Interview: Ask the KDE Developers 292
Gnome has gotten the lion's share of Linux desktop publicity lately. Meanwhile, KDE has been quietly working on KDE2.0, which will hopefully contain several interesting features including a WWW browser called Konqueror and the long-anticipated KOffice, a free office suite that may provide a viable GPL *nix alternative to StarOffice and Applixware. Rather than speculating, we've decided to ask the people who are actually doing the work what they're up to. Post your questions below. Tuesday we'll send 10 - 15 of the highest-moderated ones to selected KDE developers. Answers will appear Friday.
Would've been nice if you'd waited... (Score:1)
KOffice support for MSOffice file formats (Score:5)
What level of support will KOffice provide for MSOffice file formats? I need nothing less than 100% support for at least Excel and Word file formats. It would also help if the support was entirely transparent - no kuldgy 'export' or 'import' required.
Also, an Exchange mail client would be REALLY nice.
-josh
Future UI (Score:4)
My question:
How far do you think the GUI can go from here? What's next in GUI design, and what'll be the next big thing after pointy-clicky?
dylan_-
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About Konqueror (Score:2)
What kind of features will the Konqueror browser have? Do you expect it to be something on the level of Mozilla or better, or will it be less feature-loaded initially?
The old KDE (Score:1)
A question (Score:5)
In light of this, where do you see the desktop in, say, 5 or 10 years time?
KDE's Legacy? (Score:3)
What do you think will be the most important legacy from the KDE project? A desktop environment? A framework for applications? KOffice? A bunch of little applications that make life easier (kppp comes to mind)?
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QDMerge [rmci.net] 0.4!
Magellan (Score:1)
KDE vs The World (Score:2)
User Interface Engeneering (Score:3)
Although one goal of KDE is to have the user interface immediately familiar to Windows users, what is the project going to do to correct Windows user interface problems, such as putting the close button next to the maximize button? (The problem here is that users will often accidentally press close instead of maximize and vica versa. There are many other examples in Windows, such as the confusing start menu: KDE's is better, etc. Copying the Mac is not the best thing either ex. "Use the Chooser to connect to the network AND select printers." etc.)
Henry Lafleur
QT (Score:1)
License issues:
* you can't fork QT development.
* you can't make commercial software with QT without having to pay Troll.
Technical issues:
* QT is C++, which makes it harder to program it another language than C++.
* QT imposes (or at least strongly encourages) the use of a preprocessor which painfully reminds of MFC.
Mathias
Re:The old KDE (Score:1)
Yes, you can shut off all those eye candy features.
Actually
Gnome/KDE compatibility (Score:5)
Do you see the two projects moving closer together, moving further apart, or staying about the same?
Konq? (Score:5)
KOffice vs. StarOffice (Score:4)
Will KOffice treat each of the applications as separate binary executables, or follow the one-large-binary approach of StarOffice?
Eric
Window Managers... (Score:5)
My question (Score:1)
Desktop Common Ground (Score:3)
Some time back, there were some noises made about the KDE developers and the Gnome developers coming together and finding some common ground that would allow both environments to get (somewhat) get along together.
Has there been any talk between the two camps about standards development and such?
jf
Bloated Hogs! (Score:1)
Dos1->Dos? Office 95->Office 97... the bloat creaps in invariably with newer versions. Looking at the screenshots of KDE 2.0, I am a little worried. Is there a concerted effort to keep bloat to a minimum and make sure that KDE is available to those without 256Megs of RAM and PIII's?
But I must say, KDE (and GNOME) have made linux useable for the masses(aka. my Mom and Dad). Thanks
Will KDE incorporate OO technology and metaphors? (Score:5)
I've read many posts on Slashdot and (and other places) that lament the abandonment of the Workplace Shell by IBM, and even former OS/2 users lament the lack of any similar Object Oriented UI in the Linux world. So then, my question is "are KDE developers familiar with the Workplace Shell, and are there any plans to incorporate similar features and technologies into KDE itself?"
Mainstream desktop (Score:1)
Either would be a boon!
