Enlightenment now KDE compliant 120
teraflop user writes "The Enlightenment window manager now works with KDE, along with a load of other window managers. If you want to run the same window manager under Gnome and KDE, you now have several choices, including E, Blackbox and WindowMaker.
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Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
Which ever product has the best code -- the most functionality -- the most stability, is the one that will dominate the Linux desktop.
I know which one I think is best
Macka
Re: Power users? (Score:2)
This is not the definition of a power user. Instead, they are interested in tools, lots of tools, at both low and medium levels. They are also interested in fiddling with settings.
"Ask a gnome fan why he prefers gnome to kde and you would hear stuff about enlightenment themes."
Enlightenment is not a part of Gnome. This is like saying you prefer the L.A. freeways over the Bay Area freeways because you drive a Ferrari. A non sequitur.
Much better than GUI *or* CLI. (Score:1)
It needs a lot more practice than lerning to move a pointer and click buttons or typing commandos, but once you've masterd the transformation, you will never touch a keyboard ore mouse again.
Believe me!
Re:what is the point? (Score:1)
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
This applies even to the author! If I write a program and version 1 is GPL, version 2 if it is based on version 1 must also be GPL. You own the copyright, yes. But your "ownership" is under the same contions as the GPL.
Linus can't tomorrow say "This open source software movement was neat, but now that I've got them hooked.." Nope. Of course this is a simplistic example because much of the Linux code is owned by other people, but you get my meaning.
You can probably get more info from http://www.fsf.org. From "What is the Copyleft?",
"To copyleft a program, first we copyright it; then we add distribution terms, which are a legal instrument that gives everyone the rights to use, modify, and redistribute the program's code or any program derived from it but only if the distribution terms are unchanged. Thus, the code and the freedoms become legally inseparable. "
Re:GNOME? (Score:1)
This is very true. And the reason HURD exists, is because Linux isn't a GNU project.
Re:I would like for you to explain ... (Score:1)
I think you've got the groups backwards. New users (especially those migrating from doze) are used to things crashing as well as the form over substance of eye candy. Power users, on the other hand, are actually DOING stuff with their computer already and don't need distractions.
No, no, no (Score:1)
The owner doesn't have to follow the terms of the license because he is not a licensee, he is the licensor.
Look at it like this: remember when your dad told you "in my house you follow my rules"?
Now, do you think he also told that to himself?
Anyone got a tarball? (Score:1)
Re:A little confused - what's the diff? (Score:1)
A Window manager is what takes care of placing and decerating the windows temselves.. KDE DOES use a seperate window manager called kwm. The window manager itself is something simular as if you didn't have a taskbar in Windows. The provide other ways to launch programs beside's that little start button. There's ALOT more to it here, but I'm trying to generalize.
I've heard of many good things about E on lower end machines, but be warned. The flashy themes you see on e.themes.org DO take gobs of memory.. E can be configured to use less memory, but you lose alot of flashyness. I use it on a 16 Meg machine with the 'Clean' theme, with little problems.. I've tried to add gnome to it, but the memory requirments of Gnome simply kill my little laptop..
Re:Anyone got a tarball? (Score:1)
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
Re:what is the point? (Score:1)
I've read somewhere that in the future KDE will be providing GTK+ drop-in compatible libraries which will be KDE aware so that you can run GNOME apps seamlessly under KDE.
Bah... (Score:1)
Re:what is the point? (Score:1)
> that you can run GNOME apps seamlessly >under KDE.
Woow ! that would really be something worth to see
Re:And GTK+ is much worse than Qt in C++ (Score:1)
Re:KDE had Corba before Gnome existed (Score:1)
I didn't say it was good. (Score:1)
Anyway: if someone is interested in writing a good C wrapper, ask me how. Putting work in it it can be made arbitrarily good (within the bounds of C, which are more painful than your message seems to imply)
Some to try: (Score:2)
The diffrence between a "window manager" and a "Desktop environment" is that the "desktop environment" includes a window manager, as well as a bunch of other applications that use the same widget styles.
Re:A little confused - what's the diff? (Score:1)
What I have come to install on weaker machines recently is XFCE: really elegant, CDE-like looks, easily user-confugurable, supports drag and drop of a sort and is relatively humble in its demand on the systems ressources.
I do use a mixture of applications from "generic X" and KDE under it, and it probably will interact even better with Gnome-apps, since XFCE is GTK as well.
I can really recommend this for smaller machines.
BTW, since I dont have sufficient documentation with me right now: anyone around who knows if there is an option to start kfm in a way that it doesnt put any icons on the root-window and works only as a file-manager/thumbnail-viewer/browser etc.?
I would like to play with it a little under XFCE, to find out if it interacts well with it, but I dont want the KDE-Style icons.
