Preview of KDE 3.4 315
comforteagle writes "In this month's KDE: From the Source George Staikos details what is to be expected from the upcoming 3.4 version of KDE. An Alpha release is due any minute so you might as well know what you're in for if you're a loyal K head. Some changes include major rework within KHTML & Konqueror, Subversion support, and Apple's Rendezvous."
Rendezvous? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:5, Informative)
Rendezvous is apple's version of ZeroConf.
More info on ZeroConf [zeroconf.org]
More inof on Rendezvous [apple.com]
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:3, Insightful)
Another company owns the trademark on the work Rednezvous when used in relation to networking.
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:2)
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:2)
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:2)
Just seems like it is in the wrong place. Sort of like making your Browser and Email client part of the OS and not Apps
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:2)
With support only in the OS, what is the point of having it in the first place? Without developing support into the individual applications, your mail client won't be able to use it to find your mail server. Your web browser wouldn't be able to use it to find your web proxy. And the server applications you actually run, would never be able to advertise themselves as available to the network!
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:2)
Re:Rendezvous? (Score:5, Informative)
Rendezvous and Zeroconf are the same thing, the latter being the Open Source release of the Rendezvous technology.
The ZeroConf page is maintained by Stuart Cheshire, who is the engineer at Apple responsible for Rendezvous.
Article text..... (Score:5, Informative)
KDE 3.3.2 was tagged today, so we should see a new bug fix release of KDE in the first or second week of December. Earlier this past week, the plans for a KDE 3.4 release were also finalized. This will be the last major KDE 3 release before KDE 4. KDE 4 will make use of the Qt 4 library which promises to be quite a revolution for KDE and all Qt applications, but will break binary compatibility with previous releases.
The release schedule for KDE 3.4 plans for an alpha release December 3, a beta release January 7, and a final release March 16 2005. The 3.4 release will bring a large number of features and functionality enhancements over previous KDE 3 releases. Here are some of the features already implemented:
Hardware Support
- Support for special keyboard keys on Dell Inspiron and ASUS laptops.
- A new battery monitor (under development).
- media:/ addition to the KDE I/O subsystem to list devices on the system.
KHTML and Konqueror
Konqueror
- KHTML has undergone major work lately, though much of it will appear in KDE 3.3.2. Merging with Safari fixes continues, alone with new work and fixes by KDE developers. Site compatibility continues to improve, stability is very much improved, and KWallet no longer blocks Konqueror while waiting for a password.
- Support for multiple site logins with KWallet (for all protocols, but not HTML form completions yet) added.
- A notifier was added to visually indicate when user-agent spoofing is active.
- KHTML plug-ins are now configurable, so the user can selectively disable ones that are not used. This does not include Netscape-style plug-ins.
- Netscape plug-in in CPU usage can be manually lowered, and plug-ins are more stable.
- Over the past couple of months, confirmed KHTML and Konqueror bug reports have been on a significant decline as bugs are fixed more rapidly and fewer are reported.
E-Mail and Personal Information Management
- Major improvements in synchronization, including support for synchronizing between two PCs.
- Enhanced support for groupware servers, including Exchange 2000, OpenGroupware, Kolab 1 and 2, SLOX, Groupwise, and eGroupware.
SLOX
- XFace support for associating faces with mail and news articles.
- Blogging and journal support.
- KMail supports KWallet.
- Client-side IMAP search support.
- Improved drag and drop in KMail.
- Improved anti-spam support in KMail.
- Uncountable other e-mail, organizer and address-book enhancements.
Kopete
- Novell Groupwise and Lotus Sametime protocol support added.
- Support for adding URLs to bookmarks.
- Drag and drop of files and contacts.
- The NetMeeting plug-in now allows the use of arbitrary applications to start a chat.
- Support for incoming MSN messages that are handwritten.
- An adium look-alike chat window style.
KPDF
- KPDF includes new numerous new features including:
- New rendering engine.
- Optimizations and enhancements for zoom, search, and thumbnails.
- Better printing (using Postscript directly).
- Support for password protected PDFs.