Myxx
Gnome Compatibility (Score:3)
I don't frequent mailing lists of either camp, but I've heard bits over time such as perhaps a common desktop-entry format. That's nice, but I'm far more interested in, essentially, cooperation whenever possible and practical. This is, IMHO, in keeping with the Linux spirit by allowing more choices. From an end user standpoint, the DnD should be compatible, desktops' respective productivity suites/applications should always be able import/export each other's format, web bookmarks ought to be accessible from both sides, and so on. So my question would be, what sort of plans and/or discussions are going on to facilitate compatibility, rather than forcing users to use either one desktop or the other?
I did (Score:1)
More than one question (Score:5)
1. In the 1.x series of KDE, we have seen some nice interaction between the programs and the actual system. However, all that was required was that a program be written in QT, and also maybe use the KDE libraries. My point is that there was not a lot of system interaction and integrity which can be observed in other systems. For example, databases and such didn't exactly have to be standard, KSCD uses its own, and other CD players use THEIR own. Anyhow, will we see a much tighter environment with KDE 2.0, besides what we already know?
2. There was a big problem with what Red Hat did to KDE in it's 6.0 release. Putting it in
3. Will the next KDE be able to read menus from other WMs? Such as E, GNOME, FVWM, etc? I think it is nice that we see such things in other WMs such as GNOME, and it sure would help in organizing user menus. Also, the menu editor in KDE 1.x has been cryptic and difficult. Since there isn't much information on the new system, will it be easyer, more like a tree (yes, Windows-style) of shortcuts or something similar?
4. In the past KDE was not able to interact with applications from other desktop environments very well. For example, if I have X-Chat or Grip (grip is for making MP3s) installed, they won't gain a lot of recognition in KDE because the are gnome apps, same goes for XMMS. Will KDE in the future be able to detect some of these applictions (and will the limit of XPM icons be removed?
That's all! Thanks!
Re:The old KDE (Score:1)
smb browsing (corel filemanager?) (Score:3)
Something for oldtimers, maybe? (Score:2)
I'm therefore a little concerned about how KDE handles the de-facto standards for Linux programs - it seems to me, like, saying: "GUI is the most important thing, and we want it to be "a better Windows".'' Well, I don't. I don't want my rc files look like some Win 3.11 ini files :-) so to say. Don't you feel sometimes that you head for the "more-features-more-gadgets" road? I mean, it's nice to have this or that, but I don't want to abandon what I learned, and I don't want Linux abandon Un*x philosophy, which is, in my eyes, slightly different. A tiny example: why doesn't the commandline from kwm have a history / tab completion / anything that could make it seem a little different than dos?
Note, that I'm using KDE every day and I like it very much. I just - I am just concerned, that's all :-)
Regards,
January
Lead or follow... (Score:5)
My questions are these: What are your ideas for a "desktop of the future"? Do you agree with Dvorak that the current model is ridiculous and needs to be rethought? If so, what will that look like? (3d??)
Interoperability (Score:5)
It is evident that the C++-based CORBA options are pretty slow, and thereby not acceptable for mass use; barring that, has there been any consideration of using a messaging system that is in use elsewhere, so as to both have evidence that it works, as well as a reduction in the proliferation of new APIs?
What comes to mind are:
It is such a shame when new formats have to be designed and managed, when debugged code already exists to implement these sorts of things.
C++ only? (Score:5)
What hardware are you targeting? (Score:5)
KDE v. GNOME (Score:5)
The QPL vs the GPL, / Drag and Drop issues (Score:2)
Also, will KDE 2.0 have the ability to drag and drop objects between KDE/non-KDE applications? I keep hearing about an old drag and drop protocol in X, but I never see any apps actually using it in any way I can tell. KDE does it with kfm but I'd like to, say, drag a mp3 over to koffice and have it embedded, or to kmp3/xmms/gqmpeg and have it load up automatically.
thanks
Re:Konq? (Score:1)
to know what web standards Konqueror is aiming for as
well.
Macka
KMail progress? (Score:1)
So, are there any plans to add a Eudora-like mode to KMail, or to create a Eudora-like mailer for KDE?
