KDE 3.0RC3: Prepare to Fall in Love
Dre writes "As announced on dotsy, the first day of the Season of Love (for us Northerners, anyway) brings us the KDE 3.0 final release candidate, KDE 3.0RC3. Besides fixes for any remaining crashes and grave bugs, this release will become KDE 3.0, scheduled to free the world in early April. Having benefitted from a week-long hacking session early this month, I can report that this release is very solid and, best of all, much snappier than prior releases, particularly Konqueror. Downloads are available through KDE's load-balancing mirror system. Since this is principally a show-stopper release, things are on an expedited schedule; more binary packages will appear in the next few days, and shortly thereafter KDE 3.0 will be tagged."
I wonder if mandrake will change there april distro to reflect this.
Save me some download time at any rate.
..which just shows that the human brain is ill-adapted for thinking and was probably designed for cooling the blood-T P
I'm afraid you'll have to ask the GCC crew as
:)
:)
all the problematic bug fixes needed for compilation
were reported shortly after 3.0, yet still, there
are compilation problems.
Basically, from what i've heard if you use 3.0.4
with no opimisation then you should be pretty sorted
(excepting mcopidl - part of arts - which probably
still has problems even after all this time)
In other words, wait for gcc 3.1
Alex
It seems to handle the load pretty well, i mean, load balancing all those 404 errors
You just have to look at the Keramik theme and the Conectiva Crystal icon theme. It is going to be a bright, bright future.
My desktop icons always get messed up on startup. However, that seems to be the only real bug in can find.
It simply rocks.
This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.
They didn't plan on adding any new features, just to convert kde to qt3 and make sure it's compatible with gcc 3.x while still getting it out on time. In the end they not only accomplished this, it seems like there are new packages and many many new features in existing packages which crept in... and now we're hearing it's stable too? geez.
Liberty.
I found Konqueror works much snapier and the improved KHTML is way faster than the one from KDE 2.2.2. [KHTML is the renderer for konqueror web content].
The whole system does seem to run more cleanly and smooth. And that's just from a CVS built over two weeks ago. I imagine what is there currently is much better and is why I still have my home PC building it right this moment.
Mandrake claims they will have KDE 3.0 packages available for 8.2 when it's released. I'd much rather they give us a thoroughly tested and functional 2.2.2 and let us upgrade to 3.0 when we're ready.
Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
Add Netscape Plugins support which won't run due to missing symbols - so if you want Netscape Plugins - you'll need to compile that part statically in GCC 2.9x..
I think Mozilla has the same problems (if you compile it with GCC 3.x)
Hetz (Heunique)
I found it funny that you can watch the mirrors work. I found an directory (http://download.uk.kde.org/pub/kde/unstable/kde-3 .0rc3/SuSE/7.1-i386+kde/) that was half-full (4 packages), which I found somewhat interesting. I reloaded and it had 5 packages. You could just watch the packages grow ... (and not slow as well, it seems the mirrors have some massive bandwidth to the central site).
Actually, Kfm had integrated webbrowsing and file management long before IE did.
So it's IE ripping of KDE, if anything.
Screenshots are available for KDE 3.0 here.
These shots go to show that Unix and Linux systems are more than capable of competing with the eye candy UIs of Windows XP and MacOS X.
I have RedHat 7.2 w/GNOME on my laptop and Mandrake 8.2 w/KDE on my desktop. Weird enough, a few days ago my GNOME desktop freezes and I couldn't do the CTRL-ALT-BCKSPACE , nothing worked. Then yesterday, my KDE freezes and I couldn't do anything either. I had to reboot.
I remember the days when they weren't so damn bloated and when Linux meant "fast/light/stable". Nowadays with recent distros, it takes over 40 seconds to boot into Linux. Linux is becoming more and more like Windows.
Because it breaks binary compatability in the move from qt2 to qt3. In addition qt3 brings some enhancements such as data aware widgets, etc.
