KDE 3.4 RC1 Released
twener writes "The KDE project has announced the first release candidate of KDE 3.4 which brings many new features targeted for release at 16th March. Sources (requirements list, build script), an i486 GNU/Linux Live-CD (375MB) and SUSE 9.2 binary packages are available currently.
OSdir.com and tuxmachines.org have screenshots of this release. Source Code and a Live CD are available."
Ceep up the good worc.
The tuxmachines.org link is hosed already?
-Jar.
Together, We Can Make Slashdot Better. I Do NOT Mod ACs. - Check Me Out
But does it run on linux? Oh... wait...
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Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
Is anyone trying to run KDE on an x86 processor that doesn't support at least the i586 instruction set? Anyone at all?
It's so cool. I only use windows 95 at home, but Robert (that's his name) say's it's a crappy operation system. I guess I agree, because KDE looks so cool I was amazed.
Robert says if I want a real computer, I should put Linux on my windows computer. I should try the LiveCDs from the article, maybe. What's the best Linux for my computer anyway?
Thanks!
~~ Ellie
-- Ellie Morrow
I'll probably get modded down for this, but my forays into KDE use have been separated by 6 months at a time. It seems the KDE team is emulating Microsoft's penchant for changing how major features of the interface work at frequent intervals.
I see lots of people complaining that each time Windows is updated they have to relearn the GUI, but honestly the same is true with KDE.
I'm not primarily a Windows user - I mostly use Mac OS X these days, but because of the amount of change that happens in KDE, I find it more trouble than it's worth and have begun to just stick with XFCE when I'm working on my Linux boxes.
It would be nice to see some consistency between major releases of KDE so that configurable items are still found in the same place when you upgrade, etc.
KDE has updates? I didn't know that! I use Debian!
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Support Indy Music. Buy
Perhaps someone can read this and route it to the appropriate person in the KDE project. Is there some way to merge the burning and playing application for media files inside KDE? K3B or whatever it is seems to work great. All the players work fine. However, a huge advantage of iTunes is the ability to burn playlists and play burn lists. Also, I really wish they would get rid of that stupid green cartoon character that pops up different places in there. I'm not sure if I would like a different character better, but that one seriously, seriously bugs me.
Looks just like the kde version I'm using.
A Release Candidate...
/. is not freshmeat.
Oh, wait.
Let me know when the actual product is out, eh?
PS :
Along the lines of bugs, KDE's bug tracking system just reached it 100000 *reported* bug (not open) On the kde news site ther is a story about it include tips on how you can help report bugs/problems that you find in KDE to help make it better.
-Benjamin Meyer
Do you changes clothes while making the "chee-chee-cha-cha-choh" transformation sound?
Still looks like it has fundamental heterogeneous integration black holes to me.
Q: How do you identify a KDE programmer? :-)
A: He's swapped the functionality of the 'k' and space bar keys
BTW, Are there any screen shots out there?
Windows Update = Fixing bugs
Maybe if you got more benefites from windows updates other than patching holes.
If you're going to Kompare apples to oranges go ahead. This is more along the lines of a service pack, or beta of a new version of windows.
been running kde 3.4 beta1 for a few weeks now. my personal favorites are the improvements to kdvi and kpdf. things are rendered a lot better in each, and the sidebar page previews really help navigating for us needing to edit long latex documents... too bad the bug that doesnt show >1 images in kdvi on the same page when it's supposed to is still there.
the best thing now is that they're no longer using that hideous keramick theme as the default...
unfortunately, everything in kde is a little too self contained. as in it doesn't launch the 'default' browser (sensible-browser) that you set. there's not even a simple config/dialog where you can choose to run firefox/mozilla instead of konqueror whenever you click on links on other "K" apps.
my blog
I'll say one thing for GNOME ..... it makes KDE look fast.
Linux is ready for the desktop don't you know! So of course, large updates like this are really just simple patches!
I find it interesting that they released this as a live cd. As far as I can remember this is the first time a desktop environment released a live cd with their new releases.
This is certainly a trend I'd like to see more of. There have been times where updating to the latest version of kde or gnome could cause a headache that lasts several hours (yes even in debian where there are occaisional dependency problems especially in unstable). And there are of course some distros that take several weeks before packages are available. Of course compiling from source is an option, but remember if linux is ever going to be ready for the desktop, compiling from source has got to be just that, an option.
But with a live cd release you can check out the new features and decide whether it's worth the risk of a headache.
I'm still downloading the iso but I give KDE major props for releasing a live cd in addition to the source.
It's nothing to brag about...
New features? I thought Linux was ready for the desktop years ago???