Alex Bischoff
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Is it really a viable GPL office suite? (Score:2)
License Issues (Score:2)
Confused users (Score:3)
Kapps not under KDE (Score:2)
Swappable windows managers is one reason why X has remained fresh all of these years, and I'd hate to be commited to one just to use a particular application.
KDE browser (Score:3)
There's been some mention of a new KDE browser effort in the press recently. This is great, as the browser is such an integrated component of KDE and yet the current one doesn't support (e.g.) authentication.
Was there any consideration given to using Gecko as the rendering engine for this?
I'm using mozilla (M11) to post this, and the rendering engine seems pretty much all there now, in fact there's enough working that I find the browser side more stable than Netscape (although not always as functional).
Also, on the endless KDE / Gnome / just a WM choice: I have tried KDE and Gnome both, and found that the tight browser integration caused too many problems for me and I consequently switched to Gnome where the browser isn't so tightly integrated.
I still find myself using a 'KDE' application for building web pages however (webmaker) and that works just fine under Gnome. I've looked at other KDE applications and found that they don't work so well under Gnome though. Why is this? I'd love to see KOffice work OK for me :-)
Are these non-working applications using more features provided by the KDE window manager, or some other part of KDE that I don't see?
Thanks,
Re:A question (Score:2)
Exchange mail client (Score:2)
You should check out Fetchmail [tuxedo.org]. Although I've never used it with an Exchange server myself, the FAQ says that it supports Exchange servers [tuxedo.org]. The beauty of Fetchmail is that it lets you use practically any mail client with practically any mail server. I started using fetchmail because MIT's mail servers use KPOP which very few mail clients support, and fetchmail supported it beautifully. I use Netscape Messanger to read and write my email, but practicaly any other mail client that runs on Linux will also work with Fetchmail (as it uses the standard mail spool).
As a nice added bonus, Fetchmail can transparently check multiple mail accounts at different intermittent intervals. So now I can check my ISP mail account, my main mail account, and my work mail account on a regular basis without having to think about it. When I used to live in the world of Windows I only checked my ISP account about once a month because nobody ever sent me mail there because I never gave out the address. Well, one day my ISP sent mail there because the credit card they had on file for me had stopped working (my bank had issued me a new card for some reason and cancelled my old card before its expiration date). Anyway, I didn't get this email in time because I checked my account there so infrequently and so one day my dialup account with that ISP just stopped working. The moral of the story is that if I had been checking that account regularly I could have prevented the problem. Now that I use fetchmail this problem will never happen again because I've set up fetchmail to regularly check all of my accounts and it takes zero time on my part.
That was just a fringe benefit, though, and it would probably be a fringe benefit to you as well. The main point is, Fetchmail can be used with Exchange servers.
Other windowmanagers and KDE support? (Score:2)
PS The two links I included are just examples; I don't mean to single those two out ;).
Alex Bischoff
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Re:QT (Score:2)
You have to do it in a different way, but it can be done. But is there a need out there to fork Qt in the first place? I don't see any of the other free GUI kits forking.
"* you can't make commercial software with QT without having to pay Troll."
Bull! You're thinking of the old license, not the new-and-improved Free QPL license of Qt 2.x+.
"* QT is C++, which makes it harder to program it another language than C++."
There are good C bindings for Qt. But OO is one of Qt's strongest points. Why abandon it when with just a half dozen lines of code I can inherit a Qt widget to do what I need it to do?
"* QT imposes (or at least strongly encourages) the use of a preprocessor which painfully reminds of MFC."
Then you've never programmed in both Qt and MFC. I have, and there is no comparison. With three simple macros you eliminate 99% of the cruft that goes into MFC code. Trying to code in MFC without the ClassWizard(tm) is excrutiatingly painful. But I can do all of my Qt coding out of vi with no problem.
Re:A question (Score:1)
I hope some KDe dev reads in here. Keep KDE clean, fast and functional!
Re:KOffice support for MSOffice file formats (Score:1)
Part of the issue is that my job is Lotus Notes development so I'm not able to use a different client. Other people are going to have a similar position with MS Office and will need something that will provide the same functions using MS Office file formats.
