KDE Plasma 5.5 Has Matured Past the Point of Plasma 4 (phoronix.com) 111
An anonymous reader writes: KDE's Plasma 5 desktop received a lot of early heat for being unstable, missing functionality compared to the older Plasma 4, and other changes that irritated Linux desktop users. Fortunately, with the recent release of Plasma 5.5, they have hit a stage where there's fairly wide agreement that Plasma 5 has now matured past the point of Plasma 4. Ken Vermette looked meticulously at the KDE stack for 2016, including how it's working on Wayland, the setup, widgets, various new features, and more.
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Is Plasma 5.5 still has resource intensive as Plasma 4.x? I found the latter really slow, and ultimately uninstalled KDE from my system.
Not that it matters any more to me, since I've settled down w/ Lumina.
Of course ... (Score:5, Insightful)
They've added 1.5 to the version, of course it has matured.
I remember over the years companies taking v1.1 and renaming it v 8.1 or something equally stupid ... because clearly lying about the major version number means the product has matured.
Version numbers are cheap, and in the hands of marketing they can say anything you want them to. ;-)
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The KDE series largely tracks the Qt version, so
KDE 3 - Qt3
KDE 4 - Qt4
KDE 5 - Qt5
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"The HP200A was the first product made by Hewlett-Packard and was manufactured in David Packard's garage in Palo Alto, California......
The product code was chosen to give the impression that HP was an established company. "
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I'll have to give it another look.... (Score:3)
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The best I was able to do was to get a window to be centered on the screen when I opened it.
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Do ANY Linux desktop environments save window position? I don't think any of them do. It's up to the developer of the application to handle that, under Linux.
And you know what? The "your window position isn't always saved" thing drives me NUTS on Linux. It's one of the little "fit and finish" things that Windows and OS X do so well, but never seems to get taken care of with Linux DEs.
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Do ANY Linux desktop environments save window position? I don't think any of them do. It's up to the developer of the application to handle that, under Linux....
Really? None of the Linux desktop environments do it? Wow.
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Why should the app developer care about where on the screen the window is? It's a user's preference on how the desktop looks and is used, and, as such, it should be done via the desktop interface.
... It's one of the little "fit and finish" things that Windows and OS X do so well...
Yup.
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KDE has allowed you to *set* window position for many years now. In addition, the WM allows you to configure absolute window position/size/opacity/etc. on a per-window basis. Every one of my main windows has a pre-configured size and position.
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And this douche is why we're perpetually wondering if this year will be the year of the Linux desktop. Way too many attitudes like this can be found amongst the Linux Elite.
Isn't it obvious to you yet? They don't want normal people to use Linux.
It's not that we don't want normal people to use Linux, it's that we don't want Linux dumbed down to a normal level with no way to turn the dumbness off, which is what usually happens.
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I am not talking about me digging through menus to *set* the size/position, but the desktop remembering the size/position by itself when I adjust it ion the desktop.
Would a window menu item to the effect of "save window as default" do what you want?
This would let you:
- easily update the window default parameters without hunting for and tuning its defaults in some other menu.
- only do it when you WANT to - thus not annoying other users who don't want it to work this way (and also not causing
Save and undo-save window defaults. (Score:2)
Would a window menu item to the effect of "save window as default" do what you want?
Also: If the manager remembers the previous default and switches the menu item to something like "restore previous window defaults" or "undo save window as default" when the window is at the default location, accidentally hitting the menu item when something else was intended would also be easy.
(Same comments about being fine with me if you use it and this posting becoming prior art.)
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accidentally hitting the menu item when something else was intended would also be easy.
UNDOING accidentally hitting the menu item when something else was intended would also be easy. B-b
Re:I'll have to give it another look.... (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd agree that some of the community doesn't think about stuff like that, but on the whole, KDE is the least frustrating desktop environment I've ever used. And I've probably used more than most.
I'm not saying it's not without its faults, but KDE actually has plenty of very thoughtful touches, sane defaults and UI polish. OS X is generally pretty good and then there is Windows, 'nuff said.
All just my personal opinion of course. When it comes to things like GUIs, different people will always favour different ways of doing things.
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I'd agree with you, up to KDE 3 -- after that it took a nose dive. Its just a shame that Trinity didn't succeed because KDE used to be great.
(this message posted from a system running KDE... its still my daily environment)
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I'm really quite partial to LXDE. I also kind of like Cinnamon which is a fork of Gnome IIRC. I don't do so well at keeping track of all that stuff. :/
However, I've tried a whole ton of them and I use LXDE. I made my own little dock that pops up when I mouse over the top of the screen. Meh, it works for me. Back before Christmas I took a screenie for someone, I forget who. I might as well share it anew.
http://i.imgur.com/tnptzQN.png [imgur.com]
I find it insanely fast on new hardware and still really fast on older hardw
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I prefer WinXP, but of the linux desktops I've messed with, KDE 4.x is the most usable and least annoying. For the first time in the 18 years I've been trying to find a linux I can love, I could probably live with it as a daily desktop.
