KDE 1.1.2 is out 253
Title says all. KDE 1.1.2 is out for the masses. Press release is here. Please use the Mirrors . (note: ftp.kde.org doesn't have the files yet, but ftp.de.kde.org. have it). Go get it. Try the themes and the new (and very colourful) icons, and enjoy. Update: Currently, it's available only as a .tar.gz, and .tar.bz2, and for Debian (Sparc & Intel). No binaries for most of the distributions yet. (RedHat - please make it faster this time - hint!)
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:3)
Re:qt 2.0.1 and kde (Score:1)
And yes there are enough differences between 1.44 and 2.0 that would make trying to port current version of KDE rather large task.
www.plig.org/xwinman (Score:1)
Re:1.1.2 is a step up... (Score:1)
Case in point, when I showed my mom GNOME, she said "Oh, that's nice. How does it do the ripply thingy?" I didn't even try to explain that GNOME doesn't do the rippling, because the ideas are a bit beyond her. But when she saw it crash to command prompt mode, because I tried to open the GMC, she laughed and made a crack about how maybe linux wasn't more stable after all. Linux isn't GNOME, but a LOT of newbies/uninformed people think so. And when they see it crash, they wonder why we like it so much. When I showed her KDE, she tried it out and she was amazed that the system could handle so many things at once; Internet browsing, emailing, graphics design (with the Gimp), 3D modeling I was doing on Blender, programming/compiling on another VT, and a load of little games on the last open desktop. And KDE showed it, but it held up. Which is why I admire it; it seems to be able to handle a LOT. And its file manager doesn't crash when I close one of its open windows.
Gnome and KDE together (Score:2)
I'd really like to see the gnome and kde developers get together and work on making it so that each other's apps will be able to optionally look like whichever desktop environment they are run under. ie. some kde/qt app using a gtk+ theme, or a gnome/gtk+ app using a kde/qt theme.
These are just my opinions
Mike
Everything at Slash Mirror (Score:1)
ftp://128.253.254.56/kde112 [128.253.254.56]
SlashMirror: Where to put files for fellow /.'ers
What's cool about KDE (Score:2)
Most everything is where a windows user would expect it to be, yet it's different and more powerful enough for them to start recognizing the power of linux.
KDE makes a newbie linux user feel at home, he's got nice menus for everything and a consistant look and feel among all applications - Things like a windows (or mac) user take for granted.
So now i've started walking down the long road of converting everybody in the house to be linux users, KDE sure makes it a lot easier to convince them not to press the reset button every time they see something that's not windows.
BTW, I dont think any one has the right to whine at other people's code. If you think KDE sucks, don't use it. But don't come insulting the developers, for releasing thousands of hours of hard work for free.
Re:I Love watching KDE & GNOME duke it out (Score:1)
Like Rodney King said "Can't we all just get along?"
Re:GPL's restrictive also. (Score:1)
You can link with any license freer than GPL, but the whole package become GPL'd.
So you can create a product combining XFree and the Linux kernel, and that monster would be GPL'd.
Re:Time for war... (Score:1)
Some of the most humbling experiences I've had were when I have had opportunties to meet some truly talented folks who didn't display their talents in a flashy manner, nor did they boast of their great abilities, nor did they look down on others for not having their gifts. I've known musicians that fit in this category, graphical artists, chefs, carpenters, and others.
I'm not lumping the whole lot of us in this category, of course. In fact, one of the aspects of the Open Source Community that has so drawn me in is the frequent willingness of its members to help those who are less knowledgable or at times less talented than they. I believe that is something that will carry our efforts a long way.
Humility and selflessness are the outshoots of wisdom, rather than cliche or a warm-fuzzy feeling.
Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth..
--Jamin Philip Gray
jamin@DoLinux.org
Um... Eterm works great in KDE (Score:1)
Re:KDE w. Enlightenment (Score:2)
ah, wishful thinking... alas...
--
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
?package(gnome-control-center):needs=X11 sections=Apps/System\
title="Mouse Properties" command="/usr/bin/mouse-properties"
And RedHat has something similar. If you can't bother to make your package follow the distribution's policy you're going to have a package that looks poorly put together. WM-specific menu hacks are **EVIL**. See update-menus(1).