Josh
Core desktop problem: printing (Score:5)
As for device driver support, I've used Ghostscript extensively in the past and while it's impressive, it's a FAR, FAR cry from being comparable to a vendor-supplied, Windoze-based driver equivalent with regard to quality of output and reliable printing. As an example, try printing a high resolution image to an Epson Photo 700 under Windows and then do the same under Linux using Ghostscript. The two are completely different and it's not in favor of Ghostscript.
All this leads me to my question for you guys. I use KDE along with KWM as my working environment at home. How do you see printing functionality being affected or enhanced by KDE and do you have any suggestions for how to improve upon the current state of things? Is there a huge re-write of printing support under *nix systems that I don't know about and that most applications these days are being coded to? I strongly suspect so, because there's no way in hell Linux will be able to compete in the desktop market if every application is required to write out postscript data manually and/or include printer drivers for every printer known to man. Both Windows and Java take an approach to printer support that ties printing code to display code and I believe something similar is *really* needed under Linux and/or X11. Do you guys have a feel for what the future holds with regards to printer support under *nix systems? Having coded a complete office package yourselves, I'm sure you have a pretty good idea...
Re:KOffice vs. StarOffice (Score:2)
why another browser? (Score:3)
Re:KOffice vs. StarOffice (Score:1)
Re:Is it really a viable GPL office suite? (Score:1)
--
Joshua C. Stein
Superblock Information Systems
Re:About Konqueror (Score:2)
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Completeness of KRASH? (Score:1)
- How "complete" feature-wise will KRASH be compared to the actual KDE 2.0 release?
- Will it be possible to run KRASH on the same machine with KDE 1.1.x without conflicts?
I know KRASH is supposed to be a developer's-only release, but I would like to try it just to get a preview of KDE 2.0.
Video playback (Score:2)
Unfortunately, there is no playback software for two of the three important formats ASF (specs [microsoft.com]),
QuickTime (site [apple.com]), only Real is available (with some flaws in the player, correct me if I'm wrong).
Remember that Star Wars trailer using the Sorenson codec and how nobody could see it without a Windows box or a Mac? I'd like to know if there are any efforts underway to create a replacement format (very hard) or convince the creators (one of them Microsoft, but hey, they're trying to establish a standard with ASF, so they at least have to pretend they're cooperating) to offer a player which can be integrated into X / KDE. The xanim [buffalo.edu] author does his best, but the enterprises won't give him specs on their newest codecs.
BTW, anyone here know about an MPEG-2 player (for unencrypted movie trailers)?
Re:KOffice support for MSOffice file formats (Score:1)
I emailed one of the koffice guys a long while ago about MSOffice file format interoperability. He said that the framework was in place to allow modular file format conversions, so MSOffice file formats would be OK. This was a while ago though, so I would like your question answered by the developers, in case they changed their strategy/made progress on this subject.
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Your attention please everyone, if I could just say a few words... I would be a better public speaker.
KDE 2.0 Licensing (Score:2)
Considering that Redhat once declared distributing KDE to be illegal, and that Debian would include Qt but not KDE, all because of a perceived GPL incompatibility, it seems that the licensing aspects would be very important.
What are the core developers views on KDE licensing? Will we see major components released under the Al, QPL or other license? Is the compatibility problem even an issue with the team?
In other words, considering the GPL/QPL intermix, and paraphrasing RMS, is it wrong to share KDE with my friend?
KMath improvements? (Score:1)
My question is basically:
What work is being done to make KMath a more powerful equation editor (more like MathType from the Windows world)? Is it likely that there might be some integration with LaTex or LyX? I would like to see it possible to embed LaTeX-like code in the document to make prettier equations. Right now, I use latex2html to make
Re:Video playback (Score:1)
A couple of questions... (Score:3)
- Are there any tutorials for QT/KDE programming?
- Is there anyway Joe User can help with KDE2?
- Are there any aspects of GNOME you wish KDE had?
- Many aspects of the KDE interface have a WinNT look and feel(imho). Any particular reason why you went with that style as to MacOS or BeOS?
- Q3Test or UT?
Thanks for a great UI...
