KDE 3.2.1 Released
TheSurfer writes "The KDE project today announced the immediate availability of KDE 3.2.1, a maintenance release for the latest generation of the most advanced and powerful free desktop for GNU/Linux and other UNIXes. KDE 3.2.1 ships with lot of bug fixes since KDE 3.2 and is available in 49 languages (now including Bengali, Icelandic, Japanese, Lithuanian, Low Saxon, Latin Serbian and Tajik). Sources and contributed packages are linked on the KDE 3.2.1 info page."
Now we know why the government needed that 2.5TB chunk of RAM.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
another lews link with coverage here
It supports Elvish.
Klingon, however, has already been determined to be "silly."
KFG
Hail from every rooftop!
Some bugs are fixed!
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
And most of it is already in unstable branch. Great work KDE and Debian KDE team! :)
For the record, Low Saxon is an extant language used every day in parts of Germany and the Netherlands.
It may be a somewhat obscure language, in the sense that Icelandic is an obscure language, but just as is the case for Icelandlic it is not an obscure, dead language.
KFG
Do you mind? We're in the middle of a vi versus Emacs debate here.
Please don't put such things on the main page, we have enough boring flame wars already...
Oh, so you're one of those holier-than-thou anti-flamewar fanatics, huh? Well, I personally think flamewars rock. We need more of them. I could use a good mysql flamewar right now.
Except for the fact that 10.0 has heavily patched KDE 3.2.0 packages which are almost 3.2.1. My KDE here is at package version 3.2-70mdk, 70 meaning that it is the *70th* version of this package. i.e. it has been patched and rebuild roughly *70 times.
:) They're even coming out of Chapter 11 too.
Try:
rpm -q -changelog libkdebase4 | less
Oh, Mandrake hasn't gone gold either. The boxed version will go gold in May as I understand it.
Mandrake's luck isn't _that_ bad.
--
Simon
You have apparently not heard of the KDE Klingon Translation Team. According to them, the K in KDE actually stands for Klingon.
Gee, I wish I had that much time on my hands.
The bigotry of the nonbeliever is for me nearly as funny as the bigotry of the believer. - Albert Einstein
But how are they handling error messages? Are they doing a literal translation, or will it be more along the lines of "This application has shamed itself with a segmentation fault!"?
Hey, stop making fun of our language!!! Icelandic is spoken by about 300.000 people... yeah ok, I get your point ;)
And with this new release a new flood of bugs coming in
KDE weekly bug report summaryPlease double check when reporting a bug that it really isn't a duplicate. Also be sure to send in backtraces only if you have compiled with debug information. Every bad bug report just costs the developers valueable time which is badly needed for all the features coming with 3.3:
KDE 3.3 featuresKDEPIM 3.3 features
If you want to help with an even better 3.3 your help in the KDE Quality team is welcome!
KDE, rock on
Except helping in KDE Quality Team or supporting it in various other ways there is a simple thing you can do within a couple of minuts which really help: write an email!
Start one of the many good KDE applications, go to the "help menu" and click on the "about box"->"authors". Pick one or two of them and write them a short email telling them how much you like their application and that you really appreciate what they are doing for us, the open source community.
It's easy and makes them very happy to hear from satisfied users--normally they just hear about it when something is wrong and sending some nice words really keeps them motivated. Thanks.
Granted, it says great things about Apple that the most anyone can come up with is the lack of a 2nd mouse button. However, given that EVERYONE IN THE FREAKING UNIVERSE thinks that multiple mouse buttons are more usable, and has thought that way for, oh, the last 15 years or so, why doesn't Apple just swallow their pride and provide a mouse with a 2nd (or 3rd, this *is* UNIX after all) button? Why should someone have to spend $7 for a new mouse at Radio Shack when Apple could just include one from the get go? Apple users are like Porsche owners. It's only when the new model comes out that they can admit the glaring flaws in the old. For years Mac users talked about how stable the OS was. Then when OSX came out everyone was saying, "Finally, it doesn't crash anymore. OS9 had real stability problems." Admit it, the day Apple includes a 2 button mouse everyone will be talking about how the old mouse was dated and how Apple's pushed the Mac to new levels of productivity.
They'll probably kill the application's parent and siblings too.