gDesklets - Gnome2's Karamba
Deusy writes "Footnotes is running an update article on gDesklets, Gnome's answer to KDE's Karamba. I've heard a lot of noise with regards to Karamba (and Super Karamba) and a lot of moans from Gnome users about the lack of a Gnome equivalent. Hopefully this should fill that void and more, as one of the developers comments that gDesklets is the product of "months of planning" and describes Karamba as an "ugly hack"."
Never mind about Gnome2 for a second, I have a real question.
When are you slashdot people going to fix the single white pixel appearing at the top of the page just below the banner ad? You have in your code something buggy, because you are generating an IFRAME tag of size 1x1 that has nothing in it.
Whats worse, you have totally failed to fix this, despite it running on your PRODUCTION server for weeks now. So much for open source software being more reliable. Sheesh.
talk about flamebait
GNOME seems to be more popular though, what are some of the biggest differences, Gnome doesn't have it own window manager right?
gDesklets provides an advanced architecture for desktop applets - tiny displays sitting on your desktop in a symbiotic relationship of eye candy and usefulness.
Populate your desktop with status meters, icon bars, weather sensors, news tickers... whatever you can imagine! Virtually anything is possible and maybe even available some day.
The system consists of three parts: the gDesklets core (a daemon running in the background), the Sensors (providing data and processing user actions), and the Displays (what you will see on the screen).
New Displays can be put together by simply composing widgets and Sensors in a XML file. Advanced users may also create new Sensors easily.
As of now, Sensors are restricted to Python modules, but we are planning to extend this to scripting languages like Perl and Ruby, and to C as well.
You can get gDesklets from: www.pycage.de/software_gdesklets.html
Have fun!
Martin Grimme
Christian Meyer
Jesse Andrews
Thanks for the graphic imagery *puts breakfast back on shelf*
Try konfabulator which does the same for Apples. I've bought it and love the way I have so much eye candy on the screen that I end up only using about two thirds for productive work!
Pimping my Karma Whore since 1847.
So its a desktop portal server. Why is this amazing ?
An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
1. Copy KDE
2. ?
3. Profit !
A developer calls it "an ugly hack". Well, not quite. It was pretty clearly marked as tongue-in-cheek, and not to be taken seriously.
Looks to me like the submitter deliberately wants to fan any remaining flames between the projects; who knows why.
Instead, we have some pretty good illustrations as to why having two projects is a really good idea. KDE gets Karamba (and SuperKaramba) which takes off like wildfire. Undaunted, some Gnome people sit down and look at what Karamba does and learns from it (what the devels envisioned versus how it is actually being used; awkwardness and mistakes in teh design) and develop something similar, but with the benefir of hindsight from the other project. No doubt will the Karamba people look at gDesklets and in turn learn from it's strengths and weaknesses. THe end result is a set of tools that become far better, faster, than either would have become on its own.
Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
Good to know Gnome is going to have something along the same line as KDE. Having said that however, I'm wondering if the Gnome community can match the number of Karamba plug-ins out there, some of which really do look good (www.kde-look.org) Also, before slamming Karamba for being "an ugly hack", I'd love for them to explain A.) Why they think this is so and B.) Why their version is going to be so much better. I mean, a good explanation might go a long way in converting people over who use KDE just for Karamba (and they are out there).
*Fortitudo, aequitas, fidelitas.*
Hello,
Consulting for several large companies, I'd always done my work on
Windows. Recently however, a top online investment firm asked us to do
some work using Linux. The concept of having access to source code was
very appealing to us, as we'd be able to modify the kernel to meet our
exacting standards which we're unable to do with Microsoft's products.
Although we met several technical challenges along the way
(specifically, Linux's lack of Token Ring support and the fact that we
were unable to defrag its ext2 file system), all in all the process
went smoothly. Everyone was very pleased with Linux, and we were
considering using it for a great deal of future internal projects.
So you can imagine our suprise when we were informed by a lawyer that
we would be required to publish our source code for others to use. It
was brought to our attention that Linux is copyrighted under something
called the GPL, or the Gnu Protective License. Part of this license
states that any changes to the kernel are to be made freely available.
Unfortunately for us, this meant that the great deal of time and money
we spent "touching up" Linux to work for this investment firm would
now be available at no cost to our competitors.
Furthermore, after reviewing this GPL our lawyers advised us that any
products compiled with GPL'ed tools - such as gcc - would also have to
its source code released. This was simply unacceptable.