Thanks for your nice reply. I don't know much about it. I think my mom got it in 1997, so it's kind of old. But it has character, you know.
;-?
I would ask Robert but I'm afraid he will think I'm lame or dumb or something. He's from Maryland and he's really smart. I don't want him to think i'm even dumber than he probably already thinks!
It's not a bad computer though. I can play nethack on it (that's his favorite game), but I get killed all the time. It's kind of a hard game. I think it would be better if it had music and stuff. But anyway, that's what the computer is about.
Thanks, Ellie xxx
-- Ellie Morrow
a torrent, a torrent, my coffee for a torrent!!!
fancy posting a link to an iso and there not being a torrent available...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
Why do all the Linux desktops emulate the Windows interface? Can't they come up with something more original?
Shouldn't it be "KDE 3.4 RK1 Released" ?? :)
8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
Or, with the time you spend pissing about with both of them, just get a job and pay the difference for a decent desktop. I hear you can get one from $499.
KVim works fine without this hack.
Please provide at least one example for the alleged major changes and inconsistencies. Thanks.
Please provide some examples of the alledged "fundamental heterogeneous integration black holes."
Thanx in advance.
Heh...a new KDE release candidate comes out less than two days after I stop using KDE after spending the last two years as a die-hard KDE user.
It's not that I have anything against KDE, but I just discovered Ion and how completely wonderful it is. KDE's the best traditional DE, but why should I use a traditional DE or WM when I've got Ion?
It took a little getting used to, but once I got my screen layouts and virtual desktops set up in a way that I like, I've found that Ion is far more natural and useful than a normal WM/DE.
Of course, even though I'm no longer using KDE as a desktop, I still use quite a few KDE applications, and that's not going to change soon.
I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
yeah, Gnome was really nice back when 1.4 was current, the 2.x gnome releases are pure shit, i would not have that crapware on my boxen, KDE is much more polished & user friendly...
Please tell us what exactly looks like windows and what you would prefer instead.
Thanks in advance.
Thankfully I have Apple hardware so I don't have to run either of these craptacular bloated "Ready for the Scrapheap" GUIs.
I lurk on the KDE optimize list and came across the funniest comment in an email there the other day that probably goes a long way to explaining the mess that is KControl. They were discussing reducing disk accesses for displaying icons (a worthwhile cause) by building a database of their location:
"Do you think that it can make sense to add an option in KDE Performance -> System to Cache icons location?"
It's just like they have some instinct to add options rather than taking decisions. Just profile the system with and without the cache on and if it helps, enable it. If building the database takes some time, spawn it as a low-priority background task. Don't push all that work off onto the user.
Finally, a theme that looks good! Now if only they could get their control spacing.... under control...
I don't mean to sound like I am flaming KDE or the development structure, but all this seems to be is a few more appliKations thrown into the default KDE install. I would love to see them take steps to make KDE LESS monolithic, and perhaps even go as far as to start removing packages from the default KDE app-set. Does anyone really use all ~3 text editors that come with KDE? Choose the best one, and if people like something 'different' allow them to install it themselves.
Who needs KDE or Debian when you have Emacs.
Which applicatians have been thrown into the KDE default install and above all, what exactly is the kde default install. The one on Suse, Mandrake, Fedora, on my gentoo, on debian?
About the text editors, this has been answered about 300 000 000 times, but here it goes again. There are kwrite and kedit, because only kedit supports writing form right to left. If you don't need that feature, don't install kedit.
Now you might want to ask about kwrite. Kwrite is only a simple frontend to kate, intended for people that only want to do basic task with their text editor.
What happened to implementing the Shared MIME Info spec from FreeDesktop.org? As recently as 1/2005, KDE was "planning to support it for their next major release". GNOME already supports this way to focus on our data, with automatic integration with our apps, without worrying that we picked the right desktop to mediate between our apps and our data. Is the next "major" KDE release "4.0", and we have to wait a few years for MIME integration to catch up with GNOME? Or is the MIME layer already in 3.4, and this is just another action-packed OSS episode airing with hidden, inscrutable features not making it to the release notes?
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make install -not war
Support for text-shadow! Hope this will pressure Mozilla to do likewise.
well when the KDE people said they would support it next release, it sure leads me to beleive that it will be supported. i know it is crazy to make that assumption, but i guess it is a natural conclusion when THEY SAY IT.
For example, this 486+ instruction speeds up TCP communication:
... use rorw $8, %w0; "rorl $16, %0; rorw $8, %w0 ...
... bswap %0 ...
