> grand conspiracy by Red Hat to make the Linux desktop worse, increasing their consulting profits. (/s)
I must admit, I have wondered about the plausibility of this in the past. It seems like ironically, making a problem-free Linux would be a conflict of interest to Redhat, which makes more money the more problems it has.
Is there any particular reason you think it couldn't be the case? I could definitely see it within the realm of possibility, especially since they maintain a huge chunk of the ecosystem nowadays (Fedora/RHEL, GNOME, LibInput, Kernel development, NetworkManager, Pulseaudio/Pipewire, Systemd, Wayland, and probably even more in the future.)
Because just factually Red Hat isn't working on many of these things alone. Most of these project have huge interest from many parties. And all those parties work daily with Red Hat and somehow the conspiracy remains undetected. The idea tat Red Hat corporate overlords can easily hurd the Gnome developers just isn't how the project is set up.
Many of the contributes to these project, even when being employed by Red Hat don't always do this as their primary job, many do it because they want to. It just so happens many people that love the linux ecosystem and linux itself work at Red Hat.
Other then that, many project that are very unifying and don't create much 'conflict' are also lead or worked on by Red Hat people. Pipewire for example has been the opposite of 'conflict' for the most part. LVFS is another good example. Flatpak/Flathub are another great example (Maybe Ubuntu is the evil agent of chaos). Systemd is also almost universally adopted by ever major distro even if it created much conflict.
Somehow people can't decide if Red Had is an evil dictator wanting to control everything or if they are deliberately creating 'conflict' so nobody is in control.
The simple reality is, there are a huge amount of people with incredibly different opinions in the Linux space. Even different people employed by Red Hat also don't always agree with each other. So who is really the true Red Hat conspiracy agent?
Difference on opinion is fine as long as people work on their own stuff, but when it comes to unification, like Wayland protocols it just gets really hard. The reason there is KDE and Gnome is because of fundamental disagreements about goals and that will be reflected in how they think wayland properties should be installed.
P.S:
> making a problem-free Linux would be a conflict of interest to Redhat, which makes more money the more problems it has.
What is your actual evidence for this statement? If that was true, why are they working on all those projects. Objectively things like Pipewire, LVFS, Flatpak, Systemd have been major improvements to the ecosystem.
I must admit, I have wondered about the plausibility of this in the past. It seems like ironically, making a problem-free Linux would be a conflict of interest to Redhat, which makes more money the more problems it has.
Is there any particular reason you think it couldn't be the case? I could definitely see it within the realm of possibility, especially since they maintain a huge chunk of the ecosystem nowadays (Fedora/RHEL, GNOME, LibInput, Kernel development, NetworkManager, Pulseaudio/Pipewire, Systemd, Wayland, and probably even more in the future.)