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What are the preferred GUI controls? (Score:2)
Re:Exchange mail client (Score:2)
However, POP3 does not an Exchange Server make, in fact most admins don't enable support for it because of bugginess. Exchange users commonly keep mailboxes (with dozens of subfolders including calendar and contact data) on the server. Compare it more with IMAP instead.
The calendar/contact/task data is relatively standardized - dozens of software vendors [imc.org] ship with vCard [imc.org] support in one way or another. The FIPS PUB 98 standard used by Microsoft Mail (yeah, not exchange, I know, but very similar) is a NIST standard, and although available, I can't find it as I write this post. I've looked through it earlier and it's very nondescript (every message must contain a Subject line, a To line, a From line, etc).
The info we need is how this information is accessed. We know it's TCP RPC-based, but anything further will either have to come from Microsoft or be reverse engineered.
That, and the Personal Folders file format would be very useful (we're all itching to find out how they implemented "Compressable Encryption" :)
AVI, QuickTime only containers (Score:2)
Whither Magellan? (Score:5)
-=-=-=-=-
Performance & Video Realistate (Score:1)
Re:KDE v. GNOME (Score:1)
Which isn't to deny the validity of your underlying issue; many Linux users need to read the Linux Advocacy HOWTO at http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/mini/Advocacy.ht
How indispensible is QT? (Score:1)
Do you have any thoughts on.... (Score:2)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:A couple of questions... (Score:2)
Thanks again...
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Konquerer (Score:1)
<SIG>
I think I lost my work ethic while surfing the web. If you find it, please email it to crispy@crotch.caltech.edu.
</SIG>
Convergence: Gnome and KDE (Score:2)
Re:Confused users (Score:1)
I love the choice that GNU/Linux provides. I love offering my friends these same choices when I introduce them to the GNU/Linux operating system. I have multiple sessions configured from gdm. Do you want to use E + GNOME, E standalone, KDE, KDE with E or Window Maker, GNOME + Sawmill, Window Maker standalone, etc...you get the idea. I love it.
The other benefit of having "competing" projects is forced improvement. KDE can borrow ideas from GNOME and vice versa. And the code is there for referrence. With time, you'll see a greater interoperability between KDE and GNOME, rather than a further splintering.
--Jamin Philip Gray
jamin@DoLinux.org
Here's the Really important questions (Score:1)
What, if any, new games are going to be included with KDE 2.0?
How about putting in an Xscreensaver interface like Gnome? The
Gnumeric vs KSpread (Score:1)
mobile & special needs users (Score:1)
What's in it for the rest of us? (Score:5)
Here are seven distinct question areas that follow from that:
Component Architectures (Score:1)
Given that, for the inprocess case at least, you've abandoned CORBA for shared memory in KDE 2.0, have you considered alternative component technologies such as COM, the Component Object Model?
Aside from the fact that it was created by Microsoft, I've found it to be a rather useful. It's fairly efficient for inprocess use (the overhead is only that of a C++ virtual function call, assuming "client" and "server" are in the same "apartment" (in COM-speak), and is language-independant -- assuming you can get a compiler to create the appropriate C++ virtual function tables. GCC-2.95 just happens to be such a compiler. (You need to use __attribute__((com_interface)) in the class declaration.)
It can also be extended to work cross-process and cross machine by implementing proxy and stub DLLs/shared libraries.
The only downside is that there is no free/open-source COM library implementation that operates under Linux. However, it's fairly simple to implement a subset that works on all platforms -- Mozilla does this through it's XPCOM libraries for all inter-object communication.
Just wondering if any other choicse were explored in the decision to drop CORBA...
- Jon
Re:Will KDE incorporate OO technology and metaphor (Score:1)
From a programmers POV the KDE gui is 100% Object Oriented since it is written in C++.
From a users POV, the embedding of applications (when I click a picture-icon a viewer is started and embedded inside the requesting appl) is nothing short of a OO methaphor. The way of working is indeed based on the workbench methaphor which is around since Xerox started that..
Window Managers and KDE 2.0 (Score:1)
Which direction are you guys headed with Kwin, other than the stated purposes of skinning and cutting down on the memory load?