Byte Swap (bswap) [486]
bswapreg[16|32]
Example
Convert little/big endian to big/little endian by swapping bytes.
bswap %ebx
The equivalent 386 code would take 3 times as many cycles even on modern hardware:
simplified excerpt from a GNU C library header file:
/* To swap the bytes in a word the i486 processors and up provide the
`bswap' opcode. On i386 we have to use three instructions. */
# if !defined __i486__ && !defined __pentium__ && !defined __pentiumpro__
#else
#endif
> "planning to support it for their next major release"
*** NEXT MAJOR RELEASE. ***
That would probably be KDE 4.0 and furthermore it is planned but not decided.
Indeed! Emacs is a great OS. Too bad about the crappy text editor though. =/
I can live with glitches, slight instability etc. as long as I know that then RC2, RC3 or release comes out, I can easily upgrade from this RC1.
Is the live CD version compiled with the visibility option?
Same thing applies...
Service Pack to Windows=boo, Windows sucks
Service Pack to KDE=Yay, time for a circle jerk!
You're a weirdo egotist who thinks "real" means "my personal Linux fantasy". Keep developing that software for its audience of one, while whining about how it still isn't "the year of the Linux desktop". That FD.o spec marks an essential agreement among desktop developers to interoperate, the key to integration that keeps Microsoft rolling in monopoly money. Getting the choice between preferred desktops, without the getting jailed in any one's limitations, is the "freedom" we need in Linux, so the platform isn't fragmented for app developers and the masses of users.
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make install -not war
They're about (in the next year or so) to get hit with a double whammy of OS X Tiger (although Panther makes them look dated as it is, never mind the new Core Image stuff coming along), and Longhorn, should it ship on time. I don't think either of these systems have even caught up with current offerings from Apple and Microsoft.
"probably"
So, Anonyous Coward, you have no answer to the question - just the same question as I posed, that you quoted. "Major release" doesn't necessarily mean "major version number". And if it does, then KDE's lag will keep an interop desktop standard behind long enough to help ensure the Linux desktop is a completely fragmented market, just as it's proliferating among a wide variety of personal devices.
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make install -not war
I would say SP2 for XP was a significant update for functionality. The .NET framework is also a "Windows Update" with lots of added capability.
Get real idiot. The reality looks differently. Most specs are set up by GNOME fanboys trying their best to convince the hell outa the KDE people to adopt their halfassed crap.
Anonymous asshole Coward:
1> KDE has agreed to the spec - that's reality.
2> *Your* post is the defensive logic of the fanboy - the rest of us are trying to get our software to work.
3> Descending deeper into cruel irony, every sentence in your obnoxious post has errors that make your talk about "idiots" and "halfassed crap" look like the words of hapless expert.
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make install -not war
Yeah, you must be one of those "ready to spend a fortune" guys :-)
*lol*
Are you always acting like an asshole towards others ? I doubt you have any social life or even friends. I bet even your dog runs away from you.
Personally, I think KDE's interface hasn't really changed all that much. Every year I try it out, it feels the same.
? set_albumName=KDE_rc1&id=default3
For instance, look at this screenshot from 3.4 RC1:
http://www.tuxmachines.org/gallery/view_photo.php
That is one MASSIVE menu. The same redundancy I've been complaining about for years--"System," "Utilities," and "Settings"--is still there. Why are they even seperate menus? Why not remove all three menus and just have a link to the system configuration dialog? Oh, that's right, they have that too! That's four redundancies.
Why is there an "Edutainment" menu? Why is there an "Editors" menu? There should just be an "Applications" menu, and they let the user categorize their apps the way they want to. That menu is suffering from huge clutter overload!
And look at the apps. Basically, they have two names each. Instead of "AppName," you have "AppName (WhatItReallyIs)." Silly and redundant. If the original name isn't working well enough, rename it. Essentially, you're having to maintain two app names now instead of just one. When a name isn't descriptive enough, its icon should be--that's why Apple insists that OS X icons show the document type and some sort of action happening to that document or related tool, like the text editor showing a page with a pencil overlaid on it. Not all icons follow these guidelines, but they should, and the ones that do fit visually in the interface. Fishing through appnames with parenthetical descriptions is ugly and time-consuming.
Those are just a few examples. KDE is overloaded with buttons, tabs, sidebars, and input fields. A lot of that stuff is simply not needed but is only there because it seems like someone got happy with the form designer and stuck a bunch of stuff on all the forms to have multiple ways of doing things. You should have two or three really good ways of doing things, not seven ways that clutter up the really good ways.
There's an XFCE 4.2 live CD here.
Hail Eris, full of mischief...