Can i have some screenshots? I couldn't find any of version 3 on kde.org.
/. effect in full swing!
Right Here. Of course, it's very slow loading now,
I guess you'll also need to write a driver for one of these to get the full KDE luvvin' effect.
In Soviet Russia, Jesus asks: "What Would You Do?"
In a CVS entry, they tagged it with "gcc3 compat fixes", followed by a mailing list posting discussing that it was now gcc3 compat.
I dont know whether rc3 has that cvs patch in, but I would definitely assume so.
GPL'd web-based tradewars themed space game
IMO the need to get some really nutty types
to go back and start writing the code in
assembly........
Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
You know, I thought exactly the opposite thing when I installed WinXP. I thought its default look/feel/whatever was extremely reminiscent of a certain few Linux (and other UNIX bretheren) Desktop Environments.
Now, regardless of who copied who, what difference does it make anyway? I _like_ the way KDE 2.2.2 looks and feels. Similarly, I like WinXP way more than its predecessors, much for the same reason. Well, that and XP doesn't crash quite so much.
As for IceWM, I've never much cared for it.
Lets not forget how many times MS has been caught ripping off other folks' ideas. We all stand on the shoulders of giants. If someone did come up with a totally different GUI style, the likelihood that its going to be accepted and used by everyone is pretty small. People don't like fooling around with stuff they are unfamiliar with when they are trying to get stuff done. Thats why I use WinXP and KDE 2.2.2. I am comfortable with the UI, and I can focus on getting things done, instead of fucking around for hours on end trying to figure out how to do x. Its for that reason that I've never really cared for Enlightenment, IceWM, or Gnome. (I only include Gnome here because its had a nasty history of throwing SegFaults for no apparent reason).
Back for a moment to how KDE3 seems such a blatant ripoff of 'Doze. Have you installed KDE3 and played around with it? Neither have I. It would make sense that KDE would most resemble Windows simply because it uses QT, which is also compatible with windows. Furthermore, if it is the aim for Linux to provide viable competition in the Desktop market, there needs to be a desktop environment that is just as pretty as windows, but is more stable. Damn, isn't that what KDE is? I would think that all Linux fans would appreciate something that contributes to the cause (dominance of Open Source/Free Software/etc), even if is not exactly their cup of tea.
What exactly is a legitimate Linux user, pray tell?
If the next version of KDE was to be name KDE XP, it'd probably be a pretty smart marketing strategy, assuming there are no legality issues with using the letters X and P consecutively.
What could possibly hurt the security of the American people more than giving our own government the ability to hide its
Mirror of the dot.kde.org page
I'd rather they give use Mandrake 8.3, and make sure everthying worked together. I'm holding off on upgrading until I hear that everything is stable together, then I will pay the $60 for their club membership and download an ISO.
I've reluctanly entered the 'end-user' club. I want my computer to do things without having to CONSTANTLY fiddle with things not related to what I want to do. I want a nice simple script to set up the networked workstation as a firewall and then be done with networking. Mandrake seems to keep promising this, and I'm willing to pay for it, but I don't want to have to constantly be upgrading huge pieces of the OS. (and yes, I consider the window manager to be part of the operating system, because it is part of the system that I use to operate the computer.)
Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
Is it just me, or is all the kdenetwork stuff missing from the distribution builds? The RedHat RPMs directory doesn't seem to include KMail.
And, will it have the fixed linker? That would give KDE's performance a nice boost
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
At least improve the handling of the CD drive. The system is perfectly capable of detecting when a CD has been inserted. Mount it for me damn it! And when I press the eject button, it can umount automatically. Why am I having to go through the trouble of doing this manually?
-- Will program for bandwidth
Every version of KDE i've ever seen has been, well, sort of inherently ugly-- the worst abuses of the motif, windows, and aqua mindsets combined.