Although we had planned for no one outside of this company to ever
use, let alone see the source code, we were now put in a difficult
position. We could either give away our hard work, or come up with
another solution. Although it was tought to do, there really was no
option: We had to rewrite the code, from scratch, for Windows 2000.
I think the biggest thing keeping Linux from being truly competitive
with Microsoft is this GPL. Its draconian requirements virtually
guarentee that no business will ever be able to use it. After my
experience with Linux, I won't be recommending it to any of my
associates. I may reconsider if Linux switches its license to
something a little more fair, such as Microsoft's "Shared Source".
Until then its attempts to socialize the software market will insure
it remains only a bit player.
Thank you for your time.
For something being touted as eye candy for the desktop, there's amazingly few screenshots available in the links provided.
Have EVDO, will travel.
Why isn't Slashdot covering this story?
"The Filthy Critic was killed in a
bicycle collision late Thursday night."
Here's a link to Filthy Critic, check for yourself.
Looks like another example of a project which should use xml for its configuration files, but instead uses a proprietary format...
Well, after all the planning that they claim went into gdesktop, you'd think maybe they could get the thing so it would compile, and so that it would stop insisting that I live in .de
/usr/bin/install: cannot stat `de/LC_MESSAGES/gdesklets.mo': No such file or directory
Anyone actually get this thing to work?
someone want to explain that one to me?
This is a very cool thing. I wish windows would have thought of this way bak when. Oh yeah they did. Active desktop sucks.
10) Registry editor clone (gconf-editor).
9) "Instant Apply" techology that can accidently cause damage (Ooops, I selected hello.jpg as my wallpaper instead of fish.jpg)
8) Weather applet that shows fahrenheit by default (Hello, the wolrd is != USA)
7) The half assed way of changing screen resolutions. The Xrandr hack is useless if you want to change colour depth.
6) No easy way to edit menus. With windows I can right click the menu and rename, edit, and drag and drop entries. You are at the mercy of your distro's complex heiracrhy without editing text files.
5) Nautilus, half asssed file management with no "real" features. Guess whos using konqueror.
4) Its word processor (Abi word office) has no table support
3) The clock, in its asswipe MM/DD format (again W!=USA)
2) The file dialog (no further comment)
And last but not least
*drumroll*
1) HAVOC PENNINGTON
The person who took gnome from being a KDE Kass Kicker in 1.4 to a VTECH Whizzkid computer in 2.3. Give us back our features and shove your "HIG" up your millimetre dick!
I guess smarter developer would have ported karamba to gnome. I've had enough of this duplication of every goddamn app in world for both of the systems. What's the use of making everything twice? Waste of talented programming resources, IMHO.
... and call it iKaramba.
[Tumbleweed rolls past]
I'll see myself out ...
The GTK file dialog as an "ugly hack". Remember. KDE is the kettle, gnome the pot.
A prime example of how the Open Source community wastes resources by re-inventing the wheel again and again and again.
BOO! TERRO
Except for considering konqueror any better than Nautilus - it just sucks in different ways. And while the lack of table support of Abiword is a bind at least it works unlike Kword.
However for those of us that like a GTK desktop the way to go is XFce4
$ tar xjf gdesklets.tar.gz ./configure --prefix=/opt/gnome2/ /doc/html/index.sgml
$ cd gdesklets-0.1
$
Bach blah...
$ make
blah blah...
$ make install
blah blah
Error :
No such file or directory
Help! I cant rtfm because this IS the FM!
Warning: Too many connections in
Warning: MySQL Connection Failed: Too many connections in
Unable to select database
1) Persistant connections can screw things up just as much as they can help. Put a limit on them.
2) Increase the number of max connections in MySQL.
3) Make sure the tables for your site are all in INNODB format. Slow DB connections are often caused by keeping MyISAM.
4) use something like PHP Smarty to manage templates. It can dramatically speed up your page load times.
5) Increase the number of apache connections. Really, if you have a gig of mem, 500 concurrent connections are quite easy to deal with.
Your server doesn't HAVE to frickin choke on the first few hundred visitors from slashdot
It never ceases to amaze me the number of people who put up great looking PHP sites but forget to do the simple tuning to make it scale.
Gah!
Of course, I've left out things that could be done, and probably made mistakes here, but who cares. The point is; look in those config files. They are not there for nothing.
