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An Alternative Look for KDE

An anonymous reader writes: "I'm a huge OS X/Gnome fan, but still highly respect the KDE project. I still try and keep up with it's developments and recently came across this posting on KDELook which proposed a totally new GUI design for KDE, which I think could be quite easily adopted in other environments as well. A rolling Slashdot discussion I think would help keep the open-source innovation going. Thoughts?" Update: 11/27 20:12 GMT by T : Amended to give credit where due, which in this case is to the anonymous submitter :)

3 of 50 comments (clear)

  1. Re:a few thoughts by sweetooth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't see any need to try and please a particular crowd. When creating something new and innovative it's very easy to fall back into old habits to please certain users. The interface should have useability in mind first and foremost.

    Things like animation and flashy graphics are eye candy that appeal to many people even the "Unix Crowd." If that weren't the case Enlightenment would never have been so popular and many of the things it did wouldn't have carried over into other window managers. The key is that those items can be enabled/disabled. That way those that like flashy work environments can have them and those, like yourself, that don't like flash don't have to deal with it.

  2. Stunned In Awe by MBCook · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Wow. What more is there to say? It's very clean and nice looking. I really wasn't expecting much, I mean how often do new ideas for how to make a desktop actually work? But this really looks like it would work well. Like I said, it's clean. It reminds me of aqua, but "less", which is a good thing. I've got to say that if this doesn't make it into KDE, I hope someone makes a new window manager that uses this idea, it looks handy. I've been useing WM lately because it uses less resources on my little system, and I've got to say that I really like it. If my system was more powerfull, with things the way they are today, I would probably stick with WM. But if my system were morepowerfull, I'd be willing to switch over to that system. I'm sorry that I don't quite know how to describe my reaction. It seems like a very intelligent evolution that would be very functional and doesn't clutter things up. I'd love to give it a try.

    PS: As for comments like "Why is copying WinXP by rounding things considdered new?", it's not. The fact that the edges are rounded is NOT the point, that wouldn't be new. Why don't you try looking at the forest once in a while. That said, I think that rounded things look better than square boxes. The use of curves instead of straight lines seems natural now that graphics cards are better equipped to deal with it than they were back in Win 3.x days.

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    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
  3. Quite frankly, excellent. by EnVisiCrypt · · Score: 5, Interesting

    After the author's initial revisions, this is a pretty spectacular redesign.

    I would really love to see something like this implemented for Linux.

    While the core theory behind the design is *really* good, I would eliminate the extraneous application elements. The quicklaunch above the K menu should go, and the quicklaunch on the right should be used instead. The slideout on the right should be what the card application for "information center" launches from. The taskbar on the upper left should be open by default, hidden on the click of the arrow. I don't think the cards should be activated on mouseover, the behaviour should be:

    If !ontop{
    focus
    hideothers
    }
    expand

    All in all, the card concept is great, and this design would be a much needed ideological break from OS X and XP. I've heard some grumblings that it will "confuse windows lusers", and "we need to keep the old style for windows to linux converts!". Remember though, users don't need the operation of the interface to be immediately apparent, it need only be easily learned and consistent, which is a common failing of Linux applications/desktops. It would help to think of usability as "learnability" instead of idiot-proofing, a la Jakob Nielsen.

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    *everything* is Orwellian to cats.