Daniel
two words of advice: nondestructive install! (Score:2)
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
[a] fine. i agree RPM is not a standard..but you have to start somewhere. i'll be fine if it works with deb/rpm/tgz whatever as long as the damn thing WORKS.
[b] if every windows program asked you to pick an icon and drop it on the menu would you do it ? I want A STANDARD WAY FOR THE **APP** TO DO IT AT INSTALL TIME. Its unbelievably frustrating when there is no way of doing this.
[c] From what i understand/saw in redhat 6.1 there was no standard way. i'll check on this.
[d] Fine it has a help viewer -- SO WHAT ? what use is a help viewer if it doesnt have hooks to the application to add it's help pages to the help system ? I want A STANDARD WAY FOR AN APP TO ADD ITS HELP TO THE HELP VIEWER. And that means any desktop period. gnome/kde whatever.
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
Re:Time for war... (Score:1)
My review of it so far?
Its still slower than CDE and windows, though it has become far more integrated than I remembered it. Over the past two days while I've been fighting with a new install, and a completely new X interface I was bouncing up and down whenever something worked right, and frowning and scratching my head whenever it didn't.
I was scratching my head because KDE has become windows to a certian extent. Programs don't give error messages anymore, they just die silently, or worse, they never start at all. Searching my harddrive for clues turns up lots of core files, some of them with info, some of them 0 byte. I never used to have core files on my old install, and I'm not sure the prettiness is worth not knowing what the hell is going on.
Back to the original point, "Time for war...":
speaking from a warriors point of view, I can understand why they've said for years "We don't want your newbie questions, go away." I've said exactly the same thing quite a few times. This isn't just being a general bastard towards someone, its fighting the urge to give in and use a pretty desktop with pretty features, because once you've surrounded yourself with a pretty interface and you have no idea how the underlying system works, you've lost your ability to keep your own system running.
*shrug*, thats the way I see it anyway.
Happy day to the KDE users, I'll probably switch back to WindowMaker.
whois
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Re:1.1.2 is a step up... (Score:1)
I installed Red Hat 6.0 + all the latest patches and Linux crashes hard every few hours. KDE is stable as a rock. I also run KDE on my Solaris Sun box and it is quite stable, although kwm from 1.1.1 won't work (I use kwm 1.1 and everything else 1.1.1).
Hopefully 1.1.2 will be at least as stable and have better support for Solaris.
Re:Time for peace... (Score:1)
tongue, firmly, in cheek
LinuxPPC (Score:1)
-confidential
AIM: confdntl98 ICQ: 150685 E-Mail: above... you can figure it out ^_~
Re:How the hell do you remember your userID? (Score:1)
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:1)
KDE is great (Score:1)
Well the KDE projekt should not be flamed by all you GNOME people and vice versa. How come the two of them can't live together - maybe even work together?
Yes, I know the QPL is not exactly the GPL - but what does it matter?
KDE is one of the things that is very very good for linux!
Re:Time for war... (Score:1)
Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth..
for the rest of are going to the stars.
Re:Standardized Help (Score:1)
Re:KDE is great (Score:2)
1. KDE is LGPL
2. QT is QPL
Re:LIGHTEN UP (Score:1)
Gnome looks great. It has a few things I really like, (lots of cool apps for the tool bar) and some things I don't like (instability). One thing I'll say about KDE is that it is clean. The UI is clean and to the point. The source tree is also clean. Just download qt and the KDE source files and that's it.
KDE has been running fine for months on my Solaris box with no crashes or lockups (once I downreved kwm to 1.1 from 1.1.1). I've even run out of swap and the system gracefully recovered.
I look forward to compiling KDE 1.1.2. I just wish the KDE folks would update their bug database better.
KDE w. Enlightenment (Score:3)
Please use mirrors! (Score:2)
Re:Broken (Score:1)
KDE / GNOME (Score:3)
The ability to configure is really what people want.