Finally, have you considered(and please forgive me if this is asinine) setting up a way to install a kind of KDE "Lite" that uses fewer resources and has less core function, but runs on older and less powerful machines?
Cuchullain
Re:What hardware are you targeting? (Score:1)
For the high-end market; multi threading of the software is being done, 3D screensavers/games are considered. CAD applications are being made in KDE.
A very exciting market of stuff!!
Re:KOffice vs. StarOffice (Score:1)
Kword is an application of 19Kb.
There are a lot of libraries with every part of koffice, and the kword application can load a library of killustrator to show an inlined document. Kind of loading-on-demand-on-steroids.
Printing is indeed an issue (Score:3)
That appears to be the Qt Way of handling printing.
It is interesting to contrast with other methods that have been used historically and recently:
It is not clear whether or not KDE is using the QtPainter facility, or whether there is need for something like GNOME Canvas...
Re:KOffice support for MSOffice file formats (Score:2)
Internationalization (Score:2)
What kind of support do you provide for localization and internationalization? Do the toolkit itself and all applications support locales (eg, ISO-8859-?), or is everything in American English? What support do you provide for real message catalogues? How much support Unicode for is there? Considering the profound differences--often conflicting and contradictory--in pictorial interpretations seen between diverse cultures, what are you doing to do to bring the idea of message catalogues into the graphical space of those funny little bitmapped icons and buttons? How easy will it be for an entire site to change the default configuration to use an alternate set of text labels, text messages, and graphical devices (buttons, etc) that make sense in its culture? What tools do you provide to developers and to administrators to facilitate this?
Re:C++ only? (Score:2)
Re:QT (Score:2)
Would you say that the worst excesses of Troll Tech's licence were more or less palatable than the Open Group's attempts to hijack X11R6.4 work, via it's licence change?
If Troll Tech seem to be misbehaving, in some way, I hope you can at least see that some of the alternatives out there are a whole lot nastier.
Hopefully, Troll Tech can head into grounds that Sun and the Open Group fear to tread, becoming more open with time, not closed. However, I can't see them being overly thrilled with the idea, if all they get is pelted with rocks every time they make a move someone doesn't like. Under those conditions, diving for cover and staying put would seem the more likely.
Only politicians and dictators win unilaterally.
Re:QuickTime for Linux here (Score:2)
Be aware of one thing: Quicktime for Linux won't read any of the movies you download from the internet. Quicktime is a wrapper for many different kinds of compression formats. What you know as "Quicktime 4" is really a distribution of libraries which contain certain compression formats not found in previous versions Quicktime. Regardless of the version number, each Quicktime distribution is able to read and write a basic set of compression formats that you can manipulate on Linux or any system not officially supported by Apple.
Re:Will KDE incorporate OO technology and metaphor (Score:2)
Just because something is written in C++ doesn't mean it is object oriented. I'm currently maintaining some C++ code that is not object oriented, and I find it terribly difficult to maintain. On the other hand, just because something is written in C doesn't mean it is not object oriented. I'm a C programmer and I write almost all of my code in an object oriented fashion.
I haven't seen the KDE code, and I am not saying that their code isn't object oriented. I'm just saying the C++ != OO.
Mike
--
Mike Mangino Consultant, Analysts International
Re:why another browser? (Score:2)
It is a single bloated binary that crashes on a regular basis, and (more importantly) it doesn't follow a large chunk of the CSS, DOM, and DHTML standards. They keep saying "5.0 will fix all that!!" but it isn't even in beta.
Mozilla, while starting to look nice, is still not anywhere near the quality I would expect to use on a daily basis. The latest Milestone release is still very flawed, and what's worse, seems to be heading even more to being Windows-centric than Navigator 4.xx!! I mean come on, it starts a "Profile Manager" to set up a "Profile" for you when you first run it. Um, helllooo!!!! This is Unix, thank you, I already have a Profile, it is called my user account. Just create a ~/.mozilla directory for your settings and cache, and pop up a nice little window telling me so. Also, I tried both the Windows and Linux versions of M11, and the Windows version seemed more "complete", in that portions of the program that would crash the Linux version would work just fine on the Windows version.