- Image extraction support.
- Nicer user interface in general.
Libraries
- QCA - A complete cryptography architecture.
- Usage of GCC 3.4 symbol visibility functionality for much improved application startup time.
- Optimizations of various styles and other components.
- Cleanup and reworking of KJSEmbed to make it much more functional.
- Password dialog gives feedback on the relative strength of new passwords.
Desktop / General
- KDM theme support.
- Numerous window manager enhancements, including indicators for remote applications.
- Major Kicker panel reworking, with support for hiding tray icons.
- Empty password support (password-less wallets) in KWallet.
KWallett
- Support for setting the clock with NTP.
- Completely redesigned, more flexible trash system.
Other Cool Things We Might See
All of these feature
Re:Article text..... (Score:2)
Oh please please please let this be configurable (as in, I want to toggle it OFF) so those of us who used "company.local" for our Active Directory domains can still browse them from KDE.
Re:Shouldn't this be posted Anonymously... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Shouldn't this be posted Anonymously... (Score:2)
Re:Shouldn't this be posted Anonymously... (Score:2)
Re:Shouldn't this be posted Anonymously... (Score:2)
Case in point: I had "positive" karma and visited slashdot four or five times a day (give or take a few visits).
Re: Better Thumbnail support? (Score:2)
I believe KDE 3.3 does that already. And it has done it for quite a while I think...
You just need to hunt for the option. It's in the control panel somewhere. Of course, that's like saying there's a very valuable rock in Wyoming, go find it.
Re: One learns something useful everyday. Thanks. (Score:2, Informative)
You can change this behavior too, under Settings-> Configure Konqueror-> Previews and Meta Data, change the "Maximum filesize" to your liking.
I hope... (Score:3, Interesting)
autorefresh (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem comes when I try to find somebody that notices this too: google helps not, discussion lists either etc. Even people (like: real people) deny that they notice this refreshing/flickering.
This is one of the main reasons I avoid using KDE.. and this is one of the first times I read from somebody that he di
Re:autorefresh (Score:4, Funny)
Re:autorefresh (Score:2, Interesting)
This is quite annoying, I just shade the window until it stops flickering...sometimes this can take a while though...
Re:autorefresh (Score:3, Informative)
The flickering is due to the fact that QT is not double-buffered. There are, AFAIK, tricks to make applications/widgets double-buffered, but it's not toolkit-wide. Gtk is, however.
There is a speed vs. eyecandy/usability tradeoff involved.
Re:autorefresh (Score:2)
Re:autorefresh (Score:2)
--
Evan
Real Window Managers (Score:4, Insightful)
I know I'll probably be modded down as flamebait for promoting alternative window managers in a KDE message thread, but I think it might be a good time for the every day user to take a look at how bearded terminal hackers are making things more efficient. Many "LINUX power users" are making their every day work more efficient by using and developing great window managers such as EvilWM, which I am currently typing this post up in.
Maybe a grassroots movement towards simpler window managers is in order. This would be a movement similar to what Bruce Perens trailblazed for GNU/Linux back in the early nineties to fight the onslaught of OS2 and Win 3.1. Now that we have a stable system to build upon after all of these years, we should concentrate on a good user interface. Not necessarily a Desktop User Interface, but a thin, lightweight interface that allows the user to more efficiently do their work without any messy cognitive analogies.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:5, Interesting)
If Microsoft integrates a browser with a file manager, or hints at integrating a media player or anything else in the OS, everyone cries foul, so why is that considered good practice in the major *nix environments?
I'd much rather see a truly modular system, so the the user is free to pick and choose a window manager, a file manager, a browser, a messenger etc. and have them all play nice together, regardless of whether they are part of KDE or GNOME or standalone projects.
For the record: Slackware, Fluxbox and ROX-Filer all the way, baby.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:3, Informative)
You can use a different window manager in KDE than kwin, as long as it's standards compliant.
You don't HAVE to use Konqueror in KDE.
You don't HAVE to use Kopete. You don't even have to install it.
