KDE 4.1 Beta 1 Released 242
appelza contributed a link to Tuesday's announcement of the next step toward KDE 4.1: "The KDE Project is proud to announce the first beta release of KDE 4.1. Beta 1 is aimed at testers, community members and enthusiasts in order to identify bugs and regressions, so that 4.1 can fully replace KDE 3 for end users. KDE 4.1 beta 1 is available as binary packages for a wide range of platforms, and as source packages. KDE 4.1 is due for final release in July 2008." I haven't used KDE much for the past few years, but the screenshots of a "grown-up" plasma are enough to make me correct that.
At least its getting updated (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a fast /. (Score:2, Funny)
Impressive!
I dunno.... (Score:3, Insightful)
How many KDE3-guified apps are going to switch over to KDE4? I don't expect to see very many this year, but next year should be very telling regarding the desktop's popularity.
Re:I dunno.... (Score:5, Interesting)
I dunno ... I'm running kde 4.0.4 right now, and I have to say that while there are apps that are prone to crashing (darned open-source imperative to release early and release often, but, hey, I knew that before electing to install it), I do love what they've done with many things. A few things stick out in my mind: konqueror - VASTLY improved, okular - replaces kpdf and can read MS's "compiled html" (.chm) format (which is helpful for me), the composite effects are not all just eye candy - things like dimming background windows help me focus on the foreground application and pushing my mouse into a corner of the screen (default: top-left) to show all the windows on the desktop (or on all desktops) is HUGELY helpful.
That's just some of the KDE3 apps that are already ported to KDE4. Even extras like ktorrent have already been ported to KDE4, which is nice.
I really miss the PIM stuff (kmail, knode, kalarm, kaddressbook, etc), so I'm really looking forward to seeing KDE 4.1 in the main Gentoo portage tree, even masked, as soon as possible.
I expect to see MANY kde3 apps moved to KDE4 this year.
Heck, I was running the KDE4 version of ktorrent on KDE 3.5.8 earlier this year (yes, I know, 3.5.9 is out), so it's not like it's entirely a problem to have these apps coexist. This provides apps the opportunity to port to KDE4 without needing their users to actually use KDE4 as their desktop.
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Except for very old, stable programs that are not being updated anymore, I don't see what would stop someone from switching over to QT4 (and presumably KDE4).
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Amarok and KDevelop already have Alpha/Beta releases out, and should be done within a couple of months I think (original plan was to coincide with 4.1 but not sure if they will), Kontact will be a part of 4.1.
Konversation and K3b are going to be ported, but I don't know when
Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:4, Interesting)
Historically KDE has fallen down by making configurability difficult for casual users and a pain for power users but at least power users could eventually get things the way they want them. I read good things about how KDE4 is going with that but have yet to see it for myself as it was a mass of regressions from KDE 3.5 the last time I tried it. Once it acquires polish and forward ported features and apps from 3.5, I'll be switching too.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Important Caveats (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Important Caveats (Score:4, Insightful)
If it was meant for bleeding-edge adopters, it should have been called alpha or beta. If it was meant for application developers, call it a release candidate, or split it into two projects and call this one "kdebase 4.0".
Calling it "KDE 4.0" was a mistake.
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Re:Important Caveats (Score:4, Informative)
KDE 4.1 is supposed to be the first KDE 4 version usable by real people. There was a lot of space between 4.0 and actual usability; but the developers have been making rapid progress, and KDE 4.1 seems good in the article, so I'm allowing myself a bit of optimism that it might have enough of 3.5's functionality to be useful -- especially if I can uninstall Dolphin without trashing the rest of the desktop.
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Love the fact that we have competition on the desktop on Linux. It's our greatest blessing!
Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:5, Insightful)
Some people feel that completely removing options is a good idea because they are looking to target corporations and limiting options makes support easier, but I have always felt that KDE's approach is much better. Give the users all the options they could imagine and then let them decide what is best. With KDE's approach you can always have some sort of locked down "corporate default" setting that would make support easier but with Gnome's approach what do you do when a user wants a feature that has been removed?
Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:5, Informative)
No, there's a huge difference between removing options and leaving advanced under-the-hood features, well, under the hood.
GNOME takes very much the same approach as OS X here. For instance, in order to let users adjust how Spaces handles new windows popping up in different workplaces, Apple didn't throw yet another checkbox into some huge and unnavigable control panel. Rather, they left it as an option to be configured with defaults write com.apple.Dock ..., because 95% of users won't want to change this behavior, and those who do won't have any trouble figuring out defaults write anyway.