Then I looked at KDE 5.x ... which is apparently starting the slide to copying Gnome. All sorts of annoyances and missing functionality. Won't be going there, nope...
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It's one of the little "fit and finish" things that Windows and OS X do so well
I'm not sure I'd say OS X does it well, from my experience at least. It seems to work fine most of the time but some of the core utilities, especially Finder, 'forget' their window size on seemingly ransom occasions and it annoys the hell out of me.
On the other hand, most (if not all) of the GUI applications I tend to use in KDE remember their size and position without a hitch. Things like Dolphin and Konsole, that I am very particular about in their arrangement, open up in the same layout every time. Grant
Window Maker (Score:2)
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In Windows it's always been up to the application developer too, if I recall correctly. Many apps save this information in the registry. I don't think Windows itself does this for the apps.
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I use KDE5, so I'm only going to speak about it. KDE5 is far, far more configurable (and powerful) than the Windows scheme. I can, for example, configure all windows with Thunderbird" in the title such that they fold into a paper airplane and fly to the taskbar when I minimize them. I am not going to go into an exhaustive list. I merely picked that one as a radical example of something of which Windows has never even imagined itself capable.
Re:I'll have to give it another look.... (Score:4)
... the last time I tried out KDE, I was frustrated that I was not able to configure it to remember any window's size and position upon closing that window, so that it would be the same size/position the next time I opened it.
Really? All versions of kde I have used have been able to do this, with varying degrees of convenience. In KDE 5, right click on the title bar and go to "more actions".
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... with varying degrees of convenience....
Perhaps that's the rub. I went digging into the window control panel and came up empty. That and other expeditions proved fruitless for me. When I checked online, I saw some comments about the feature not being present because it interfered with switching hardware while the system was running (?!?!).
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In any case, as I said, I'll try it again. I've saved your instructions. thanks.
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You can also left click on the window program icon on the top left. There are a really wide variety of window pinning options. You click through two menus and end up in a system wide tabbed dialog with zillions of options for controlling various kinds of window behavior for all kinds of applications. This is a bit more awkward than the old 3.5 interface, which was really convenient, but it does the job and has a lot of depth. You certainly can't complain about missing features.
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You click through two menus and end up in a system wide tabbed dialog with zillions of options for controlling various kinds of window behavior for all kinds of applications. ...
Are any of those zillions, "remember the last size and position of the window when reopening it"? When I last went through them, that particular one was not present. But as I mentioned twice so far, I'll check out the new version.
You certainly can't complain about missing features.
I can if the feature I want is not there. Quality, not quantity. :)
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Are any of those zillions, "remember the last size and position of the window when reopening it"?
Yes, why are you asking? It's right there, your options are: "do not affect"; "apply initially"; "remember"; "force"; "apply now"; "force temporarily". Overkill if anything.
Re:I'll have to give it another look.... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Yeah... (Score:4, Informative)
No [kde.org]
Re:Yeah... (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow, that is a monumentally stupid bug. I mean, really YYYY-MM-DD is the only thing which results in any sensible lexical ordering of dates, and remove the most ambiguity.
This tells me shiny is taking precedence over useful.
That's insane.
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Not exactly that. What they did was junk the entire KDE locale, presumably in order to have less code to maintain (hard to figure out why else they would). It is actually less shiny -- no preview of what the change will do, etc.
It isn't as if KDE's user space consisted largely of people who liked to customize the shit out of it. Oh, wait...
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"user space" -> "user base". Doh!
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The feature existed in 4.x, the developers decided to toss it, knowing full well - I hope at least - that qt has nothing comparable. So what you (and they) say is technically true, only bullshit. For me, it is preferable to have a feature implemented (not ideally in KDE) to not implemented (ideally in QT).
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Holy cow that is awful. Although I've been using KDE for the last fifteen years or so my current workstation is KDE only because of long refresh cycles. Since I can't have KDE 3 I think I'll switch to MATE. Not great, but better than that.
For those who can't be bothered to follow the link: one of the "improvements" in KDE 5 is removing Locale and using Qt's limited locale functionality. Which eliminated nearly all locale configurability. The lack of configurability won't be fixed by the KDE team because it
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Also, you seem to lose the ability to change on the fly: the change applies only when you re-login, which is mind-blowing in 2016, for me, the whole point of KLocale was that it worked around the UNIX's environment variable problem.
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There's no option to set the time using the strftime format? Like %A %x? (Not a KDE user so not sure if such is enabled. It seems like it'd be something, somewhere, that you can set.) There's gotta be a config file somewhere... :/
Several Years Later .. (Score:1)
Firstly, Kudos to the plasma team for getting this far. I'm sure the KDE users are happy.