MS bundles tend to be UNREMOVABLE from the sy
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
I do like E's eye candy, but am sympathetic to the parent poster's argument for a leaner, cleaner desktop/WM. Many of E's themes are over-the-top, but at least it's flexible and fast enough to
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
If you think working out package dependencies by hand is a mess (I definitely agree), why are you using Slackware? On Debian Testing, over 16000 packages are just an "apt-get install foo" away.
If Microsoft integrates a browser with a file manager, or hints at integrating a media player or anything else in the OS, everyone cries foul, so why is that considered good practice in the major *nix environments?
When Microsoft does t
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:5, Insightful)
But KDE *does not* tie the browser to the OS, it ties the browser to the *desktop* and there is a *HUGE* difference in that. I can't think of any part of Konqueror that directly makes calls to kernel functions (though admittingly I have not dove deep into the code.)
MSIE is a beast that is *tied* to the kernel, uses kernel internals, and thus, is bad. I have yet to see *any* *nix desktop/window manager that does such a thing.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:5, Interesting)
To see what system calls Konqueror makes, run 'strace -f konqueror'. This won't catch them all, of course, becuase KDE relies on other processes to do a lot of its work. You can start an X server with xterm as the only client, and do 'strace -f startkde' to see the lot.
Of course, one can always apt-get remove konqueror if one doesn't want it installed, the rest of KDE will not stop working. Try that with Internet Explorer.
WRT to MSIE using 'kernel internals': is there actually any documented evidence of when/where/why it does this? Internet Explorer probably uses the "Native API" *less* than a typical Unix process would use system calls; where Mozilla would open(2) a file, IE would call the OpenFile Win32 API, which would be handled by the Win32 server (csrss.exe, IIRC).
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
You know, kdeinit doesn't actually do anything. It's just a way to get libraries into memory faster.
dumb and dumber (Score:2)
MSIE is no more tied to the kernel than any other application. Tied to Explorer? Absolutely, but no, not the kernel.
Neither is Microsoft Office. Everybody claims that the reason MS Word starts so quickly is that much of it is already loaded when Windows starts. Nice theory...doesn't explain why MS Word running under Wine starts blazingly f
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:3, Informative)
The real difference between Konqueror/KDE and MSIE/Windows is that Konqueror and KDE are optional, and can be removed from the OS without affecting other (non-KDE) applications. Windows can't be pared down like this.
If I want to build a small embedded computer that uses a simple nonstandard GUI on a touchscreen, it's fairly easy to do that in Linux. Just don't install all the KDE/
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
As for strange interdependencies between "higher level" packages, that's just standard Linux dependency insanity - nothing to do with Gnome. I have a command-line only Gentoo system (only containing sudo, bash, and nano) that is insisting on installin
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
That might well be life with Gentoo, but it's not the case with Debian. Apt packages can have both "required" and "suggested" prerequisites.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Make a note of what libraries are missing, and search on the Slackware web site to find the package they belong to. Then use wget and installpkg as necessary. You could probably automate the process.
.....} You can even copy most of an ex-Slackware userland {no
Alternatively, you could run Debian {bye-bye, my cred with the Slackware fans
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Slackware Users and "Their" Issues (Score:2)
Someone installs Slackware instead of a distribution that properly modularizes its package and dependency handling and then comes here and complains.
In Mandrake and Suse, packages are broken into smaller part. You also have meta-packages if you wish to install the whole bundle. So you can install, kde-network or you can install kget and kopete by themselves.
Get a grip and keep it!
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
So often the MS added remote desktop, which I use often through the week.
How many times do you need to support multiple displays and screens
Every day, I have multiple monitors at work.
ancient bloatware package known as "The X Window System."
Please explain how X is bloated.
I'd love to see a thin, fast, cross-platform replacement for X.
Well from this post I gather you want an X that doesn't have support for things that are finnaly being added int
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:5, Insightful)
X is not bloated. It's the toolkits. Try running a lightweight window manager (fluxbox, icewm, etc). It's damn snappy. X can run on the most minimal machines and even PDAs.
How often do you need to run an X app across the wire?
