuntu.
XServer Bug Tracker (Closed): /gitlab. freedesktop. org/xorg/ xserver/ -/issues/ 1028
- https:/