You telling me that this is ugly? Or this?
that doesn't change that there seemed to just be very little engineering of details in KDE, and little things-- the relative placement of buttons, layout, fitt's law considerations, stuff you can't skin over
Everyone always seems to whine about fitts law, like knowing what it is automagically makes them a GUI design guru. To be honest, I prefer having smaller buttons/icons and being able to fit more on, and I think you'll find most other people do too - which is why even on OS X, that bastion of largeness, users often make the default dock icon size smaller, and the finder uses 16x16 icons in its default view.
"Not but that KDE is quality software.. But a simple clone of Microsoft's desktop isn't going to be freeing me anytime soon.
It's more like indentured service. It's not quite slavery, but it sure as hell isn't freedom."
Why? Why must UI looks 100% different from Windows UI? Are there any usability-reasons or is it just the "It reminds me of MS, it must be EEEEEVIL!"-mindset?
How exactly does KDE look like MS? Gnome looks like MS too, they all that "start-button" or equivalent. They all have a taskbar. Having some similarities with Windows-UI is NOT automatically a bad thing (despite the fact that many people seem to think so)
Why do you think that KDE doesn't give you "freedom"? I mean, it's free software, it's licensed under the GPL. Just because you think that it looks like Windows-UI (There might be some similarities, but honestly, how many different ways are there to design a windowed UI??? They ALL share some basic characteristics! Building a UI with sole goal of looking as different as possible when compared to Win-UI is, well, retarded) does not make it "un-free" or anything.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
If the next version of KDE was to be name KDE XP, it'd probably be a pretty smart marketing strategy, assuming there are no legality issues with using the letters X and P consecutively.
As KDE developer I can promise you there will be a 3.0.1 bugfix release first, then a 3.1 with new features, etcetera. Just because we do indeed implement good stuff as seen in other OSes (yes, including but definitely not limited to Windows) doesn't mean KDE is just a copycat.
Magnetic window borders, old classics such as virtual desktops and focus follows mouse.. KDE has it all. Configure it for ten minutes and you've got the exact Windows clone. Or, you've got something completely different. Umpteen window decorations, style, icon themes, colour schemes and a powerful control center give you choice in the look and feel of KDE. So make it look like whatever you want, there is not just one look and feel.
Really, it is? I've looked all over my wife's XP machine, and I can't find sources to anything...
-B
Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.
> AFAIK in KDE 2.2 you cannot simply drag and drop to the "floppy device" icon in the desktop.
;)
:)
Just implemented this yesterday... quite a concidence
konq_operations.diff
Apply this patch to the KDE 3 sources (current CVS, or 3.0-final
when it's out). It's a tiny bit late for inclusion in 3.0, given the size of the patch (which mainly moves code around though).
Feel free to test and report problems to me
Actually, if you look at the mailing lists - you'll find people from IBM (who compile KDE on AIX), SGI (Irix), FreeBSD, HP-UX, Sun (Solaris), and even Mac OS X!
The KDE Development team doesn't have the machines to try the code on other things then Linux, but non-the-less - most of the time people manage to compile KDE from sources with 90% of success with few small problems that are being discussed and fixed within short time.
Hetz (Heunique)
- Windows needed a long time to offer a measly 4 desktops (compared to up to 16 in KDE)
- Unix-style cut&paste is much more efficient and unmatched by Apple-style cut&paste used in Windows
- Konqueror windows reappear after logging out and in again. Of course on the right desktop and with the right widow-geometry. No more temporary bookmarks!
- Konqueror has much better bookmark-handling than any other browser
There is more innovation and new ideas in one year of KDE-development than in the whole Windows-series.
For those of you already running Conectiva Linux, it is aptgetable already.