Every day. X needs better network transparancy, not less. Keep in mind that for local delivery, X uses unix domain sockets which impose no observable overhead.
How many times do you need to support multiple displays and screens
Again, every day. And again, if you don't use them, it doesn't hurt you any.
(OK, this is slashdot, so I know some of you do -- I have myself, but it's very rare).
What's next then? X is slow because of virtual desktops? Makes about as much sense as your other objections.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:3, Informative)
I will grant to the grandparent post that X adds some overhead for the applications that have to send a large amount of rapidly-changing data to the display (e.g., games). The problem is that even if relatively efficient techniques such as unix domain sockets are used, updating the display
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Let's see... Every day I have two or three XTerms on different machines from which I launch some editors (emacs, xemacs) and various graphical programs (purify, xcompare). Then I also have a mail client (sylpheed [good-day.net]) running from yet another machine through ssh X forwarding and sometimes also a web b
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:5, Insightful)
What, exactly, is wrong with the X Window System? It's not bloat - X gets used on handheld and embedded devices. It's not that the network transparency slows it down - when connecting to a local server X uses shared memory on the machine and doesn't go through any network calls. Speed? Now we're talking implementation issues, but X has been getting better on that front since it finally moved on from XFree86 as the default implementation on Linux. More importantly, in raw rendering speed, X is actually faster than windows. Percieved lack of speed is more due to some lingering X rendering issues (which Keith Packard is fixing), and the toolkits that run on top.
Sure X isn't ideal - nothing is, but it is a hell of a lot better than most stuff out there, and it certainly has many advantages over Win32 GDI.
How often do you need to run an X app across the wire?
Every damn day! Just because you don't use this feature doesn't mean it isn't (a) immensely valuable, (b) used regularly by everyone else. It is not at all uncommon for me to have a desktop full of apps, where each app is actually running on a different machine. X lets me do that, and have a perfetly seamless desktop as if all the apps were running locally. That is a huge advantage.
I'd love to see a thin, fast, cross-platform replacement for X.
X is surprisingly thin - more so than Windows, which has Win32 GDI tied in to everything else. X runs on embedded devices - how slim do you want? X is fast - run some raw render benchmarks for yourself. X is cross platform. I've run X servers on Windows, on Mac, on Linux, on Solaris, on AIX, and on BSD. They all connect to each other happily with no complaints. Show me Win32 GDI doing anything similar.
Jedidiah.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Some clarifications are in place...
First of all, Win32 windows draw on device contexts, not on graphics contexts. A window output can be printed as is, without needing support for postscript graphics.
Win32 regions are much faster than X regions.
Each window in the Win32 environment has a totally user-defined coordinate space. That's a lot of help for applications that need to have the Y coordinate inverted.
The Win32 GUI is scalable: changing the font size
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:5, Informative)
1) KDE != WM. Repeat after me: "KDE IS NOT A WINDOW MANAGER." It's a desktop environment and it does way, WAY more than a simple WM. God it's 2004 people, HAVE YOU NOT LEARNED THIS YET?
2) The IMMENSE proliferation of small, lightweight WMs has ALWAYS been active in the Linux community. EvilWM, IceWM, TWM, BlackBox, FluxBox, Waimea, Kahaki, etc. etc. etc. There is really NO NEED for any more WMs to "get back to basics" THEY'RE ALREADY OUT THERE. Most of them are damned good as they are. Real users want MORE features at this point, these kind of posts are just counter productive. It's 2004. People want to USE the 2.4Ghz 64 bit Athlon they just bought (for cheap). Mom doesn't want fluxbox, she wants her computer to put up a little CDROM icon when she inserts one into her computer. Congrats KDE team on making an efficient, fun, functional DE.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Real users don't want applications dependent on downloading bucketloads of Audio crap when their hardware doesn't even have a sound card.
Many work environments do not allow sound, and why should we have all this aRts stuff unnecesarily?
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
I just wish it were easier to extract only the packages I like and use them without having to install the whole deal.
With disk space costing less than $1/GB, I don't see the point of your argument.