Re:so are punctuation marks! (Score:1)
......,,,,,,;;;;;;::::::(((((())))))>>>>###$$$$
KDE's got a a few kinks still (Score:2)
Session management: you can't save your session whenever you like, only when you quit. There is no option NOT to save your session when you do quit. Not like session management in any desktop environment, whether win (explorer windows), CDE, gnome, or kde has ever been anything more than a joke anyhow, so I never really use it and would like to keep it off.
Desktop pager: It constantly loses all but the first two desktops. The remaining two lose their names.
Panel: No usable web browser button on the panel. Something like CDE's sdtwebclient would be nice, which uses netscape -remote, or some similar voodoo with hotjava.
Tooltips: Those damn useless tooltips for those equally useless desktop folders pop up unbidden and over any foreground window when the mouse just grazes one, and don't go AWAY unless you "swat" them away with the mouse. Major annoyance, and I can't seem to disable them.
General dumbness: The CD player applet from the panel really amazes me. Click it, it launches. Click play, it plays the CD. Okay, nice. Now click it again, and it launches a NEW instance. Close the rogue instance and it stops the playback. DUH. If there's ever a use for KUniqueApp, this one is *it*.
Help in most apps: the content usually isn't too great, but also, clicking help several times launches multiple instances. Should only be one help instance per app (with an option to clone off the help window)
The notepad app: triple-click doesn't work. Triple click (and sometimes quadruple click) are nice features that work across many text editors including notepad on win and emacs on *nix. Minor annoyance, but enough to really irk me (since i copy and paste lines all the time). The toolbar buttons are also really miniscule.
Bug reporting: it's arcane and bureacratic, relying on specially formatted emails. Some bugs have remained open for over a year now. So I just gripe here instead.
We didn't knew! (Score:1)
If any WM has support for the KDE hints and stuff, let me know, and they will eventually get a headline in the KDE news page as well.
This is good news (I think) (Score:1)
Today's English Lesson: Oxymorons
Windowmaker fully KDE compliant? (Score:1)
BTW, does Afterstep have any plans to be Gnome/KDE compliant?
Alex Bischoff
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Re:This is good news (I think) (Score:1)
Gnome and kde compliency interacting (Score:2)
PS. Even though I've programmed gnome stuff before I've never even TOUCHED window manager stuff so if I don't know what I'm talking about......be nice....
Call me crazy, but... (Score:1)
So now I'm using a windowmaker login (rather than a Gnome or KDE login) and I just have Windowmaker start a panel. It works well, the windows come back where they belong.
The only problem I have is that if I add or remove desktops, or add or move icons on the desktop file manager, it crashes X. But I rarely do that, and I never need to.
Enlightenment 0.16 (Score:1)
Chris Wareham
Why support KDE? (Score:2)
Why should E support KDE? It works well on its own. And if you feel more confortable with a desktop environment around your window manager, the GNOME should certainly be enough.
Here is a suggestion:
No, this is not only a flamebait (I am fully aware of the usual flamewars between GNOME and KDE). I am thinking about this seriously. Currently, several companies are reluctant about developing for GNOME because of the GNU GPL (this is the same for KDE, although the problems with the license are different). If GNOME was released under a BSD license, I am sure that these companies would not be reluctant anymore. And then the number of good applications would increase.
Before you object about the fact that these applications would be closed-source, I must say that they do not have to be. But the developers and their bosses would be able to choose, and thus they will not be reluctant to at least look at GNOME and start coding something. And if some very good applications are released under a closed-source license, it will probably not take long before someone implements an open-source equivalent.
Currently, the licenses on GNOME and KDE are only encouraging the fragmentation of the Linux desktop.
Re:what is the point? (Score:2)
you also have the ability to make your desktop look like Mac, windows, amiga, SGI, startrek, WindowMaker, or whatever else you want...
If E looks like nintendo, that's because you set it up that way.
ICCCM (Score:1)
Chris Wareham
Open desktop! (Score:2)
Some at one point in the brilliant future in which Open Source rules totally, you'll have the choice of OS (Linux, Sun, BSD, etc.), the choice of GUI (KDE, Gnome, etc.) and the choice of winmanagers.
It sure beats trying to pass freedom as the ability to change fonts, colours and wallpaper!
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Re:Windowmaker fully KDE compliant? (Score:1)
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Re:Why support KDE? (Why support gnome?) (Score:1)
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
I spent the better part of a week chasing down missing and outdated libraries trying to make gnome compile. KDE built and ran on the first try.
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
Re:kde? (Score:2)
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
Re:GNOME? (Score:1)
The one benefit that GNOME has over KDE is that it has been designed with a CORBA core since the very beginning. This *could* make it easier to get working reliably. KDE 2.0 will have a CORBA layer as well, but it will be added after a lot of development has already been done.
The KDE folks will probably still produce a very respsectable CORBA desktop though.
Tne applications that will make most use of the desktop features will probably office applications suites such a KOffice and the GNOME Workshop.
Iggy
IceWM! (Score:1)
IceWM [cjb.net], on the other hand, had been Gnome-compliant for a long time and supports KDE too.