Joseph Elwell.
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:1)
Peace!
Re:first (Score:1)
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
I infer from "like a shell script call from an RPM" that the original poster wanted a standard way to automatically add an item to the K menu when an application is installed, not a way for a user to manually add an application to the K menu.
From a quick look at the "Configuration file handling section" [debian.org] of the Debian Packaging Manual [debian.org], Debian also has a mechanism to run scripts during the installation of a package (it seems to talk about creating configuration files, but I don't know if that means it's incapable of editing existing configuration files), and the *BSD package facility also has such a mechanism, so a feature such as this doesn't depend on using RPM.
Then again, Debian also appears to have a mechanism to let you add items to all "well-behaved" window managers/desktops, as shown in the Debian Menu System documentation [debian.org], which it appears the script run when a package is installed could use; I don't know if KDE is "well-behaved" in that sense, i.e. whether Debian packages for KDE include scripts for /etc/menu-methods.
Re:qt 2.0.1 and kde (Score:1)
--
Re:Its too big! (Score:4)
1) KDE is a bit large; but the installation of KDE doesn't take up THAT much space, binary-wise. I don't know the exact numbers but last time I checked it was close to 30MB; you are correct. But it's an entire user environment, with MANY utilities. We can't compare it to Windows because a) windows is at 4.1 (or so they claim) and b) KDE is already better than it, despite being at 1.1.2. When I say better, I mean that it has more apps, it's more stable, and it looks cooler. What else matters? Oh, and it's a helluva lot faster than Win98 on this machine at least (overclocked Celeron300A).
2) Linux takes up less than a meg. The kernel fits onto a friggin' floppy! It's not that large, really; the source code to it is, but on my system at least the entire kernel (once compiled and made into a binary) which is 2.2.6, is less than a meg. How large is the Win9x one? I don't know offhand; some figures would be nice though.
3) yes, X is large, but when I downloaded version 3.3.4 (yup, downloaded it over a 56K... crazy me) it was about 30M (still compressed). I don't know how large it was when uncompressed, because I didn't bother to check, but I'll bet that the source code was pretty large too. But the binaries! That's what this is really about in the case you've made. The binaries for X are not that large, really; and it doesn't take up that many resources on my machine. I can run X and three Konsoles, all compiling different software, and my machine doesn't even break a sweat. (God bless Linux.) Personally, I run Blackbox with KDE stuff (the panel and the FM) because I notice the speed! differences. BB is FAST, man. And perty, too.
Well, just more of my $0.02.
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:1)
I definitely see KDE as the standard shipped desktop, especially for corporate use, because it feels more standardized than Gnome. Gnome has a more organic feel, and I'd expect it to be preferred by people that like to tinker.
Okay, I'm done stating the obvious for today.
(I'm judging by 1.1.1, BTW - haven't gotten a chance to check out 1.1.2. It may be very fun to tinker with, for all I know.)
For LinuxPPC? Yes! But.. mirrors? (Score:1)
Thx for the URL, and thx to Franzo!
But, can we d/l this from a mirror?
Just trying to be a good citizen...
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Relax! (Score:1)
The US is an incredibly self-sufficient country, and we lead the world in many (of course not all) technological areas. Did you know that Microsoft has a market capitalization greater that that of the entire GNP of Spain? That's just one company! If California were a separate country, it would have the sixth-largest economy in the world. That's just one state!
Of course we don't think we're the only computer users in the world. But look at any graduate science program at any college here, and you'll see it's filled with non-US citizens. Now, do US citizens go to Finland, India, Russia, or China to get their degree in CompSci? Hardly.
And as far as you in Europe having "technologies that ...americans will only dream of and will never touch", umm... name one?
You may be surprised to know that your mobile digital cell phones are quite popular here, too. I know Europeans have a high rate of cell phone usage, but that's because your local residential service charges by the minute - unheard of in the States for residential service. You need to ditch your lazy-assed State-run telecos and allow private companies to compete for the service.