As for old computers with small disks, well tough. The KDE/GNOME apps are probably too heavy for them anyways.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Personally I was shocked at how tiny, say, MonoDevelop is, because of all the dependencies. Where something like Eclipse or OpenOffice is just MASSIVE, because they don't depend on anything.
I finally just switched to using GTK apps only to avoid having both the Gnome/KDE and KDE/QT dependency trees installed (ma
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Yeah right. So instead of Konqueror being preloaded and popping up in half a second (still too long, but bearable) I have to load a standalone browser and wait for 5 seconds or longer.
Same goes for filemanagers of course.
Yes, if you don't run any serious applications alternatives might be "more efficient", but Konqueror running on KDE is by far the fastest browser on Linux.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:3, Informative)
app load times in kde has historically been a big problem. It's due to the way the library loader works with c++ apps. The current solution is "kdeinit", which is kind of a hack, but the right way to do it is to have improved control over what exactly is exported from a library, which gcc 3.4 gives.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
I wonder, what exactly are you trying to say with the title "Real window managers"? That KDE doesn't have a real (whatever that is supposed to mean) window manager? How comes then users of all those real window managers moan (http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04 / 11/29/171204 [slashdot.org] - search for not stealing focus or opening new applications on the virtual desktop they were started on) about
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
I disagree... As one of the "bearded terminal hackers" (well without the beard, but from that generation) I moved to KDE back in the 3.0 days because I just got tired of using bits and pieces and getting a patchwork windowing system. I was (still am actually) an ardent WindowMaker fan but back at the time I made this choice I wanted a cohesive desktop. I wanted the apps to look and work similarly and I wanted the flexibility to bust out and completely customize whatever facet of the experience I needed.
Re:Real Window Managers (Score:2)
I used to think like that and be religious about using icewm, eventhough I had a powerful machine.
Then one day I gave
the Devil is in the Details (Score:4, Insightful)
I would also like more information about the core KDE, not just the peripheral stuff like Konq & KHTML.
All that said, the idea of a new version of KDE is fairly kool, but frankly, as an XFCE user (and occasionally Gnome), I find the KDE desktop & icons to be just a shade on the kludgy side. They don't look as clean or professional in my mind.
But that's just one geek's opinion.
Re:the Devil is in the Details (Score:2)
If you look closer, there are some nice details though. For instance the symbol hiding, which will speed-up applications start of all KDE applications.
Obligatory Futurama quote (Score:5, Interesting)
Calculon: An Oscar, you say? That would get me out of this festering rat's nest called "television" once and for all. Let me see the script. [Zoidberg hands it to him and he speed-reads it.] No, no I don't like the font.
Konqueror + Gecko? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Konqueror + Gecko? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Konqueror + Gecko? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Konqueror + Gecko? (Score:2)
It would be a wonderful thing for everyone at a technical level.
It would also be inspiring to see the cooperation adn the elimination of redundant work.
It would be cool if mozilla/firefox could be themed by the KDE, but I guess you pretty much get that with konqueror using gecko.
IMAP filtering in KMail (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:IMAP filtering in KMail (Score:4, Informative)
Report from KDE World Summit, Day 7: (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=04/08/30/2 028209
Hope you find it to educational
More complete feature plan (Score:5, Informative)
Though it's not always up-to-date (some devs prefer pushing their code first, and *then* update the page).
HTH,
Kig.
Mirror! (Score:2, Informative)
Rendezvous support is nice, but ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, the article doesn't say so.
Re:Rendezvous support is nice, but ... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the article doesn't say so
~jeff
Re:Rendezvous support is nice, but ... (Score:2)
Support for Jabber-over-Rendezvous as used in iChat to IM with other users on same subnet would be nice too.
Re:Rendezvous support is nice, but ... (Score:2)
Way to go KDE and Apple (Score:2)
Re:Way to go KDE and Apple (Score:2, Interesting)
The underside of OSX is the most fsked up nightmare you can imagine. It's two completely imcompatible OSes crammed togeather with nightmarish consequences. It's a huge pain for developers and a huge opportunity for virus writers should they ever bite.