The X-based desktop manager known as Gnome which many thought has long died, makes a barely noticable comeback by implementing an eyecandy which has been used by the KDE folks since half a year ago.
Come on, don't beat dead horses... just let Gnome decompose its stinking carcass in peace already. Even the minimalist Fluxbox can beat Gnome in terms of usability and eyecandy anyday.
Welley Corporation - SLM Scammers
It certainly looks completely pointless RAM devouring nonsense, and I could care less whether the KDE or Gnome version is best.
You would think the developers would concentrate on making the GUI more and more accessible thereby facilitating Linux's use as a desktop OS.
But no, uber-geekery is the order of the day. How dull.
Hmmm.
These look strangely like BeOS replicants. Small programs that can sit on a desktop. Only the BeOS versions could "front" as monitors for larger programs and pass information between eachother without extra programming.
If the wishes of desktop users are the same, KDE and GNOME will keep on copying from each other forever.
How likely is it for one idea to never appear in the other project?
I notice python is the scripting language for Karamba events and it looks like gDoclets is written in it.
Cool
Here are just some examples of the things that can be done:
Display system information such as CPU Usage, MP3 playing, etc.
Create cool custom toolbars that work any way imaginable
Create little games or virtual pets that live on your desktop
Display information from the internet, such as weather and headlines
The possibilities really are endless!
In other words, more proprietary gui and more useless stuff on the desktop. I am not trolling, but why would anybody want little games or virtual pets on his/her desktop ? or display the weather or/and headlines ? it is just cosmetics, i.e. they don't do anything useful. And since Linux has so little desktop usage, I can't see how useful is this for the majority of the Linux users.
Personally, when I work, I don't like to be destructed by anything that moves on the computer screen but it is out of my focus. Maybe it's just me.
this entire story is a troll. shame on you.
But it's not true at all.
Look at GNOME 2 vs. KDE 3.1. They are almost entirely DIFFERENT. KDE still follows the path it has always followed--a beefier CDE with Windows trappings. GNOME, which used to follow this model, has completely changed--it's more like the Mac now rather then playing catch-up with KDE or imitating Windows.
I used to be unimpressed with GNOME. I recently installed GNOME 2 and was blown away--very slick, very minimalist, very tight. And very different from the current KDE. I stopped using Windowmaker as a result.
The two projects may have started out trying to mimic each other, but it's not true now. They are going in two different directions, and it shows.
More popular? Show me one user poll showing that. Not even among developers.
This is ActiveDesktop from Microsoft reimplemented. Not very hooray, is it?
How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
I've been waiting long for something to equal the power of the command line + Unix philosophy in a graphical environment. I think this technology has that power. I think we soon will see a set of graphic small tools which do one thing, and do it well.
Why "classic" frameworks as Gnome and KDE failed to provide this tools? Well, they follow the "component model", which basically means that there are BIG modular reusable tools intended to have everything but the kitchen sink. Those components are great to assemble stand alone applications, because they provide a great chunk of related functionallity. But that's not the Unix way.
The Unix way is to have small and versatile commands, to know what they do and to combine them in new ways to solve problems as they appear. I think most GNU hackers (and some intermediate users) benefit from that approach, and I think that a text command line is not a requirement for that.
You only need a common API to communicate those small tools, something that Unix carry out with pipes. But now we have two new environments, Karamba and gDesklets, which could be the base for a graphic API. I believe it's time to move from the Command Line Interface to the Command Graphical User Interface.
Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
Gnome dosent let you change the colour scheme of the widgets. You have to HACK a text file gnown as gtkrc which is about 15000 lines long and it takes ages to hack the colours. KDE and Windows give you nice clicky pointy gui. If gnome stopped removing features and stopped hiding options in its gconf registry it might actually have more than 1% of linux desktop share which is 2% of the global market share.
As Ron Minnich said
"You want to make your way in the CS field? Simple. Calculate rough time of
amnesia (hell, 10 years is plenty, probably 10 months is plenty), go to
the dusty archives, dig out something fun, and go for it.
It's worked for many people, and it can work for you."
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
This is simply flamebait. Do not argue about if Gnome is superior/inferior to KDE or vice versa. Use any *box instead. =P
Girls are strange. They don't come with a man page.
-- Michael Mattsson
Really, was it really necessary to mention that "karamba is an ugly hack" comment? The project's homepage is very objective and doesn't slam KDE at all. That comment was the opinion of one single person!