What sort of strange intense rage is it inside of Europeans that just busts out whenever a US citizen lazily refers to the rest of the US as 'everybody else'. If only you guys could work up that sort of intense rage over fascism, or high taxes, or your crappy little socialist beaurocracies, then you'd be onto a good idea.
Only for Whindoze Developement! (Score:1)
Re:What most people want... (Score:1)
If most people bought a computer to be productive then we'd all be running 486's. The average home user buys a computer for multiple purposes, usually with some sort of spoken intention of improving their productivity, but with the real intent of playing games, going online etc... How many non-programmers do you know? Too many people come home from work to go play on their computer all night, not come home to work out their budget all night.
Joseph Elwell.
Re:looking forward to testing this (Score:1)
Who was arguing? (Score:1)
That's why KDE/GNOME is likely to suck (Score:1)
And as a coder, I'm sometimes suspicious about the crowd of ppl who rush things: what is the average talent of KDE / GNOME coders? When I code I always make sure the proggy is smoking and steaming, what about these people? Those object models are definitely under-rated.
Re:Packages for Debian (Score:1)
Re:Its too big! (Score:1)
-Aaron
Re:KDE took up all the bandwidth of a certain ISP (Score:1)
Of course, once you add the sources.list line, it's no problem at all to hit it repeatedly. I use potato, and run apt-get a couple times a week. There's so little work involved, why not run it often?
Re:GNOME (Score:1)
:)
-----------------
Your attention please everyone, if I could just say a few words... I would be a better public speaker.
Re:KDE w. Enlightenment (Score:1)
Beer recipe: free! #Source
Cold pints: $2 #Product
Re:Packages for Debian (Score:1)
Re:Packages for Debian (Score:1)
deb http://ruins.tdyc.com potato kde
deb http://ruins.tdyc.com slink kde
C++ going for it? No thanks (Score:1)
No thanks; personally, I'd rather use GTK+/Gnome, at least that one can be easily used with other languages than C++.
GNOME Road Map (Score:1)
Re:Its too big! (Score:1)
As for the memory usage, yeah. You're right. KDE is awfully big. I have a weird problem with X, though, and my running X always takes up around 24-25 megs. Maybe it's something I've set up wrong (1024x768, 32bpp, using windowmaker?), but it doesn't seem to give any performance problems regardless. Swapping in Linux makes the system a little chunky sometimes, but never stalls it like under NT. With 64mb of ram, the computer is still far more responsive with linux/KDE than NT.
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:2)
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:1)
Re:1.1.2 is a step up... (Score:1)
I was looking at some of the KDE2 is it just me or does it look substainially more like GNOME? hmm
Cut the FUD (Score:2)
"You always read about Miguel de Icaza going to this press conference or that GNOME presentation. But you never hear anything from the KDE guys. Maybe it's because they're too busy coding and getting things to work right."
If you would bother to check on the GNOME status reports you would have noticed that there were over 1000 CVS commits between August 30-September 7. Does that sound like the GNOME hackers are sitting on their hands?
Also, anyone else notice the lack of a GNOME2.0 pre Alpha version? I have.
1) Version numbers are arbitrary and almost meaningless. 2) GNOME had a much later start than KDE 3) 1.0.50 (roughly equivelant to KDE 1.1.2 in amount of changes) is well on its way towards release. Bugs are being rapidly slayed as we speak. 4) GNOME 2.0 is already on the discussion table
Why people want to spread missinformed FUD about free software projects is beyond me. GNOME and KDE are both thriving and competing and will be for a long time to come, deal with it.
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
The LSB does not need to specify a packaging system. All I'm saying.
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
In the Debian system, at least, it appears that applications - in the sense of "the actual application code" - don't install menu items, a script in the package run by the package installation code installs the menu items.
Thus, the application doesn't have to be distribution-specific...
...only the installation script does.
If applications are distributed as both RPMs and Debian packages, that's not an issue.
However, if it's possible to just ram an RPM through Alien and install it on a Debian system, one could possibly argue that it'd be nice not to have to distribute applications as both RPMs and Debian packages, in which case a non-distribution-specific menu-installation scheme would be required.