I initially thought the same as you, "Finally, a desktop unix with a usable UI!" how wrong I
Re:Way to go KDE and Apple (Score:2)
Pocket PC Sync (Score:2)
So tired of keeping outlook around just for the ability to sync/backup...
What about the menu editor? (Score:3, Insightful)
Best update (Score:2)
That's the only thing that's irks me with KDE: Apps just don't seem to start as fast as in Windows. I hope this brings things up to speed.
Re:Slashdotted (Score:5, Funny)
CB
Re:khtml get fewer bug report (Score:2)
More likely it is based on the number of users; you see, Mozilla works on Windows (you know, where the users are). With the increasing number of Mozillia users they have more people testing their stuff, Konquerer doesn't have that Windows user base.
Re:Does it have a proper exchange handler (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Subversion support (Score:2)
This isn't redundant. [slashdot.org]
Nor is this, though after reading it I wish I could edit it, oh such awful grammer. [slashdot.org]
My parental post here wasn't either; the one following it was, as it said basically the same thing as me.
Conforming, yes, I conform with people's standard views of what is reasonable an
Re:gmail? (Score:3, Funny)
Gmail doesn't support Konqueror, but Konqueror now supports Gmail.
Re:gmail? (Score:2)
Re:gmail? (Score:2)
Re:Slashdotted already (Score:2)
Not that anybody actually reads the FAQ, but wouldn't information on using Coral be something good to put in the FAQ, under the section on submitting stories?
Then, if (and this is a BIG if) the editors were to view the page (using the Coral link) before posting the story to the front page, the Coral cache would have had a chance to get to the page before the /. effect took place.
And, while I'm offtopic to the main discussion; how about a Slashdot.org story, maybe once a month, where discussions about Slas
Re:Thanks a bunch (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree, this part of GNU/Linux still need work, the structure of Program Files\ApplicationName in Windows or Applications/SingleFileWhichIsTheApp is a lot easier to manage instead of putting everything into
Re:some KDE myths (Score:2, Insightful)
Online polls are the joke of the
century; it doesn't even require a motivated script kiddie to render then worthless.
A single post alerting the faithful on a zealot-ridden site can skew the result so
much it makes American presidential elections look fair and well organised.
This is so obvious, I have in fact never thought about it this way. "He guys, on www.xyz.org, I've put up a poll
Re:some KDE myths (Score:2, Insightful)
times of KDE apps on GCC. One need only look at the recent fuss
over ugly KDE hacks (such as prelinking) used to bandage up the design and coding
flaws in the decrepit KDE architecture to see the truth
When was the last time you used kde? You may be surprised at the speed improvements kde has made recently. I used KDE up to version 3.0 where I finally found it to be so bloated and slow that I actually returned to windoze. Of c
Re:some KDE myths (Score:2, Insightful)
Where's the beef? (Score:3, Insightful)
put more emphasis on usability if you don't want linux to fall in a few years
Define user friendly.
Re:again, a lack of priorities. (Score:2, Insightful)
although the screenshots show that the UI is getting better, the UI of KDE and GNOME is still severely not user-friendly.
I agree that there are a lot of areas for improvement, but I don't think that they are behind Windows or Mac OS X. Both of those environments have significant shortcomings as well.
put more emphasis on usability if you don't want linux to fall in a few years.
Both the projects have usability teams, but even without them I don't understand why you think that way. Poor usability d
Re:again, a lack of priorities. (Score:3, Informative)
You obviously never had to reconfigure your Windows in any way. I have been power-using Windows since 3.11 and after switching to Linux about one year ago I was immediately surprised at how intuitive everything configuration-related was compared to Windows.
Properly configuring your system is pretty hard with Windows - most of the interesting settings are hidden in obscure places where no one in th
Re:slashdot rendering incorrectly? (Score:2)
hit ctrl and +, then ctrl and -. it will change your font size up and down, forcing firefox to re-render. no refreshing, and it will be rendered correctly.
SLASHDOT EDITORS: find out what this problem is and either submit a bug to mozilla or fix your broken code.