Why was it mentioned? Are you trying to slam KDE again? Or are you trying to make it look like as if the GNOME guys are slamming KDE, and start yet another flamewar on Slashdot?
I'm sure I will get modded down for this, but hell, it's the truth! Slashdot should not encourage more pointless desktop flamewars or trying to make either GNOME or KDE look bad.
Don't just stick your head up your ass (by modding this down.)
10) Registry editor clone (gconf-editor).
9) "Instant Apply" techology that can accidently cause damage (Ooops, I selected hello.jpg [goatse.cx] as my wallpaper instead of fish.jpg)
8) Weather applet that shows fahrenheit by default (Hello, the wolrd is != USA)
7) The half assed way of changing screen resolutions. The Xrandr hack is useless if you want to change colour depth.
6) No easy way to edit menus. With windows I can right click the menu and rename, edit, and drag and drop entries. You are at the mercy of your distro's complex heiracrhy without editing text files.
5) Nautilus, half asssed file management with no "real" features. Guess whos using konqueror.
4) Its word processor (Abi word office) has no table support
3) The clock, in its asswipe MM/DD format (again W!=USA)
2) The file dialog (no further comment)
And last but not least
*drumroll*
1) HAVOC PENNINGTON
The person who took gnome from being a KDE Kass Kicker in 1.4 to a VTECH Whizzkid computer in 2.3. Give us back our features and shove your "HIG" up your millimetre dick!
Obligatory mention of gkrellm ... www.gkrellm.net. IMHO, its smaller, more lightweight... can be extended with hundreds of plugins and doesn't clutter the desktop. I think it's been around a bit longer too, but I could be wrong.
Skiers and Riders -- http://www.snowjournal.com
Ok, so gDesklets is a clone of Karamba that is a clone of Konfabulator that is a clone of the old hack Andy Hertzfeldt and Arlo worked on in Nautilus. Nice so see how things work in circles ;)
"Also, before slamming Karamba for being "an ugly hack", I'd love for them to explain A.) Why they think this is so and B.) Why their version is going to be so much better."
There is no "they". There is only "he". This is the comment of one individual, not the entire project.
Slashdot is just trying to start another flamewar. This whole story could be considered a troll just because it mentions that single comment.
come on guys, its been at least a year since the gnome guys have changed their logo, how long does it take you guys to update one little .gif?!?
Pretty much spot on!
> 9) "Instant Apply" techology that can accidently cause damage
It's not even "Instant Apply", it's "Touching this gadget or closing this window means Instant Fucking Save and Apply, do not breathe while this window is open"!
Three buttons:
Apply. Save. Or Cancel.
How simple and useful things could've been.
> 6) No easy way to edit menus.
A total showstopper. But then again, the philosophy for GNOME 2.x seems to be "No easy way to [do anything]."
> 5) Nautilus, half asssed file management with no "real" features. Guess whos using konqueror.
Like "Chemicalscum" said, they both suck but in different ways. DirectoryOpus (I only tried the AmigaOS version) is an excellent file manager (not a "very slowly display a directory list with added cute icons and previews" program). Heck, even Windows' explorer is a half decent file manager in comparison.
> 2) The file dialog
*shudder*
Add this random reason: Metacity.
You're not allowed to configure it. Its window gadgets are placed wrong; "close" next to mini-/maximise (MORONS! I thought I heard something about some HIG...), and to the right like in Windows, and you can't change them.
I wonder how gDesklets will look when released in the GNOME distribution. Will all users be considered too stupid to be allowed to for example decide where a desklet should be placed? Will their looks be configurable beyond choosing another predefined theme?
GNOME is still the superior desktop if you're interested in open source. It's not encumbered by Qt's non-open source license. Granted, I haven't looked at KDE/Qt in almost 4 years, but I imagine it's the same stupid license bullshit as before. Fuck Trollware!
Dashboard is something that has a real potential to be cool, eye-candy-compliant AND useful - it would be REALLY kewl to search for 'heat' and comes your computer's temperature :) /me needs to be less lazy and recompile all that Mono stuff...
Cesar Cardoso can be found at cesar at zyakannazio dot eti dot br (or at least I believe so)
I am a GNOME user, but I do not think GNOME is "superior" to KDE. It's just different, not inferior.
As for QT: it's duelicensed GPL/QPL. The GPL is a Free Software/Open Source license.