/etc/apt/sources.list file:
If you run the CL snapshot version just:
# apt-get update
# apt-get dist-upgrade
If you just want to get the kde stuff:
Add this to your
rpm ftp://ftp.nl.linux.org/pub conectiva/snapshot/conectiva main kde
and then run:
# apt-get update
# apt-get install task-kde
If you want to fully upgrade to the snapshot version:
add this line instead:
rpm ftp://ftp.nl.linux.org/pub conectiva/snapshot/conectiva main extra orphan gnome experimental games kde
and then:
# apt-get update
# apt-get dist-upgrade
Enjoy!
until it's in the released documentation, i'm thinking there _could_ be problems (not there there still might not be after that). i don't think that reading in a cvs entry(s) "gcc3 compat fixes" really says that it's been tested and works with that compiler.
if they say on the mailing list that it's gcc3 compat, why don't the put it in the docs somewhere? as a comparison, some people have gotten the ati radeon 8500 cards to work using the gatos drivers, but... the driver authors aren't labeling it as supported. there's been changes in the code to accomadate the card, but it's not ready for mainstream.
So it's a ripoff (it's not - it got MORE features then Windows - remind me how you can directly send an output of a file directly to Mail? or how about directly printing to a PDF without spending money on an Adobe product?)..
.ui file - feel free to whip QT Designer and change it to your heart content..
The point is to MAKE it easier for end user to print! no matter what printer server do you use - CUPS, LPR, LPRng, Sun's printing stuff - you name it - this printing dialog gives you all the options that you're getting from your print server...
You don't like the GUI? fine - open the source - there is a
No one is forcing anyone to uses it - it's just to make people who came from Windows world easier then what there is today on Linux/Unix. Thats it..
Hetz (Heunique)
It's all about RAM, if you've got enough of it (at least 128MB, better 256MB) it should be OK.
Especially ripoff claims are somewhat stupid based on a screenshot - maybe, just maybe this KDE was configured to look similiar to Windows?
Never thought about that, right?
Try looking at Stardoc. Complete shell replacement for windows. 100% customization, beyond the level of anything I've seen for Linux. Far more "advanced" and "innovative" than KDE.
He's right. KDE is just a plain windows rip-off. Not that that's a bad thing. But anyone with eyes can see that it is... Just admit it. It's not that hard.
Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
The "focus problem" that I've been whining piteously about for so long has been fixed, so I can now actually post to Slashdot with Konqueror in KDE3...
KDE3 at this point seems to be in really good shape. There are only 1.5 problems left that I can even think of at the moment...(maybe less...)
The ".5" is the clipboard and cutting-and-pasting. Right now, it seems a bit inconsistent in some spots (especially cutting-and-pasting from within kmail [i.e. message source or headers when reporting spam]), which is annoying, but not fatal.
The other problem isn't KDE's fault - I just can't get Quanta to start under KDE3 is all (is Quanta dead? Development on it seems to have sputtered to a stop at the moment [though about once a week CVS shows a change to a configuration file or something of the sort]...)
Otherwise, I consider myself "officially" using KDE3 full-time now. I'm quite pleased with it. Konqueror in particular seems to have gotten significantly better (and I think it was pretty good before) at dealing with the more esoteric web-sites that used to give it problems (javascript/ecmascript support is greatly improved...)
Hacker Public Radio is our Friend
I've been playing with both. I can certainly say both offer great speedups over their current stable versions. However, I must say that KDE3 feels a lot closer to release quality than Gnome2, even though Gnome2 supposedly has a sooner release date...
Everything in KDE (at lleast as of RC2) seems to work, I haven't seen any crashes. All the utilities and such seem pretty complete.
Gnome2, as of a few days ago, still seemed broken in so many ways. On log out, the panel always segfaulted. The appearance is, well, pretty crappy compared with KDE (one font selector, which doesn't seem to work right). Gdm is completely broken (the daemon continuously restarts, and the configuration tools are broken and won't even start. Sawfish 2 doesn't seem to want to even pull up any configuration applets. Interoperability between Gnome2 and Gnome1 apps seems ok, until gGConf comes into play. If gnome1 installed gconf is running, Gnome2 apps screw up, if gnome2 is running it's gconf, Gnome1 apps that are GConf aware mess up. All this is my own machine, with gnome prefixes differing between 1 and 2, but under the same configuration, KDE is good to go... Maybe at release time, we will see a different story. Both show great promise.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
I really don't think that it's KDEs mission to convert every command line lovin' Linux hacker over to a GUI. KDE is oviously trying to appeal to non-Linux users! And as such, is probably VERY widely accepted over some of the more minimalist or non existant window managers out there...
Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
How about mirroring on Sourceforge?
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
I have no problem posting to /. from the KDE2 version of Konqueror. (Maybe because I use click-focus instead of hover-focus. I have a Windows mindset--sue me.) I rarely do, though, because Konqueror has trouble rendering a lot of /. pages correctly. Rendering issues are the main reason I don't use Konqueror more. If these are addressed in KDE3, Konqueror is ready to kick some serious butt.
Listen KDE and GNOME by default have configurations that are similiar to Windoze.
:->
_ __
It does NOT mean that you have to live with your desktop set this way. The control center for GNOME is confusing in its placement but KDE is logically laid out (the only bad part is that with KDE you get an insane amount of dizzying options to choose from).
I live with GNOME because I use primarily GTK+ or GNOME apps and have it set with a CDE style main panel and a menu panel above (which is kinda like Mac OSX but the usability is light years different and yes this is not the configuration for those short on screeen real estate).
However, I have KDE set up for my wife because I could make it look very XPish to cut her learning curve and SuSE 7.3 actually has a fairly tasty looking default look. You can play with the styles and Windows decorations and end up something that look very unique.
If you don't like the desktop environments then run WindowMaker. It looks good and is very traditional in the Unix way it does things. You can go to the KDE control-panel and set the kde apps to have NeXtStep look and choose one of the many GTK themes so the Gnomish apps have a Step feel to it. That way you still get the uniformed feeel except for the stock icons.
The great thing about Linux is that you have a zillion or so different choices in the way to do these things.
Its also what makes it pain in the ass for the common user trying to figure what is best for them.
_______________________________________________
ACK
No problems whatsoever here, and our rawhide users haven't found many issues with it either.
By any chance, are you using gcc 3.0.x?
That's broken.
This message is provided under the terms outlined at http://www.bero.org/terms.html
My genes make me a GUI guru.
Now hear my whine(s).
If I had to use Keramik it would drive me crazy with its hyped contrasts. (I haven't used the original OSX aqua for more than a couple of minutes so I couldn't say whether it was just as bad.)
That second screenshot is right down there knocking on the door of ugly. The way the darker blue is used inside of the lighter frame is just wrong. Maybe if I could control the ratio of one value to the other I could live with a monochromatic scheme inverted like that, but the way they did it and those title bars? Unh-uh.
In all the screenshots of Liquid that I have seen , the nice color gradients could not hide that perennial KDE theme atrocity: discrete little button surrounds for every icon in the toolbar, with all the buttons jammed hard together to the left.
Ugh. This one is the vomit-maker. Thankfully the button boxes aren't part of the default KDE theme, but they seem hard to avoid when you leave the default KDE theme. Half of the themes have this eyesore of a billion little outlined buttons in the toolbar.
Many a Gnome theme and app has the same problem. Look at Bluefish using something like a GTK aqua theme. Incompre-fucking-hensible.
The law this violates is called Tandy's Paradox: the human eye/brain apparatus follows lines unconsciouly -autonomically. Therefore, the more you as a GUI designer try to set off adjacent things with little bounding lines , and especially lines that change direction making angles and closed figures, the more busy and less clear things actually become, unless: a) The closed figures are few in number and large; or b) the closed figures are set off with a grid of spaces that give a pleasing interval of figure to ground allowing the eye to stop, offsetting the busyness (but wasting screen real estate in the process and requiring more code).
Legibility is not a matter of taste.
Try to use as few lines and separate 3d modelled surfaces as humanly possible in your GUI, then eliminate 50% of those remaining. Now you're right.
Well I think that's enough for today.
