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The technical merits of Wayland are mostly irrelevant
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I've been using Wayland for a while, but I remember two factors that might have held me back in another universe:
I'm not sure if those restrictions still apply. Luckily for the simplicity of my life I switched to Gnome (partially for Wayland support, partially for a simpler setup), and I switched to doing keyboard reconfiguration in hardware.
xkb has been split off from Xorg, all Wayland compositors (that I know of) use it for mapping.
Oh, very nice! Thanks for letting me know
What kind of hardware are you using for keyboard reconfiguration?
I built a wireless Corne keyboard from a kit. It uses nice!nano controllers running ZMK. Previously when I used a Kinesis Advantage 2 I replaced its controller board with a KinT which uses a Teensy as its controller. Customizing the keyboard with custom firmware is much nicer than customizing in the OS. But it can be a commitment. Although there are some keyboards that come the reprogramming options out-of-the-box, like the Kinesis Advantage 360, the Moonlander, all of Keyboardio's models.