(And, yes, such a scheme - one at least as independent of which window manager or desktop you're running as Debian's - sounds as if it'd be a good idea.)
Re:KDE w. Enlightenment (Score:1)
The biggest problem with RPM... (Score:1)
Is that you can't tell it to install 'this' package in 'this' location.
It is apparently possible to make things relocatable, but no-one ever does.
(It is high time that the packaging systems, build systems etc. were put closer together.)
John
For reference... (Score:1)
could anybody detail where these assembly statements are -- I haven't got myself KDE 1.1.2 yet, not gcc 2.95, since I'm on a 56.6k modem with metered phonecalls, and go back to uni. in 2 weeks (so I'll wait...).
Also, how does it compile on non x86? If there are C alternatives, then can you simply tell the system to use those?
John
Re:KDE w. Enlightenment (Score:1)
The beautiful looks of GNOME come mainly from E.
The themability of the widget set is poorly done, and in any case only allows you to redefine some of the drawing routines.
E can do its own internal widgets, but these appear to be a little simple and slow. That said, moving dialog layout logic into the window manager is IMHO a very good idea, since this makes consistency between widgets and decorations much much simpler
John
Re:Relax! (Score:1)
Meh, now I need to relax, just my pet rant =P
Nick
Re:Two different (sort of) ways of doing things. (Score:1)
Re:Time for war... (Score:1)
I'll take issue with that last sentence...I, for one, am known by my friends as the only person they know that runs Linux. They also seem to think all I do is compile my kernel (they have no real idea what that means, as a general rule). Yes, I do love to tinker with my computer, but I also have other interests; I'm currently a sophomore psychology student at (bleh) the University of North Dakota. I also crave knowledge in the fields of genetics, evolution, cell biology, and theology. Aside from other interests, I have other hobbies too! I love flying my r/c plane, baseball, model railroading, etc.
Yep, I'm a nerd. But I *do* have a life outside of computers. Don't generalize an entire culture of people based on what you know about a few of them.
Re:Time for war... (Score:2)
They read an error message that says something obvious, the call tech support and asks what it means, the tech support answers by repeating the error message word by word and now they understand!
People bother to learn all other tools before they perform any serious work with them, but when it comes to computers they do the opposit. 10 year old kids know a whole lot more than people that are payed to use a computer!
Re:KDE and Qt (Score:1)
You want TrollTech's programmers to work for free? Well, you first. Stop collecting a paycheck and you can write all the Qt apps you want.
Gee, I could get Microsoft NT and Visual Studio for each developer...for less!
Maybe, but then the user evironment costs money. Unless you're shipping boxed software or something similar, where the user isn't really your concern, it comes out cheaper in the long run. It takes less than a dozen users per developer to make Qt cheaper.
Re:What's cool about KDE (Score:1)
Most everything is where a windows user would expect it to be, yet it's different and more powerful enough for them to start recognizing the power of linux.
That's exactly what I don't like about KDE (and all similar projects). It tries to mimick Windows, which has simply a bloated, far too complicated UI. People need to get used to many completely unintuitive UI quirks to use Windows, and the same is true for KDE. Just put someone who *isn't* used to using computers at all in front of Windows or KDE and see for yourself... If you think that it isn't possible to operate complex things like computers with simple, intuitive interfaces, consider that most of the time, you don't control *all* the features of the computer, although the UIs seem to want to force you to by putting buttons, menus etc. under your nose, while at the same time they prevent you from doing some things for no particular reasons other than sloppy design (for example: can I hide all those useless tray icons? can I change the background color of all windows, without making it impossible to see the contents of those windows that insist on having particular foreground colors? etc. ...). If this is a PC disease, I hope that we'll soon have many simpler task-specific devices for getting our jobs done...
Re:What, Gnome should get special treatment? (Score:1)
GNOME is a viable desktop for end users right now, its not just marketing. I use it daily and havn't had it crash in as long as I can remeber. Weeks. I like its configurabilty and flexabily more than any other interface (no, its not just a pretty face)
Re:Works fine here (Score:1)
What versions of gcc, binutils, glibc did you use?
