First Thoughts on Corel's Linux File Manager?
Conan Albrecht asks: "A lot of hype is being made about Corel's new Linux file manager (and its Windows look). Can those of us on other distributions try it out without installing Corel? Corel's site seems to expect users to burn an install CD. Is there another way? What comments do Corel Linux users have about the new file manager. How does it compare with KDE, GNOME, or others?"
I tried it. I have the deluxe version and it doesn't make me want to switch from SuSE.
Corel has modified both QT and KDE for their own purposes. That breaks a lot of dependencies for installing software that didn't come with it. I tried using dselect to grab software that I use that didn't come with it. When I finally got the dependencies satisfied, I let it install the new packages and it broke my installation. KDE didn't work at all. Maybe there's something I don't know about the Debian package format, but it's not apparent. I stuck SuSE back on.
The file manager itself was slow and unstable for me. I was unable to connect to either Samba or NFS shares. It simply stopped or crashed whenever I tried to get somewhere. It's butt-ugly, too. The icons on the toolbar are way too big and tasteless.
On the bright side, I have a little Tux on my desk, a second copy of Civ:CTP, a second copy of OSS, and a huge load of fonts which alien helped me install.
I used the first corel filemanager on debian 2.2. I had problems with dependencies with other qt1g dependent packages. I could not seem to install both debian and corel qt, or all programs compiled against qt1 to work togther. I ended up making changes to /var/lib/dpkg/status file to allow things to install together. This did not help much. I am yet to try the newer version. Perhaps compiling the corel kde stuff against the debian qt libs would be the answer to getting it working. As far as wether or not it is worth the time, if your users are "windows users" then they will be much happier using corel, however i found the filemanager to be rather buggy for the first release.
meridian at tha.net
I got my little 'Open Circulation' CD in the mail just a couple of days ago, and have now had it running on my old Compaq Armada laptop for about 24 hours.
.kdelnk files. BAD Corel.
:) I'm going back to RedHat ... may the gods bless my copy of Ghost.
...
Now, I usually run my laptop on what started out as a RedHat 6 distribution, but has been heavily tweaked since. I use KDE by preference.
At first glance, Corel's hacked up Debian was really nice. The file manager was a definite plus - it worked flawlessly for me, browsing the NFS and Samba shares hanging off my household server. The old glitch that I got was when I accidentally clicked on the 'floppy' icon while the floppy drive wasn't in the machine.
kill -9 time. There didn't seem to be a 'nothing has happened yet' timeout.
Corel's patched KDE did address a lot of my pet hates in KDE though, such as not knowing when you've actually clicked on something. It was the 'switch the mouse pointer to "busy" briefly' path they chose, but it was a help. There were some other odds and ends that I found nice, which I hope get worked back into the core KDE code - but I'm not writing an essay here (I hope).
New nitpick - if you don't know your way around KDE and where to find all the files, I don't like your chances of adding new items to the 'start' menu. The KDE menu editor (which sucks, IMHO) isn't linked to the menu by default, and there are no pointers toward which bit of the filesystem holds all the
(If I'm wrong about this, please point out the error of my ways).
As for the underlying system, it did look a bit messy, but that could be my inexperience with Debian in general.
Summary: Corel have done a VERY excellent job on the UI side, and built a very nice file manager that I will try to work into my RedHat/KDE setup. The system itself has been neglected. I think they might have been better off just building a set of KDE packages that drop on top of a STANDARD Debian (or dare I say RedHat) system.
I'll give it a 6 out of 10, and I'm really interested in Corel Linux 2.0 if it happens. They have some great ideas
Wasting your time since 1997.