Likewise, a lot of obscure GNOME / Metacity / GTK+ configuration options that aren't wasting space on a control panel somewhere are still accessible through GConf or a separate configuration file. I'm an "advanced" user, and I like this because it gives me less junk to hunt through when I want to change something in the GUI; and I know many "beginner" users who appreciate GNOME for the very same reason.
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because 95% of users won't want to change this behavior, and those who do won't have any trouble figuring out defaults write anyway.
Well when I was using GNOME there were many things I wanted to change, and I had trouble figuring out how to change them, eventually I managed to change half of them and was told the other half were impossible to change "because people generally don't want to change that" or some shit like that.
I'm sorry for not figuring out GNOME, but somehow on KDE I can change anything I want (to be fair, 4.0 is missing a lot of configuration dialogs for plasma, but that's temporary, they'll be back in 4.1 or 4.2, wh
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You write a basic task-oriented application. You could argue that Gnome is a more modular approach while KDE is a more monolithic approach.
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From Aaron Seigo's blog:
"Hey!" I hear you say, "I see icons on that desktop!" That's quite right. (And, I must say, you are quite observant today.
Well, we now have a folder view applet courtesy of Frederik Höglund. It can view any folder you want, inclu
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Oh, wait, this is
Nevermind
Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:4, Insightful)
If anything, the big tragedy is all of the stuff that's now done by KDE/Gnome that should be done by non-X related systems. Wifi association, laptop power stuff, suspend/resume functionality, and so on... all of these things are now handled through Gnome and KDE subsystems to some degree, rather than handled by a non-X related program that communicates to some graphical widget.
There's been a big loss of separation between parts. It's a shame.
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Likewise, log in to a VT rather than an X session. NetworkManager won't associate with any known basepoint around at login. nmtool doesn't even have the ability to force a connection.
Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:5, Insightful)
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KDE 4.1 has completely removed the ability to put files or icons on the desktop [blogspot.com].
No they haven't, and claiming that they have only makes you an idiot. For starters, the new method is more flexible and powerful. Previously, you had a desktop-folder that had all the stuff that was in your desktop. This new way allows you to have several such folders which contents is displayed on the desktop. You can also have filters that only show certain type of files, instead of shoving all the files in the folder.
In the future you could have an automated system that changes according to the app you
Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:5, Insightful)
During this time, they used the opportunity to fix some long-standing issues and redesign some key components. Things were broken and in development for a long time, while the stable release 3.5.x went into bugfixing mode. Gnome was making steady improvements to their 2.x codebase this entire time.
KDE is only now starting to reap the fruits of this effort. The real power of the platform will become more obvious in the coming years.
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Ever since they started on KDE 4, they seem to have decided to run the entire project as if it were a perpetual beta. Something doesn't work? Rewrite it! Can't finish the feature on time? Release anyway!
And because of this, it should have been called a beta. They tell me that 4.2 will finally be ready...
Unless they go back to their previous development method where they actually gave a shit about quality, I'm afraid KDE will plummet in popularity. I've already switched away from it.
Well, I find that 3.5 is still more usable than anything else, so I'm staying with that until 4 becomes usable. If it never does, I'll write my own.
No, I'm not kidding about that last part. Probably start with DWM or something -- I don't need that much out of a WM/desktop environment. Just a few more features to Fluxbox or Compiz and I'll be happy.
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Re:Is KDE Taking the Lead? (Score:5, Insightful)
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They also tell me that a lot is coming back in 4.1, and that 4.2 will be fully ready to take over from kde3.
Am I Missing Something? (Score:2)
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I may have an option turned off, something misconfigured, or perhaps AA is only used for higher-end video cards than I have.
Re:Am I Missing Something? (Score:4, Informative)
Mesa doesn't support AA IIRC.
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It may also chew up too much CPU or GPU time to use it on a desktop, more than any perceived benefit.
Beta? (Score:5, Funny)
What?! The first beta of beta?
Re:Beta? (Score:4, Funny)
What?! The first beta of beta?
Naw. The Department of Redundancy Department got its hands on the press release.
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Re:Ob (Score:4, Insightful)
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Does it actually use KDE3 somewhere under the hood? Or did you mean you want more apps to be ported?