E pluribus sanguinem
Im afraid I missed the reference...
No sig for the moment.
KDE update: features which should've been there to begin with. plus hundreds of potentially useless features intruducing new bugs
Windows updates: patches for a flawed architecture.
-- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
don't forget to put
sensible-browser "%u"
so it starts firefox with the URL and not with the kio-supplied filename.
It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
Depends on the "others". When they're assholes, like you, I try to relate. My friends find it entertaining, and it validates their value. Why suffer fools like you gladly? Especially the faddish brand of fools who are so consistent, that arguments with facts are met with mere personal attacks - so easily dismissed on the Internet. It's really fun to make you dance your little inane dance.
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make install -not war
do you think that /. will hold back on a linux, KDE, or Gnome release?
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Wow. Debian has updates? Then how come Debian Stable is still shipped with KDE 2.2?
It seems from the screenshots that Plastik is now the default theme.
I think that is brilliant, as the previous default Keramic style was a bit overdone, and the buttons were slightly buggy. I think it looks much better, and will be great at not confusing new users.
# cat
Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
Why would a Debian user stoop to use KDE's bloatware as their window manager??
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery.
Full Metal Jacket
This is your User Info page. There are thousands more, but this one is yours. You most likely are not so interested in yourself, and probably would be more interested in the Preferences links you see up top there, where you can customize Slashdot, change your password, or just click pretty widgets to kill time.
This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.
IceWM-1.2.20 + GNOME's subsets run flier!!!
More quicker & littler than KDE3!!!
Use gIDE or Anjuta instead of KDevelop.
...
Use glade instead of KDevDesigner or Kommander.
Use Nautilus-burn instead of K3b.
Use Nautilus instead of Konqueror.
Use GTK+ Commander instead of Krusader.
Use Evolution instead of KMail.
open4free ©
As far as I can tell (and I'm wrong, but give me some leeway here), all SP2 did was break some things. Firstly, it caused my parent's anti-virus scanner to stop working. Yes, and it's no hopelessly obscure scanner, though I suppose most people haven't heard of Kaspersky Labs, even though in my tests it's far superior, in every way, to the "standard" options (Norton, McAfee, AVG). Then, once a worm (well, several) came and fucked up the computer (alas, I don't live in my parent's basement like the stereotypical nerd, so, being away from home, I had no idea the destruction that was being wrought on their brand-new Athlon64 system) I was unable to entirely fix it . . . oh, I got pretty close, but of course I couldn't fix it entirely, some core files were just gone. However, repairing from the XP cd (yes, it was even a legal copy!) wouldn't work because---aha!---it said "wrong version of windows, please insert the correct version" . . . with the way things had been fucked up, though, it seems impossible to uninstall SP2. So, the computer is working decently, but some things just won't be fixed, until I can get my hands on an SP2 install disk. Which will be illegal, I suppose, but you know, doing it the legal way doesn't seem to have worked that great anyways. With all my friends and their illegal versions of Win2k, though, they've been . . . okay, no, those have gotten pretty fucked up too, but I have some very careless friends, and Win2k is far from airtight (as with any version of windows, though by now you can put a box running Win95 on the net and have no fear . . . no one cares enough to try to attack it anymore! Trust me, I've tried. Obsolete is the way to go, if you're using windows!).
But anways, I could continue, but the bottom line is, look around, and you'll see alot of downsides to SP2. Yeah, there are some bonuses, but the bottom line is, my machine can currently run pretty much anything ever released for any version of windows, so I'm damn well keeping it SP1 until I actually have a reason to switch. I don't expect anything catastrophic to go wrong (for example, my own machine doesn't have a 64-bit processor, so it's okay as far as my Kaspersky AVP copy goes . . . ironic that SP1 works better with Athlon64s than SP2, innit?), but enough people have a hard enough time running older programs in XP, I don't want to press my luck. And my machine is secure to a seemingly absured level; I don't remember the last time I even picked up any malware, and never has it gotten anywhere other than "bam! deleted", so the "security improvements" in SP2 don't sway me one bit.
Perhaps I'm missing something? Perhaps SP2 is better than I've seen it to be? But judging from what I've experienced, there are little to no advantages that would actually matter to me. But, still, people, go ahead and try to convince me if you think I'm speaking like a raving lunatic.
I remember sigs. Oh, a simpler time!
Someone needs to port vi to it..
The new non-SIMD instructions of i686 are: ...
cmov<cond>, performance monitor stamping instructions,
open4free ©
It is obvious that the parent poster has never written a compiler for x86 series chips, nor has he benchmarked any code. Please ignore his nonsensical post. Any trivial test will show you the truth.