My only comment related to this (not just Plasma/KDE but more generally, many software rewriting endeavours lately), is that I wonder how far along we could've been if we started with the original base and incrementally improved and/or evolved things instead of always going for the 'quantum leap'; throwing things out and starting from scratch. Google is of late the worst offender in this regard (but certainly not the on
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LXDE and Terminator as the terminal. Further up thread, I posted a link to a screen shot taken back before the holidays. Works for me. I'm not big on eye candy so much.
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I can't speak for specifics, especially with virtualbox as I usually use VMware, but linux in general has had driver issues with 3D rendering in virtual machines for a while... and it's recently gotten worse.
I fought w/ a bug for months before I got a resolution - the fix was to set virtual hardware from version 11 to 12 on the VM for vmware, upgrade to the 4.3.x kernel, and update to Mesa 11.1 or higher so i could use OpenGL 3.3 -- the OpenGL 2 fall-back had the bug.
It's possible your issue has nothing to
KDE 3.5 (Score:1, Interesting)
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Different wallpaper for each virtual desktop (Score:4, Informative)
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So, you complain that you need the features implemented in activities, but proceed to bitch that you don't need no stinking activities.
Perhaps you do need activitites after all.
meta+tab. learn to use it and stop bitching about the solutions to your problem.
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Can it do a single wallpaper spanning a multimonitor display? Can it NOT attempt to auto-arrange monitors upon connection? Either of those, alone, would have me agitating to reinstall one of our workstations.
The fact that Gnome (afaik) cannot me made to do either of these is annoying. The fact that it *used to be able* to do a spanning wallpaper, and that feature was *deliberately removed*, is just utterly galling.
Nothing says "polish" like having an 8K display in a conference room... that can't set a meani
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> What I would give for a light modest (but capable) C++ widget set built only on OpenGLES. Linux UI development is so horribly confused.
The sad part is, if a magic fairy stumbled upon your request and PWOOFed exactly that into existence, it would only add to the confusion.
Would it support Vulkan?
Also are you sure it isn't somewhere in this massive list of things?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The huge amount of things available is in many ways a strength, but in many ways obnoxious.
Still feels like an early beta (Score:2)
Judging from the users input [phoronix.com] and my own experience Plasma 5.5.3 still works and feels like an early beta other than a final product which has seen several minor releases.
I don't know what happened to the KDE project but surely something was lost during the transition from KDE 3.5.x to KDE 4.x/5.x.
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It is worse than that. It has taken huge backwards strides in stability, in the past 4-6 months to the point where it is unusable. Kwin crashes randomly. The entire desktop freezes up when you try to move windows around. Menu items in the filemanager randomly stop working. Unfortunately gnome is not too much better either at the moment, so I am back to using a regular window manager. Hopefully they get their act together fast.
Some killer apps (Score:2)
Let's not forget some of the killer apps that are part of the ecology, two that come to mind are konsole and krita, both best in class by a mile. Who can complain about a painting program that many artists are starting to prefer over Photoshop, but free? I'm also impressed with Kdenlive. I never edited a video before and in about 10 minutes I produced my first cross fades. There's a whole lot more, including, let's not forget, almost the entire browser world, except for Mozilla and IE.
Seriously? Does the author use KDE? (Score:2)
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Akonadi, 5 years and still sucking (Score:1)
I guess now they only need to ditch (as in permanently remove and prohibit the main coder to commit to any KDE repository again) Akonadi and fix the useless mess that Kmail has become (can't delete messages from imap Courier server, instant crash when trying to compose message with non-english dictionary, etc...) and Kontact in general, and I might consider updating from 3.5.
I mean, I try to actually do work with my computer.
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systemd (Score:3, Funny)
Once Poettering releases kerneld, he can start working on winmanagerd and denvironmentd for all the new systemd/kerneld distros.
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You can use KDE 3D compositing with other DE's (Score:5, Interesting)
I've switched back and forth to just about every *NIX Desktop Environment since I started using Linux in 1999, loved KDE 3.x, loathed KDE 4.x until it became stable and used KDE 5.x on and off. The good thing about KDE is that the windowing and 3D effects subsystem is modular.
I'm pretty much settled on using XFCE but I'm using KWIN KDE compositing/3D effects with XFCE [hobo.house] for a nice compromise between a 'classic' desktop that's rock solid but with the nice themes, windowing effects and features that KWIN (KDE's compositor) brings to the table.
Patheticly lame bugs languishing for years (Score:2)
Have they fixed the stupid bullshit dumbass bug where konsole will not transmit control-space or control-shift-@ to console mode emacs? It's been there for FUCKING YEARS now. As far as I know, konsole can't transmit these keystrokes to ANY program. I have tried over a dozen other console apps, and NONE of the others have any trouble at all with these keystrokes, in the same session.