Re:1.1.2 is a step up... (Score:1)
>pre Alpha version? I have. Also, the GNOME cvs
>version didn't work right for me; it skipped all
>of the IDL related
>items, and I bet that could be one of the
>reasons... something CVS complained about was
>file permissions incorrectly set.
There is no GNOME2.0 pre alpha because gnome was started a year after KDE
and no one should use CVS expecting a stable product so there is no reason to complain.
I am using todays CVS gnome and finding its advances quite nice, though as Enlightenemnt does more it's begone to take over the desktop portion of GNOME (or KDE).
It will be interesting to see what KDE's themes do for looks, esp. how well will gtk themes match real gtk. From the screenshots I've seen of KDE, even with the latest themes, I find it a bit gawkey (personal oppinion
The thing both do is bring new applications to linux which is in everyones best interest.
--Ben
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:1)
That way one would could simply say "Download package for your system(RPM,DEB whatever), type pkgadd name and you are done"
Re:Its too big! (Score:1)
Besides, I use Caldera 2.2 with KDE, and it is far more responsive and STABLE than NT or Win98 on the same machine. And I only have 64 MB....
Re:XFCE (Score:1)
Re:Please use mirrors! (Score:1)
Several, because whenever there's a new release of KDE, the mirrors are conspicuously entirely void of any whisper of the new version that's just been announced.
This is especially frustrating, as the mirrors never seem to actually *get* the complete new fileset 'til AFTER the "everybody's downloading from the master site 'cause it's not located on any mirrors" syndrome has passed....
It'd be great if, PRIOR to the big announcements, someone made sure that at least some of the mirror sites actually had the new stuff so as to spread the load, etc. 'Til then, it'll continue to be a frustrating "catch 22"
*sigh*
Re:KDE w. Enlightenment (Score:3)
There are patches to KDE's wallpaper setter floating around which make it work with Eterm. Search the archive of the KDE user mailing list (on the web at www.kde.org [kde.org])
Thirdly, the konsole program in KDE 2.0 supports transparency - so if you download the CVS versions, have fun.
HTH
George Russell (russell@kde.org)
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:2)
a) Interoperability with Gnome is in the works as we speak. Remember that it wasn't until RMS gave his official pronouncement of "free" that the Gnome guys would even speak to the kde guys. Some still won't.
b) I haven't looked yet because I'm at work, but are you sure that it's not already there? Most kde apps I install with rpm add a menu item automatically.
c) There is a way, switchdesk, and it's used by Redhat and Mandrake. It's GPL so feel free to rip it off for your own use. Or use kdm/gdm and choose the desktop at login. Or use any of a half-dozen other wm choosers out there.
d) Ummm, the help is standardized. Everything's in html under $KDEDIR/share/doc/appname. Since kdehelp is a html browser, it makes sense that the kde help files be html. However, most sources include the sgml version as well, and use the ksgml2html tool to generate consistant help manuals.
Re:Packages for Debian (Score:1)
Re:1.1.2 is a step up... (Score:1)
HTH
George Russell
Re:Its too big! (Score:1)
Why does it use so much memory? Ps and top report the amount of memory being used by the number of pages mapped to your process. Because the Banshee has 16MB of framebuffer and 32MB of control registers the process size will be at least 48MB. Of course, this is using almost no RAM in your system since it is real memory or registers on the board.
i don't know if this is generally true or not, but if the numbers you have for memory usage by your x server seem unreasonably high, this may be the reason...
Re:"the Linux de facto standard desktop"? (Score:2)
Yeah. It helps to have competition. (Score:1)
..and it fixes that gradient bug (Score:1)
Update: kwm Author: Matthias Ettrich
It's going to look a lot better on your PPC now...
Re:For reference... (Score:1)
Re:this i'd like to see... (Score:2)
As for all the shouting, why don't you "just do it"? I do believe there's a standard, but since I work with Qt and KDE/Qt, I can't say for sure. If there isn't, WRITE ONE YOURSELF AND SUBMIT IT TO KDE AND BE THE HERO OF THE DAY! If you're a developer, and you say you are, this should be a piece of cake. Everything already goes to standard directories and everything already uses standard files and everything uses standard formats. This isn't Microsoft. It's Open Source. It's Free Software. It's a community. That means if you have an "itch" and you can code, you go code and leave the whining to AC's.
I Love watching KDE & GNOME duke it out (Score:2)
On! On! I'll be in the bar watching it on the Biz channel. First person I meet with source in either tree gets a free beer on me.
LIGHTEN UP (Score:2)
That was probably a little too prompt (Score:2)
Packages for Debian (Score:3)
Add
to yourThey had 1.1.2 days ago. There are also binary KDE 2.0 snapshots available there.
Re:KDE is great (Score:2)
In a way it's like linux vs ms... the mindcraft benchmark fiasco basically made linux say 'oh, gotta get better' and we did, and everyone benifits right?
Reading Comprehension (Score:2)
I prefer the source releases myself (Score:3)
Compiling lets me provide further optimization for my platform (using PGCC, for example), and with apps like KDE and Gnome, every little bit helps to keep them running as fast as possible.
On another note, Kdevelop (a quite cool IDE) isn't included in 1.1.2 (although it had been considered), since the Kdevelop folks don't think it's quite ready. While a few might be disappointed by this, it is an example of one of the core OSS philosophies, that if it isn't ready, it won't be included, and IMHO, that's a very good thing. For those who want to try it (and don't know where to find it) http://www.kdevelop.org.
I am currently using the 1.1 beta, and it is very good, only a few rough edges. It will be an outstanding addition to KDE when the developers think it's ready.
It is available as RPM from Mandrake (Score:4)
this i'd like to see... (Score:2)
[a] PUH-LEASE PLAY BETTER WITH GNOME !! At least have a standard way to communicate with gnome or something. and the same goes for you gnome guys.
[b] Have a standard method we can use to add an app to kde menus (NO, the stupid
[c] Standard way of switching between desktops (gnome/kde/afterstep). usekde scripts are NOT THE ANSWER. Use the control panel thing to switch if possible...allow the user to do it without editing
[d] STANDARDISE THE HELP. Including the documentation which RPM automatically makes the devloper put in %doc in the specfile is nice. A nice text/html/sgml integrated help viewer is nice too.
Component Model (Score:3)
I've never used KDE and I've used GNOME very litttle, but I'm interested in the subject of component models. I was an OS/2 user and the WPS had a truly object oriented backend, that worked with SOM (a CORBA ORB!). Then OpenDoc showed up as the next big promise. The feature list was impressive. It was cool, it as CORBA based, it promised todestroy the concept of "application" as we know it (everything was going to be a component).
Enough for an introduction =). What are the directions KDE and GNOME are taking about these things? Are they just targeting a pseudo document oriented desktop as the one included in that OS we all know? I remember having read that Bonobo is based on OLE 2.. is that true? is KOM/OpenParts cool? It would be very interesting to have these things replied, at least for me.... bye! =)
Much ado about nothing (Score:2)
I'm glad to see a new version of KDE come out. I don't use it and don't like it much but there are several people I know who use it and like it.
I really am baffled by all the fuss about Gnome and KDE and their 'integrated desktop enviroment'. As far as I can see a whole lot of effort is going into providing arriving Windows wienies with a "drag and drop' desktop. Is there more to it than that?
I use a 'homemade' version of WMaker, did you know there is a configureator deal in the later WMakers, I was just told about it and yes it is there ... hmmm I don't like it, I'll stick to editing text files thanks. Anyway I hate icons too they screw up my cool desktop pictures and take up space.
The point I'm trying to make is that there is something for everyone here. I love the flame wars as much as anyone and am guilty of starting quite a few of em' .... but they got to be FUN or there is no point.
We are getting a _lot_ of newbies now and they are complaining about the dumbest things so we need a lot of patience now.
I'm not sure 'taking the desktop' is worth it to tell the truth ... how does that go now ... "To gain the world yet loose your soul" ... somthing like that ;).
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Re:qt 2.0.1 and kde (Score:2)