Johnny Quest has two Daddies.
KDE 3.0 will not include Brahms.
Perhaps the Brahms developers should ask for the kmusic package to be added to the released packages for KDE 3.1. Brahms is in cvs, in kmusic. kmusic just needs to be released.
KDE 3 is be faster than KDE 2. Qt has been optimized, KDE has been optimized. Memory use has ben reduced where possible, bottlenecks have been traced and improved. And of course you should compile correctly:
For Qt, get the objprelink patch if necessary, edit mkspecs/(your platform)/qmake.conf to change the line QMAKE_CFLAGS_RELEASE.
For KDE, configure correctly:
CXX="g++ -fstrict-aliasing -mpentiumpro -O3 -malign-functions=4" CC="gcc -fstrict-aliasing -mpentiumpro -O3 -malign-functions=4" configure --disable-debug --enable-final --enable-fast-malloc=full --enable-objprelink
(remove --enable-objprelink if you're using the latest GNU binutils)
I'd like to see a proxy for X applications in the same sense that "screen" is a proxy for terminal applications.
Something like a mock X server for the application to attach to, that then can attach or reattach to a given X server. So, if the local X server crashes you lose nothing. You just reattach the apps to the X server when it restarts.
Of course, that also allows nice things like remotely reattaching apps. Though, it won't help out for something like Unreal.
The one thing that *still* bugs me about KDE is the inability for the panel to work like GNOME. In GNOME, you can have not only multiple workspaces, but rows and columns within a workspace. This allows you to drag stuff across the screen and have it scroll to the next row/column without having to change workspaces. Why can't KDE implement this?
Linux - Because Mommy taught me to Share.
I don't care about themes. It was just an example of something Microsoft ripped off KDE.
* How many desktops do you need? Doesn't it get confusing after 4?
I get confused not using 16 desktops when I got 40 or more windows open. And yes I want 40 windows open.
* How can Unix-style cut&paste be more efficient when it works so clumsely? I couldn't tell you how to do it by keyboard (consistent across apps), and couldn't find instructions on it either.
It works both the Unix-style method (MMB) and the MacOS-style method (keyboard) in KDE and consistently.
* Explorer windows can also reappear after logging out.
Only for the local filesystem which makes them pretty useless. I want webbrowser windows reapearing
* Why does Konqueror have better bookmarking?
You can create bookmark-dirs without helper-app and you also a nicer bookmark-bar. It MIGHT help if you would actually try it before you judge it.
* How can you claim KDE to be more innovative when most features were copied from MS? Unless you mean they copied them fast.
I provided a list which KDE had first or Windows still doesn't have. Just because you seem to have a chip in your brain that sais (Windows-> good useful feature, not Windows-> useless feature) doesn't make KDE uninnovative.
And that you obviously didn't even try it for a reasonable amount of time, speaks for itself.
Yes, I am sure this very issue is keeping thousands of people from using KDE.
sic transit gloria mundi
So I guess it's really only half a problem as well then. You can tell a physicist, they will never use 0.5 and Quanta in the same sentence.
Free Java games for your phone: Tontie, Sokoban
Huh?
Why was all you posted just prejudices and hearsay?
It was me who posted spedific examples, remember? Just because you think that everything not available in Windows is useless (that you think that nobody needs more than 4 desktops is typical. Such a coincidence, I bet if MS would have offered up to 6 desktops you would think that 6 desktops is the maximum one might ever need) doesn't mean you are objective.
So far you lack any objective argument.
How long is reasonable? How long should I suffer with something I don't like?
I'd say about 2 weeks of daily usage are needed - not to start being productive (you can use it right away) but to discouver the smart innovative features of KDE - exactly what you think don't exist.
P.S.: Oh and another feature is the Alt-modifier-key that allows you to move and resize windows faster and more comfortably. Windows doesn't do that either.
If you think you are so objective, maybe it's time that you start posting at least one example of a GUI-feature Windows has but KDE hasn't.