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Re:Ob (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Links Please (Score:2)
Re:Links Please (Score:4, Informative)
deb http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/ [debian.org] experimental main non-free contrib
deb-src http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/ [debian.org] experimental main non-free contrib
Re:Debian Lenny How-to kde4 (Score:5, Informative)
1. use the url's above minus the [bracketed] words in
2. Set pin priority. I borrowed from http://wiki.debian.org/Kde4schroot [debian.org] I also prioritized a couple of packages to be sure they didn't get upgraded. (mythtv-frontend is my biggie)
3. apt-get update
4. aptitude install -t experimental kde4 (this might take a while to calculate a solution that works for your system)
5. Restart X.
Big thanks to the author of the kde4schroot page.
http://wiki.debian.org/Kde4schroot [debian.org]
http://packages.debian.org/experimental/kde4 [debian.org]
Re:Debian Lenny How-to kde4 (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Ob (Score:4, Informative)
I am using the what appears to be Kubuntu repo's btw:
http://ppa.launchpad.net/kubuntu-members-kde4/ubuntu/ [launchpad.net]
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Wake me up when 4.1 is stable.
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more like, does it run on FreeBSD (Score:2)
Re:Ob (Score:5, Interesting)
But does it run on Windows?
Seriously, if there was a Windows version, I could replace the crappy Windows shell with it. I still need Windows for certain critical applications like Rollercoaster Tycoon and Battlezone. Losing the Windows shell (and I.E of course) would reduce the attack surface area somewhat and maybe allow me to connect to the Internet occasionally with it.
By slowly replacing Windows components with Linux ones (OOO, Firefox, KDE), it makes it much easier to convert someone to Linux later.
Re:Ob (Score:4, Informative)
porl
KDE on windows (Score:4, Informative)
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(and I could be wrong, but I believe the proper term is GUI or WM.
Nope! Looks like I really am wrong [wikipedia.org]. You are correct, sir!)
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Re:other ob. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:other ob. (Score:4, Funny)
Or BSD desktop [freebsd.org]?
*ducks*
Re:other ob. (Score:4, Interesting)
My wife and I have been talking about me getting a laptop for the last 4 years since I work from home, so this is going to give me a lot more mobility. I may finally be able to take a vacation. Anyway I really didn't want to pay the MS Tax and at the same time I wanted to send the message that I want Linux. It's a little ironic that this comes the same day
This really IS the year of Linux on the desktop even if most people still don't give a flying fsck.
Re:other ob. (Score:4, Funny)
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obvious response: (Score:3, Insightful)
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Not that you shouldn't stick with 3.5 if you feel that best serves your needs.
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Re:4.1 -- Now with no desktop icons! (Score:5, Informative)
You can have 0, 1 or more of these folder views in your plasma, all viewing different (or the same, I suppose) folders. You can put them on different activity areas (aka "desktop containments") as well.
In the future we'll have a little label in the folderview telling you which folder you are looking at, it will turn into an icon with a menu listing in horizontally constrained containments (e.g. panels), it will be collapsible on the desktop with a single click (it's already resizable, rotatable and removable) and you will be able to use it as a containment itself.
That last bit is important: it means that you can have an Old Skool(tm) desktop with an icon mess if that's what you really, really want. So don't bother with that flame, nobody has anything to complain about.
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IMHO, any change like this should at least make it possible to mirror the old way of doing things, in case people like it. Me, I like folders on my desktop... I can put handy things there within easy reach... heck, the whole desktop applet thing is really just an extension of that, and it seems pretty popular to me.
So the question for me is, why not have their cool icon area thin
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Yes... now you have a big, black box that has to be as big as the area you want icons in. Wow... that's so much more awesome. :)
The plasma developers are aware of the fact that a black box is ugly, but they like to implement the applet background mechanism in a generic clean way first. Not something hackish which causes compatibility issues later.
The idea is the following:
So
Re:4.1 -- Now with no desktop icons! (Score:5, Interesting)
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In fluxbox, I just use the slit instead of desktop apps. There are plenty of app launcher dock apps to use. They take a little more effort to set up than just dragging an icon onto the desktop, but that makes them harder for me to abuse. A feature, IMHO.
Re:4.1 -- Now with no desktop icons! (Score:4, Informative)
I heard there are no more icons on the desktop in KDE 4.1...