Even KFM is a better browser than Netscape, and the Konq rewrite, with the added fully compliant Java/Javascript and CSS/DOM/DHTML standards will blow Mozilla out of the water.
I'm sorry to say this, being a long-time Netscape user (on both Windows and Linux) but Konq has working now what Mozilla will have six months from now, and given Netscape's track record of slowly but surely eroding the functionality and stability of the Unix versions of Navigator/Communicator, I for one will be happy to see Konq come out so that we can really have a decent browser.
Re:Will KDE incorporate OO technology and metaphor (Score:3)
The WPS' "desktop" is the master object... everything else in the UI is a refinement of that object. It is possible to change the attributes of entire parts of the desktop simply by changing parts of one object higher up in the object heirarchy. I know I'm not really explaining this very well... one of the other people in this thread gave a link to a good article explaining how an OS/2 company created a product that didn't contain any executables other than the install program, and I'll reprint that link here:
http://www.byte.com/art/9602/sec16/art1.htm
Among other things that the WPS allows you to do:
full drag and drop: you can push a file onto an application and it'll activate the application appropriately. In other words, push a text file onto a text editor and it will open the file for editing. Push a text file onto a fax icon and it will activate the fax machine (without opening the program first, if the program is truly WPS integrated). Push a text file onto a printer and it will print out the document directly.
Right click on an object and you'll get a context sensitive menu for that object (which may differ from other objects -- i.e., files and folders would have different options because they're used for different "things")
If you create a program link (an iconic representation of an application) and then move the application to a different location in your file structure, the link keeps track of the new location and updates it automatically.
Of course, one of the less useful but more fun aspects of this is the almost infinite ability to cusotize everything. You can give every folder a different background color, a different font, a different bitmap. It's possible to make certain objects conform to one color scheme and other object conform to another color scheme.
Yes, all these things can be done without the benefit of an OO environment, if you hard-code everything individually. But the way the WPS is designed you need only alter parts of some objects, and the changes cascade down through all their child objects. Very nice.
Re:What hardware are you targeting? (Score:2)
Since KDE 2.0 is supposedly a little leaner, running on that hardware shouldn't be a problem.
KDE & 'Windowsisms' (Score:2)
and such. That's background, now for the question.
Is this a temporary situation, or a deliberate KDE 'design goal' to be like-windows? If some developer out there were to find some time outside of work to redo some of them with a new and non-'shame'ful interface, would that be accepted into the codebase, or is it considered that the group already did it 'right' and you only want other kinds of improvements? Is there room for a set of alternate-KDE utility apps, or do you want one true KDE look?
(UI design -is- largely a matter of opinion, so,
if you think KDE's utility apps are already just great, that's fine, but I get the impression that it was just easiest to emulate the windows way on a lot of things.)
--Parity
Re:Just how *easy* will it be? (Score:3)
For example, after trying to install a recednt version of ncurses, I find that anything that uses ncurses now dumps core for me like this:
This includes essential programs like talk and lynx. And because this is Linux, I can't just type to fix the problem. Curses! Foiled again!Remarkably enough, I did finally get enlightenment working. Considering that the behemoth links against twenty-one (yes, that's 21, 3*7) different libraries (try running ldd against it), I'm pretty surprised it's working. Well, somewhat working. It refuses to call up the Gnome configuration tool anymore after the 0.16 upgrade. The RPMs ate my program, again, Teacher. I didn't touch it, really! It won't tell you why. You can't find any error messages. No place to trace it down. No complaints. Just. Plain. Nothing.
The abyss.
After a day of doing that and finding that the harder I tried, the behinder I got, as Redhate Linux configuration bitrot sent my beloved system spiralling into unusability, I decided not to throw good money after bad--to quit while I wasn't ahead, as it were.