If it makes any difference, I'm using Arch x86_64. I have tried everything. No hint where those keystrokes are getting sucked u
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My mini review. (Score:1)
Hi, I'm a regular KDE4 user.
Sometime ago I installed Sparkylinux (not the last) on an external HD and booted one notebook of mine with it.
Though I initially intended to use Xfce, I decided to give Plasma 5 a try, out of curiosity.
It is (IMHO) already more usable than Xfce (mainly because applications like Dolphin vis-à-vis Thunar).
Since I'm used to KDE4, I noticed:
- some configs changed places like "performance"/compositing leaving Desktop Effects and being transferred to Monitor configuration.
- some t
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You are shitting me, right? We have the source code moron. Every one still runs, you just can't be too incompetent to understand that FOSS isn't proprietary and package maintainers build them all from the source for us. If we need to, we can revert to an earlier revision, but there is rarely any need or advantage to that.
KDE direction (Score:1)
Who thought the lackluster performance of KDE5 were needed? KDE4 was fine, no easy way to opt out. Why can't I do a simple roll-back out of the fucking one year mess of KDE5 with massive missing features.
KDE4 was finally OK, suspend session and everything. Now these idiots thinks they need to "improve" it without asking?
Half-baKed dumbshit "improvements", cute fucking pastel care-bear colors, who gives a fuck?
Better leadership at KDE is needed, get the fucking nerds out of the executive room.
Re:so still not as complete as3.5 then? (Score:5, Informative)
so still not as complete as3.5 then?
And not nearly as polished as 4.10 was, either. Here is a list of just the first few problems that I started to list, before the problems started really piling up:
* Maximized windows do not have thier scrollbars flush against the screen edge. Thus, Fitt's law cannot be used to quickly put the mouse cursor on the scrollbar.
* Vertical panel does not auto-hide with second monitor attached.
* No System Monitor widget. Apparently being worked on.
* Volume Up cannot be set. Volume Down and mute work fine.
* Krunner no longer accepts Bash commands. I have a bash command that I run periodically, this would work in Krunner in KDE 4 but does not work in KDE 5.
* The panel app freezes often. I can intermittently freeze the panel by clicking on More Settings in the panel configuration toolbar.
* Lots of crashes, most of which are not reproducible. I've had the Plasma Panel crash, System Settings, and other applications.
* Keyboard Layout indicator missing.
* Keyboard State widget disappears from the system tray, no resolution in the KDE forums.
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* Maximized windows do not have thier scrollbars flush against the screen edge. Thus, Fitt's law cannot be used to quickly put the mouse cursor on the scrollbar.
> try setting the window border size to 0. Most people I know don't care about Fitt's law, though.
* Vertical panel does not auto-hide with second monitor attached.
> "Panel Settings -> More Settings -> Auto Hide". Not too bad, is it? Oh, it crashes before you can see that.. doesn't crash in my distro.
* No System Monitor widget. Appare
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I'm running 5 and I tried these:
1) Appears to not be a problem in 5, I jam my mouse to the right of my screen with a maximised window and can scroll.
2) Works for me on three monitors.
3) There is a system load viewer - not sure if that's the same thing.
4) As a hotkey? Works for me.
5) This works for me, it has a 'command line' option that runs the given text.
6) Hasn't happened to me, I've been running for quite a few months now.
7) I had one crash so far, as I say, a few months of runtime. The crash may not ha
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1) Appears to not be a problem in 5, I jam my mouse to the right of my screen with a maximised window and can scroll.
Good to know, thanks.
2) Works for me on three monitors.
I was terse, this issue is when the vertical panel is "between" two monitors. Discussion on the KDE forums:
https://forum.kde.org/viewtopi... [kde.org]
3) There is a system load viewer - not sure if that's the same thing.
Only shows CPU load, not network or memory use. There are a few third-party widgets, but none are nearly as functional or useful as the KDE 4 widget or it's KDE 3.5 heritage.
4) As a hotkey? Works for me.
I cannot seem to set Win-] as Volume Up. I have Win-[ as volume down, Win-{as mute and Win-} as pause. Us VIM users take our keyboard shortcuts seriously!
5) This works for me, it has a 'command line' option that runs the given text.
Thank you, somehow I
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I'll add a couple more things I miss (lost going from Kubuntu 14.10 to 15.10):
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So instead, if you haven't done it already I respectfully suggest trying one of the desktops that has Plasma as its default desktop: OpenSUSE, PCLinuxOS, KaOS, or maybe Arch.
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I clicked on this to make a comment questioning if KDE 5 has managed to catch up with KDE 3.5, but I was beaten to the punch.