Sandro Mani  wrote on 2010-02-21:
"The person(s) who originally implemented the clipboard may very well not be 
working on Xorg anymore, hence someone would have to read through the whole 
unfamiliar code and understand it, just like we"

Then there's something fundamentally wrong at Xorg. It doesn't matter
who wrote the code. If Xorg releases some software, they're responsible
for maintaining the code and they're the ones who need to ensure
everything is properly documented, so it's possible to make some changes
to the existing code.

Sandro Mani  wrote on 2010-02-21:
"the chances of success are considerably higher if the 52 people here would 
spend time researching instead of writing long, heated comments."

Researching? That's work for developers, not for users. I've said it so many 
times, but how can Linux ever get a market share of more than 1% if they expect 
the users do everything themselves?
Step 1: User encounters a bug;
Step 2: User tells developers he found a bug and gives some information like 
when does he encounter this bug and what did he expect to happen;
Step 3: Developer researches how to fix this bug;
Step 4: Developer fixes bug;
Step 5: Developer releases an update.

Unfortuantely this doesn't work with open source software, because the
developer says: "I don't give a fuck about that bugs. Fix it yourself."

Users don't want to do research, they don't want to create Wiki-pages,
they don't want to learn how to program. They just want to tell the
developer about the bug he encountered and that's all. They encounter
this bug, because of the errors of the developer, so he's the one who
needs to fix the bugs he created himself.

Why does the term "open source developer" mean "someone who who does
what he wants to do, but doesn't listen to the comments of the users"?
If you only implement features you like yourself and only fix bugs you
care about, then don't release your software to the public, but keep it
just for your own use. If you also want other people to use your
software, then listen to them and implement the features they want and
fix the bugs they want to be fixed. If you don't want to do this, then
just dont release your software to the public, because users expect
software to work. They just want to use the software, they don't want to
help develop the software.

LimCore  wrote 4 hours ago:
"Just install Percellite by default (MIR) and we are done! No need for too much 
talking, lets do it ;)"

It has been said so many times: this is not a solution. These kind of
applications are a bandaid solution to get some half baked clipboard
implementation which crashes sometimes and doesn't even support all
kinds of file types. Besides that, installing such application by
default will cause the developers to think: "They've got their clipboard
implementation, so there's no need to deliver a real fix." We need the
clipboard to be implemented where it needs to be implemented.

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