Really, the fact that so many people think bad of the GNOME community is because of people like you who mindlessly flame down KDE. You're not helping the GNOME community, you're just making us look bad.
Quote: "Footnotes is running an update article on gDesklets, Gnome's answer to KDE's Karamba."
What's the point of summarizing a story, if - by the end of the summary - the reader still has no clue as to what it's even about.
What the hell is Karamba, and why should people care enough to click-through?
This wasn't just plain terrible, this was fancy terrible. This was terrible with raisins in it. - Dorothy Parker
... and call it iKaramba. ...
[Tumbleweed rolls past]
I'll see myself out
I believe I had a hat!
[ hat is thrown into the street ]
He he. SUCKERS!
[ runs off with hat ]
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
So this is kind of like Konfabulator?
mbbac
The default GNOME Window Manager is Metacity, however, the ability is there, if the user wishes, to swap it for another one as so long as it is "GNOME compliant".
Regarding KDE, KDE has kwin, and IIRC, you can not replace it with a window manager of your choice, hence, when one compiles KDE from scratch, the window manager is embedded right into the desktop code.
Whether that is good or bad, I'll let the zealots from both sides of the spectrum take up that argument.
"The difference between pornography and erotica is the lighting" - Woody Allen
If you're using KDE and GNOME on some unoptimized system (such as, say, Debian or a from-scratch system) GNOME is more responsive than KDE.
At the risk of starting a flamewar (and keep in mind that I'm a KDE user) GNOME is more user-friendly, IMHO, than KDE. KDE has a nice set of defaults and allows an extreme (some say excessive) level of configurability. GNOME is, well, GNOME. Sometimes it reminds me of MacOS 9. The only thing I miss by not using GNOME, though, is the ability to zoom on images with my scrollwheel. That's it.
Use whatever works for you. Heck, if TWM and a couple of xterms works for you, use it.
Stating on Slashdot that I like cheese since 1997.
It gives me joy like when I figured out I could drag applications out of their windows in BeOS.
Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
why not.
Reading flamewars is alot of fun.
It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
Oh please. Looks like we have another person who buys into the hype that Everything Should Be XML. Tell me, how would XML configuration files change things for the better?
XML is a fad, plain and simple. It isn't superior to custom file formats in any way.
Touch ./path
make install
for some reason, every package in gnome complains that index.sgml doesn't exist.
"The difference between pornography and erotica is the lighting" - Woody Allen
We have an app to plug when we mention Python to every single passer-by on the street! Even though they haven't heard of it, its proof you CAN write apps in Python!
Duh, I was trolling, that's the point.
Pretty shiny things to clutter your desktop, though? That's just evil. There's no there there. It's just pretty graphics pretending to be useful!
Am I totally missing the point, or am I spot-on?
I tried to like Karamba when it came about; I was never able to find a good use for it, though. About the best use anyone ever came up with was as a half-assed OSX-style Dock. Weather applets? Stuck to my desktop? Until I stop using my computer for anything other than staring at my desktop, no thanks.
Stating on Slashdot that I like cheese since 1997.
Not that it's not a good language, but isn't Guile the official scripting language?
....argh!!
The extra dependencies
...for an eyecandy software they have really not mastered the art of screenshooting.
The "utility check". It's a close cousin of the reality check. Let's do one. I honestly have no idea what a gDesklet or a Karamba is. What does it do? Will it help me do word-processing, development, web-browsing, or email any faster or more securely?
If not, it fails my personal utility check.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
I'm glad the good old days are gone, where in order to get a decent level of functionality with an OS such as windows 3.1, I had to get winzip, winrar vueprint, etc.
Duh, I was trolling, that's the point.
And we are very proud of you. Fag.
And while the lack of table support of Abiword is a bind at least it works unlike Kword.
Abiword 2 will support tables. Actually, latest betas and RCs do, and people say it's very good.
this one you site has a sample size of 600 developers, this is absolutely meaningless in terms of real world users. real users, not slashdot geeks like us dont take polls, and seeing as how gnome is seeing massive growth in the real users (thanks to ximian, sun and now novel) these polls are utterly meaningless.
So basically they're all just knock-offs of Konfabulator...
Here is a Gnome desktop widget that is actually quite a bit more interesting: Dashboard, software that gets fed "clues" from other applications, and searches some databases for related information.
VOS/Interreality project: www.interreality.org
You seem to be in the dark about the meaning of "propietary".
Another point is why should XML be better than what they're using now.
If you pointed me at Karamba's home page I wouldn't have a clue what it was. "information using various sensors and display types" could mean pretty much anything. gDesklets mentions status meters and news tickers so you know WTF it is.
Simple really.
I think you meant to say "Gnome is an ugly hack". Just thought you should know. ;)
Yesterday we went to the supermarket and found
the shelves full of lovely goods. Indeed, we
were allowed freely to browse the rows and rows
of delectable consumer goods, and we soon made
ourselves busy by opening various packages and
eating what we wanted, as well as filling our
pockets and bags with the many beautiful things.
I have to admit it was a wonderful fifty
minutes. Imagine our surprise, therefore, when
at the exit we were rudely stopped by a security
guard and asked to pay for the goods we
had consumed. There was no reason for this, and
we were very angry. Needless to say, I will not
be going back to this shop, and I encourage all
of you to boycott this thing we call "capitalism"
most strongly. The very idea that one person can
somehow restrict the rights of others to come in
and eat his food, drink his soda, and chew on his
liquorice sticks is an affront to all civilized
society. I am now returning to North Korea where
people have a more decent view on such matters.
Thank you for your time.
Ceci n'est pas une signature
Isn't GNOME just an ugly hack itself? KDE is by far superior to GNOME. I mean....how can someone even argue the fact? Maybe it is an ugly little hack, but at least it's an ugly little hack that runs on a solid base rather than a solid little app that runs on an ugly little hack.
if you dont care, dont click the link that will tell you what it is, its that simple.
/.?
why are you here? im not 1337 by any means, but cmon... hehe, i think someone put
but seriously, who uses the term techno-babble on
66.218.71.198 slashdot.org
in your host file
i sell illegal drugs
Is it just me or does the website this story links to (http://www.gnomedesktop.org/) not work? After clicking on the link I just get a couple of php script errors coming up on a blank page
Eye Karamba!
"600 developers" developers is the key there, this is NOT a survery of users and hence has no bearing on the distrubution in the population of users.
1. XML is readable by people. You don't end up with useless legacy binary files with XML.
2. You don't have to write yet another file format IO library - you can download XML readers and writers for any language, and there are simple and easy APIs (like SAX) for extracting the information.
3. XML files are cross-platform - there are no issues like endian-ness or word length to prevent the data being read.
4. XML files are self-documenting in terms of structure - tags, attributes and text content are understood by everyone - you don't need to specify your own delimiter set, escape characters, line terminators etc.
5. XML files can be validated for correctness.
6. XML is extensible. You can take someone else's format, and add your own tags with your own namespace, extending the structure of the data without altering the meaning for legacy programs (programs need only interpret the tags they recognise).
7. XML is transformable. You can easily port data between different XML tag sets, or to another file format (PS,PDF,RTF,SVG etc) using XSLT style sheets.
8. XML is searchable. You can store in XML repositories and it will be searchable on tags and attributes.
9. XML is international. There are defined mechanisms for coding international characters.
10. Almost everyone is either using it, or going to. Microsoft Office can load and save XML. Microsoft .Net and the SOAP services use XML for communication. The OpenOffice native file format is a ZIPed directory containg XML files. Why not be compatible, rather than write your own custom format?
So Yes, Everything Should Be XML
I've never understood the popularity of "active desktop" style embedded desktop widgets. I for one see my computer desktop about as often as I see my physical desktop, which is maybe once a month when I get one of my rare cleaning urges or have to find some document I printed out awhile back. What the hell do these people do at work, that they actually spend a signifigant amount of time without their deskop completely obscured by other windows?
--
CPAN rules. - Guido van Rossum
you can change the window button order in Metacity through gconf-editor. The key to change is documented, too.
I have mine set as minimize,maximize, title, close.
"I keep looking in the want-ads under 'revolutionary' but there don't seem to be any listings.. "
Since they are all tied together in an attempt to destroy linux, I say "Fuck You" to all of them.
Do a web search on google or forbes magazine, for kripes sake.
Mod parent up!@!!1
WOW!
You can read it here with links to the images and their comments section.
Mirror of Story
Linux will never be widespread until there's a standard and ONLY ONE STANDARD. Drop Gnome, GTK, for once and keep Qt/KDE.