That is not entirely correct. You can have icons and launchers (shortcuts) by dragging
them from Dolphin or the K-menu. What has changed is that the desktop will no longer
display the contents of the Desktop folder. However, you can show an arbitrary number
of folders (local or remote) on your desktop view, instead of being forced to display only
the contents of the "Desktop" folder. To do so, a new applet has been introduced, the
Folder View applet.
I've read it a few times .. and still vague on what the heck they are trying to do.. of course it's probably simpler to use than it sounds.. This whole thing has peaked my interest in KDE though.. I tried 4.0 on another partition, and immediately went back to gnome.. but I'll give 4.1 beta a shot what the hey.
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The files will be stored in folders, which can be kept in folderview.
What this means is that you could have more than one folder on your desktop, in separate boxes (which I think WILL be themable separately), you could use much more advanced features, like only show certain file types, you can sort
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Now in kde4.1 I have to have a big huge ugly black box around my icons...for no reason. I have used KDE for years over gnome, but this change will make me take a look at gnome again. It's a bad decision forcing users to work in a specific way without being able to configure it....Sounds a lot like gnome to me.
I switched from gnome to kde because I could actually setup my KDE to be MINE, but now the 'usability' experts are creeping in and taking that away. unless unit kontact is more stable in kde4 i have no reason to switch, and even then ill probably keep kde3 for most parts
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The desktop is covered by one or more windows most of the time, so how is it easier to move or minimize windows to launch a program or browse a directory? Any time one important thing is covered by another important thing, it's broken. That's why I hate desktop widgets, desktop icons, and windows that cover each other (not that I have a better idea for that last one).
From my perspective I think KDE 4.1
Re:One word (Score:5, Informative)
Re:One word (Score:5, Informative)
So unless our troll is using emacs or windowmaker or something like that for his "desktop environment" he should take his anonymous coward business elsewhere.
Bloat = many apps on a desktop, with few libs (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want to see bloat, look at the apps for any popular desktop that DOESN'T provide a solid, modern, complete core. Run any modern workflow, like quoting a webpage and editing photos to embed in your spell-checked word processor document, to email to someone whose name is all you can recall. Compare memory use, workflow, and integration, AFTER getting used to each desktop for a few months and learning all of the little integration features provided by each solution. I challenge anyone to do it on linux and find a desktop that beats KDE.
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Gnome has a reputation for being more stable than KDE. On the downside it doesn't have as many features as KDE. (I'm on Gnome, I'm jealous of those sexy screenshots.)
Kind of makes sense that with most of the money coming from business they would rather have something more solid than feature-rich. But this is just a guess on my part.
Re:why dont most distros use kde? (Score:4, Informative)
Gnome has a reputation for being more stable than KDE. On the downside it doesn't have as many features as KDE. (I'm on Gnome, I'm jealous of those sexy screenshots.)
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Disclaimer: I havent used Gnome since about 2001 except for brief periods in Live CD's before installing and switching to KDE... so it may inde
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I use Fedora 9 which has KDE 4.0.4-2 (latest update) however I was disappointed when I compare it to KDE 3.5 which seemed to scale its fonts on the task bar correctly. Try putting the KDE 4 task bar to your right or left on the screen, KDE 4 now has a
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Im not sure which distro's you use, but so far every distro I use has a choice between KDE or Gnome (of which i choose the former) aswell as the usual other more lean ones.
There are some distro's that frown upon Gnome aswell (Slackware for example, which happens to be my favorite)
Distro's that come with KDE (not a complete list)
http://www.kde.org/download/distributions.php [kde.org]
Distro's that come with Gnome (Probably not complete)
http://www.gnome.org/~davyd/footware.shtml [gnome.org]
Re:KDE mature enough to drop the annoying K prefix (Score:5, Funny)
Re:KDE mature enough to drop the annoying K prefix (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:KDE mature enough to drop the annoying K prefix (Score:5, Insightful)
iThere iAre iTwo iOther iCompeting gschools gof gthough, i'll grant iou.
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That's stupid, GNOME has stopped using 'g' on their names long ago.
So has KDE for new applications: [wikipedia.org]
Phonon
Solid
Plasma
Gwenview
Decibel
Strigi
Soprano
Dolphin
Sure, there are the obligatory "K" apps, many of them having been around for quite a few years and unlikely to change names for no good reason. The new stuff is pretty unconstrained, though, and certainly no more so than their Gnome counterparts.
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Gnome apps without a prefixed "g" included with Gnome: