That is good to hear. But the third post down on acidiclight's mastodon page is a link to another user's blog post:
>As a KWin developer and KDE's accessibility engineer... >https://nocoffei.com/?p=451 >This is a problem. We need to solve it. Fast.
And this is a quote from the page intro,
> As the Linux Desktop transitions to a Wayland-only future, I will be locked out of my computer, as the accessibility software I rely on is left behind. The desktop environment I use, KDE Plasma, has announced that in early 2027, X11 support will be removed from the system. That means in about roughly 9 months, I will no longer be welcome on that desktop environment, being forced to cling to an older version or switch to a more niche environment that still supports it.
The problems described therein haven't been fixed. And mclassen's (of gtk) comments on the fedora bug tracker make it clear that even if KDE tries to implement GNOME's new AccessKit it still won't solve the problems. mclassen seems to think the people asking for things like getting and setting cursor position are just sealioning "accessibility maximalists". The core idea of his argument argument is valid, you can't get it working all at once and progress is incremental. But if that's true then don't remove X11 support that works while the waylands are still progressing towards working.