Sad that the only major improvement in WinXP (themeing) was copied from KDE, isn't it?
Try rawhide, Red Hat's bleeding edge alpha-type system. Should be on ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/linux/rawhide, or something to that effect. (That's where I got them, but I'm rebuilding from src, as it's a little flaky.)
J
Well, I didn't say KDE is perfect, the main problem I have with it is speed, but that's completely outside the "innovation"-debate (and KDE3 solves this problem to the most part).
Anyway, you can create bookmark directories in IE, with and without the organizer feature. But no, you can't create them by editing a text file.
No, that's not what I meant. In Konqui you can browse your bookmarks and insert a directory directly.
For example you encounter a site you want to bookmark. You go to your bookmarks -> topic , then you decide you want to put it into a subtopic-folder. In any other browser you would leave the bookmarks, fire up the helper-app, browse to the same position, insert the file, then quit, and the bookmark it.
In Konqueror, you realize that a directory is missing, click on "new directory" which is a menu-point directly below the last bookmark and poof- you just created a directory and can bookmark your site. Much faster than the other method.
Select your window. Hit Alt-Space, then some excelator key (R for restore, N for minimize, X-For maximize, etc). Obviously, YOU need to try something for a reasonable length of time before you judge something.
Why should I be interested in that?
See this.
Look for the chapter "The ALT-key for easier window manipulation"
It's about resizing and moving. I don't see that in "R for restore, N for minimize, X-For maximize".
It would be really nice to have one key to get to just about everything I'd need under KDE--Such as the Win Key!
In Windows the Win-key is only used to open the start-menu (correct me if I'm wrong), that's not really that great of a feature. But if you really can't live without it, you can redefine KDE's behaviour to open the "K"-menu with it.
Related excelerator keys such as Win-D for the desktop, or Win-M to minimize everything.
AFAIK, KDE3 has added something like this. Don't know details, though.
File extensions. These exist in Linux, but not to the same extent. In Windows, I can easily sort a column of files by their type. Something I cannot do in KDE (again v2?).
Konqueror/KFM could always do that. Back into the v1.x days.
Also, wouldn't it be nice if I could control every aspect of the GUI from within the GUI? Imagine not being required to edit some XFree86 file when I change pointer devices, video cards, etc. Imagine if these were integrated in one place.
That would be the KDE-control center. In SuSE, everything from network-settings to X-configuration can be done in the control center.
Other distros are a bit behind, though. BTW, did you try RedHat? Even RedHat's boss Young said that it's not targeted at the desktop, try SuSE or at least Mandrake next time.
Oh and I didn't mention that the KDE-control center is much better than the one in Windows because it's a tree-like organized structure, not just a directory with random config-tools thrown in.
Something like a registry!
*shudder*
Oh yeah, I really need a binary only thing that is just like a filesystem plus config-files (tree-like structure), only with fewer features and with absolutely no documentation.
I never understood why the Windows-zealots (yes, I use the word zealot here) think that putting settings out of one tree-like structure (the filesystem) into another tree-like structure (the registry) is having it "in one place". Those who think this is "in one place" only repeated MS-marketing without thinking. Pure zealotry.
Just where, pray tell, did Linux use Fisher Price's look anywhere?
It used to be that the "focus" on a webpage was always(?) on the links on the page in KDE3. So, in other words, as I'm typing here in the textarea to fill in this web form, the "focus" is here (and if I hit ENTER, it should do whatever "Enter" means where it is focussed, i.e. it should put a newline in the textarea). Previously, once I hit "enter" in the textarea, the FOCUS was still on the first link in the page, even though it's the textarea that the focus SHOULD have been on, since I'm typing in it. Upon hitting enter, it would go to the first link in the page, rather than adding a line to the text...
(I don't know how coherent that explanation was, but hopefully it helps. The short version is that you couldn't hit "enter" anywhere in a webpage without having it act as though you just clicked on the currently-focussed link on the page...)
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