MarkJ
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:1)
So, essentially, I can change the license of the original code that I wrote, but I can't change the license of the contributions from others if they submitted it under the GPL (which they're required to do under a GPL license), or change the license of the combined/merged code written by myself and other developers.
Now, of course, if I did make any changes to the license, they would not be retroactive since a license is essentially a contract and you agreed to that contract before (but that doesn't mean you need to agree to it in the future!).
This is my understanding of copyright law. As long as you wrote the code, you own it, you own the copyright, and you have the right to do anything you wish to it as long as you don't break any contracts/licenses already entered into.
window managers for you 486 (Score:1)
ones, like wm2, lwm, flwm etc. if you can deal,
maybe 9wm. fvwm at the most. how much ram you need
will also depend on the frame buffer (resolution)
ceretainly NOT enlighenment on that one.
Re:IceWM! (Score:1)
GNOME support is in a patch, but I don't think the patch will work right with the current source release of bb.
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Re:Bah... (Score:1)
Try painting a picture from the bash command line. :-)
Or are you just not competent enough??
John
OT: What is X10?? (Score:1)
What is X10?
I though it was a device intercommunication spec.
John
Re:what is the point? (Score:1)
Just to offer an example, check out Absolute_E on e.themes.org. Beautiful, functional, and uses less screen real estate than the default theme.
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So is checking grammar. (Score:1)
John
Re:I would like for you to explain ... (Score:1)
I actually used to use just plain X (no WM at all), starting up a couple of xterms and an editor in the right places in ~/.xinitrc . Than I tried fvwm/fvwm2/afterstep/windowmaker/etc... But now I have been "enlightened" and have a 3x3 virtual screen full of windows, where I can do quite a lot of real work. I will even be going multihead after Xfree4 comes out (depends on $$$). So after adding another 21" monitor and streching E across it, I will be one happy camper!!
(btw, I remember when E was fvwm-xpm, so there!)
Has anyone noticed (Score:1)
That the biggest boosters of KDE seem to be Windows Share/Crippleware crowd? Interesting isn't it?
Re:KDE Compliance (Score:1)
But the ideea is great ! wow
Re:A little confused - what's the diff? (Score:1)
Seems like the quick way to do that is to just bring up kfm and delete the icons from the desktop. "Trash" might fight, since it doesn't seem to include a "delete" option on its context menu, but a quick trip to the shell and rm -rf ~/Desktop/Trash will get rid of it.
Don't know if kfm puts it back or not.
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Michael Hall
mphall@cstone.nospam.net
Re:This is good news (I think) (Score:1)
GNOME and KDE are both doing good jobs. they're going to both be using XDND (wel gnome alreayd does since GTK does int is dnd implimentation and KDe is moving to use XDND in their next release) and Enlightenmnet's File Manager when it gets put in will use XDND too.
Re:Why support KDE? (Score:2)
GNOME and KDE are not encouraging the fragementation of the Linux desktop--the flame wars are. Why on earth do these little people run around crying "my desktop system is better"? It beats the hell out of me, and frankly it's a little sad.
That aside, GNOME cannot be un-GPLed, and that is what you propose when you suggest moving to a BSD-like license. Once you GPL your software, that's it buddy. In order to move to a more "restrictive" license, you have to totally rewrite the code. Fat chance at getting current GNOME developers to do that.
two weeks? (Score:1)
cd
make install
done. all dependencies accounted for, etc.
honestly, if you're on BSD it's dead easy, if you're on any major linux distribution, it should be almost equally dead easy, there's a site somewhere (no idea of the URL offhand) which keeps recent versions of gnome on tap in (S)RPM format.
Re:what is the point? (Score:1)
I wrote one for Qt long ago.
New Afterstep has Gnome support. (Score:1)
Disclaimer: I don't use Gnome so I can not attest to how well it works. Also, since I have been without net access at home (only at work under NT) I haven't been able to keep up with the newest devel snapshots.
Re:Why support KDE? (Why support gnome?) (Score:2)
Re:What is KDE's default window manager? (Score:2)
Take a look at the KDE manuals as well as the specific window manager's manuals. These should give you the clues you need.
Re:Gnome and kde compliency interacting (Score:1)
Re:OT: What is X10?? (Score:1)
Re: MySQL GPL'd (Score:1)
Re:Not realistic (Score:1)
Black Box (Score:1)
a poor student @ bournemouth uni in the UK (a deltic so please dont moan about spelling but the content)
A little confused - what's the diff? (Score:1)
Also, I'm sticking Linux on a 486/100mhz laptop with 12mb RAM. I know this'll run X, but how about a window manager like E that's a step above, say, twm?
Re: (Score:2)
KDE Compliance (Score:4)
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Geoff Harrison (http://mandrake.net)
Senior Software Engineer - VA Linux Labs (http://www.valinux.com)