Samurize copied Konfabulator, karamab copied Samurize, SuperKaramba was a further improvement to Karamba, and now Gdesklets copied SuperKaramba.
As, usual KDE was ahead in features.
'If anything, it has more features than Konqueror. It's incredibly pluggable, with hundreds of enhancement pluggins. It's now fairly efficient and usable even on my lowly 700mhz celeron."
Okay this really is not true anyway you try to spin it. Nautilus has some nice things like emblems, the cool way it previews things and the celaner interface, but it really does not match Konqueror in features. Not by a long shot.
Konqeror also has a plugin architecture and can handle virtually every protocol transparently. It is far more customizable.
I will give you a simple example on why I use KDE. I transferred a folder full of files from my Window spartition, I clicked on properties for the folder and set the permissions to 'alex" my login name from the root account. To my surprise I would have had to do this for every one fo my file sin order o be able to modify them, when I canged the permissions for the folder, nothing inside it changed. This is why I opened Konqueror and set the permission to "alex" than checked "Apply changes to all subdirectories and their contents".
This is one example, but tehre are a dozen. Nautilus does not match Konqueror's feature set.
Also Abiword 1.9.x is not stable so of course he didn't try it, Koffice 1.2 which is stable already has support for tables. You need to compare stable apps ebtween stable apps.
A lot of people seem to be asking if this supposed "eye candy" is nessesary. On my windows 2000 machine I run samurizer (the program karamba has cloned from. And on my debian system I use karamaba. I created my own custom themes with art made to blend seamlessly into the desktop, yet me movable and not in the way. I have all the info I really want( Free memory, total uploads, downloads, free space on 5 hard drives, uptime... all displayed in a pleasing way) As a frequent downloader, the time saved and convienience make this program a must have.
Karamba is great software, if you actually spend some time making a custom configuration before you know it you will not be able to live without it. The only problem is that it can take a while tinkering to make it just how you want it. samurizer has a fast and functional graphical editor from which you can quickly add or change art or sensors. With karamba you must manually edit the text file.
Really, was it really necessary to mention that Slashdot comment? Slashdot is full of articles and very objective and doesn't start all that many flame wars at all. That comment was the work of one single poster!
Why did you have to mention it and blame all of Slashdot? Are you trying to slam Slashdot again? Or are you trying to make it look as if the Slashdot guys are trying to start a flamewar?
I'm sure I will get blah blah blah. You shouldn't encourage more gratuitous slams of Slashdot. Quit trying to make Slashdot look bad. Jeebus.
learn to get along.
Then we can just have Klockwork Gnome. Think of it merge that gear thing KDE has going with Gnome and you have a full on Tinker Gnome thing going.
And what zit-faced-DND-Lovin'-slashdot-reading-dork wouldn't love that?
B
Obviously the projects wouldn't be being developed if the developers (and the community around them) thought they where useless.
I've been following kde-look.org on and off for a while now, there are a lot of users who really like this stuff. I'm a Blackbox man myself, but I'm not above making my desktop easy on the eyes (I run a dressed up version of the KDE kick on mine that looks similar to this).
Too much clutter and I start to feel a little distracted, but I really like that the Linux desktop if finally starting to come into its own.
Of course if you don't like you still don't have to use it.
Quack, quack.
Or their server would be down.
Quack, quack.
Thats just one of the reasons its soooo nice using open software!
Quack, quack.
for a second there I was worried you were going to say the Mac version was the i-Karamba.
This conversation definitely needs more Pogo
Anyway, I wrote a whitepaper on this sort of thing back in '98. Look around, i'm sure it's still floating around somewhere. Might be useful.
Bowie J. Poag
I'm still waiting for the KDE User Network Tool...
I agree on the Kword call, I recently completely monstered a document for a Uni course because I put in on kword without realising how screwed up it is. the best thing was that once it was in the format it doesn't convert out to anything MS or Linux.
I clecked on the links, they didn't help. Somehow both are a framework for some "eye candy". I have no idea what kind though. I saw some screen shots, but I'm not sure what is the eye candy they are trying to show me, and what is part of the desktop.
I use KDE all the time. I might even use Karamba. If so though, I don't know about it. Since I don't develop Karamba stuff, and appearently it is a framework I shouldn't care about it. I do care about the end results, which I might already have.
"a sample size of 600 developers, this is absolutely meaningless in terms of real world users" try finishing the sentance to understand the meaning.