So you can begin to imagine the tears of joy that streamed from my eyes, when, on my happy BSD system I typed:
And it worked. It fricking worked! It just did absofuckinglutely everything and it all worked! It fetched everything needed, in pure unmutilated source code. It never blew up because something wasn't there, it just obligingly fetched it, built in, installed it, and kept going without missing a beat. Not only did it work seamlessly, it managed to so without trashing my entire system.I laughed. I cried. I giggled and gibbered with joy. I spat upon the parts of the disk on the Linux box where I thought the wicked RPMs lay smoldering. I sang praises to the mercies and the glories of the Source, whence all solutions come. The heavens themselves opened up, and the epiphany that seized me was nothing less than the full force and fury of the power of the Source. Blinded by the light, I heard the source angels trumpeting from on high (in D major): Death to RPMs! They are the Dark Side of Winix! They will destroy you! Return to the source, brother! Glory be to the Source! By Source alone are you saved!
Ok, deep breaths. Much better. I'm calm again.
I wanted you to know that you did suffer alone, that I too know intimately and painfully whereof you speak. I too have walked the Via Dolorosa that you describe. And I just wanted to share this blissful and fleeting moment of, um, enlightenment with you. :-)
Re:Internationalization (Score:2)
Yes, I know about paragraph breaks. And I even know that in HTML, they're supposed to be with a P instead of multiple BRs.
But the extra question was there that way because it didn't get attached to the itemized listing in the other top-level thread of mine here, the one which has a high score, where it would have been question #8. I wasn't breaking them up into separate pieces, so each question would appear to be the same thing.
And yes, I'm aware that using a full stop is not a sign of weakness. :-)
Freeing GPL-encumbered libraries (Score:2)
The next piece of good news is that I freed the encumbered readline library using my innovative freedline [perl.com] package.
Another piece of good news is that by this device have all the GPL-encumbered libraries everywhere been freed, rendering them useful again as LGPL'd libraries (L standing for Library, of course).
Finally, my last piece of good news is that since then I've found that there are at least three other readline implementations out there, which means that you needn't even use my device. But it would still prove efficacious in freeing other libraries encumbered with the GPL.
Be free! Be happy!
End Discrimination Based on Manual Orientation! (Score:2)
That's snarf-and-barf.
As you see, this "left" and "right" terminology is completely wrong. Last time I looked at KDE, it kept telling me to use left button and right button, despite the fact that this was completely wrong. You see, I always execute xmodmap -e 'pointer = 3 2 1', which takes care of that. But the stupid messages don't track this. That's highly stupid. You can either fix it to track this correctly, or you can stop using messages that discrimate against someone's manual orientation, as I have attempted to do above.
And yes, I actually am completely serious about this.
Re:why another browser? (Score:2)
As for the issue with the readiness of Gecko, I want to know from these guys why they didn't devote their energies into Mozilla rather than rolling their rendering engine? They could have easily concentrated on Gecko, and not have worked on the other browser pieces. Not only KDE have a far superior HTML renderer(that includes full support for XML for those app developers), but the open source community and movement would have benefited from a more stable and product product earlier. Let us not forget that Mozilla is begging for help, and here are bunch of guys re-inventing the wheel.
So, I want to know from the KDE crew, why didn't you contribute to Gecko and embed your product into KDE? Was it pure ego? or Was it something substanitive? I must say that a perspective user, it seems you wasted a lot of time that could have been better spent helping another project and expanding the functionality of your own product.
Re:Just how *easy* will it be? (Score:2)
Language *and* toolkit independence? (Score:2)
Arse! This was basically my question, but slashdot was so slow this afternoon that I couldn't submit it. I wanted to know about more than just language bindings, though. I want to be able to make KDE compliant apps using whatever language and toolkit I want. Are there any plans to make KDE more language and toolkit independent? How can I make my C/Gtk app KDE compliant? What if I'm just using Xlib directly? Or even FORTRAN and Motif? What do I need to provide KDE from my app in order to be considered KDE compliant, and what steps are being taken to let me do that from outside of C++/Qt?
A pet peeve of mine. (Score:2)
My question is: will we have to wait until KDE 3.0 to have true bidi support? KDE 4.0? KDE 2100?
OTOH if there's any remote possibility that bidi is possible to add to 2.x series, I'm more than willing to help.
FYI: MS and Apple both support bidi. Be probably does too.
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Precisely what is slow is an issue... (Score:2)