Raspi devs have already expressed that they will abandon x and wayfire in favour of labwc compositor. The current labwc target does not seem to move fast enough to address issues forthwith.
At least that is my experience. Very unstable icw Lazarus and constantly able to crash Lazarus. It never has been a problem before the 'switch' to Wayland.
imho it is a mess.... and it completely baffles me that anyone might think this half baked implementation is a good idea to push onto end-users. You are far better of installing a well tested and at least known to work graphic server/DE combo.
Well, apparently the people from the foundation assume that the RPi is hardware for conducting experiments, and the software is also for experimenting. And they probably think that anyone who uses it is an experimenter. Ergo, it is perfectly acceptable to experiment with experimenters and their experimental hardware and experimental software
As for the RPi - the hardware is quite OK. It doesn't act like it's experimental at all, rather it's quite stable. The software is a different matter - it is indeed poor. But that is completely understandable, because the Linux desktop is "too heavy" for such a small computer (well, maybe the PRi 5 with 8 GB RAM is a bit better). Unless it is "trimmed" from broadly understood multimedia (sound, graphics, camera, etc.) and used to control electronics (for example, using several buttons) and the feedback is displayed using several colored LEDs or simple displays connected via I2C or SPI.
Unfortunately, there is currently no other (widely available) OS for the RPi to experiment with. So every RPi experiment is doubly experimental: on an experimental OS, with its own experimental software. A bit too many of these experimental layers