I am so glad that KHangman finally got some usability improvements. I use this thing ALL the time!
KDE always runs x10 times worse than Win95 does.
KDE >>>>>>>>>> worse than Win95.
open4free ©
Well, you should investigate how KDE's versioning system works. Different numbers updating mean completely different things.
(For the sake of this post, the versioning is interpreted as Major.Minor.Release)
When the major number changes, it means that there has been an interface change and breaks interoperability between applications. Applications written for a 3.x release will not work with a 4.x release. New features are added in a major release, and bugs are fixed.
When the minor number changes, it means that new features added. These features will not break the API. Bugs are also fixed.
When the release number changes, it means that bugs have been fixed. (E.g. The release numbers are maintenance releases.)
Well, okay, I'd like to be proven wrong (no, really), but as a KDE user, to me freedesktop looks kinda like a marionette, controlled by GNOME people, which they use to impose their way of doing things on other desktops.
Or perhaps could someone explain to me in what is the advantage of DBUS over KDE's DCOP, or of GNOME-VFS over KDE I/O slaves, that would explain the need to set *them* up as standards (other than the obvious "advantage" that implementing them means a lot of unnecessary work for KDE devs)? Why is their multimedia framework (gstreamer) so hopelessly tied to GNOME? What is so great about glib that they *must* use it in HAL, instead of other solutions (other than the fact that glib is being used by GNOME, and therefore the library would be sitting in memory anyway, which is not true about KDE, and means extra, and unnecessary memory clogging there?) Why is that GNOME people can request X extension, and get it (Xevie), while KDE people do not?
To me it seems that these "standards" are just a way to make KDE people rip out their already working (!) solutions, and spend time implementing them the GNOME way, instead of actually improving their desktop.
Is this the new look of KDE?
I must say, it looks nothing but beautiful. Will surely make good first impressions.
Man, compared to their 1.x releases, they've reached another magnitude of beautiness .
Let's hope you're not serious.
I did testing on Gnome 1.4 vs. KDE 2.2.2 today (Debian stable on a Dell p2/~300), and Gnome started up in about half the time. The gap closed a bit later on...I used both Gnome 2.4 and KDE 3.1 on a p1/166, and Gnome started up only a little bit faster. That all is moot though, because KDE has always had lag problems with icon drawing and stuff.
This explains everything about KDE development.
"Hardly used" will not fetch you a better price for your brain.
are you sure about that? i'd believe it if you replaced i486 with i586. the pentium was in-order issue, and had "typed" dual pipelines, so that, while it could execute two instructions in parallel, only if the compiler perfectly scheduled things to use the dual issue slots. the 686 was out-of-order, and had 5 (6?) pipelines, and more than one of each type. therefore, codegen for 586 wasn't particularly useful for 686. codegen for 486 should work fine on 686?
try KDE 3.4 and Gnome 2.10. gnome 2.10 got slower than 1.4, while KDE 3.4 is faster than 2.2.2!
KDE is my favourite desktop environment on Linux and they are only adding rich text clipboard support now !!
I like linux & KDE - run a headless mandrake box as my home server, its great - but the crappy clipboard support in *ALL* linux apps/desktops is killing it on the desktop - its a deal breaker.
and no help on irc.
.dcop in user's home, restart kdeinit, and after closing konqueror windows/tabs can run konqueror again, but then the same errors pop up with ktimer, I have to restart kicker, and then trying to figure out the other processes (alt-f2 doesn't work to launch apps) isn't easy without killing kde completely (and losing tab placeholders in one of the non-functioning konqueror windows).
.dcop (which fails sometimes after numerous starts, I get errors in bash shells that no longer shows a colored prompt and something about resources not available after opening more shells in new tabs on a shell window, or restarting kdeinit after rm'ing .dcop
It's gotten to the point where I avoid opening new tabs in konqueror, and avoid using apps that start with k whenever possible.
Sitting on the problem now:
An error occurred while loading http://search.ebay.com/search/...
KLauncher could not be reached via DCOP
Could not start process Cannot talk to klauncher.
I can kill
I've asked for help numerous times on irc, in channels for kde-debian, kde-users, and one other kde channel i can't remember right now, never got a response after waiting for days after each post.
I only want to know how to find out what is the offending app (a gtk app that should be re-installed maybe?) or some other way for a non-programmer to find out what the problem is so I can fix it myself.
Already rtfm, already read the man pages, already read the kde user manual (very good btw), already did google searches on the error messages (dcop error, klauncher error, etc), only really old errors come up with workarounds to restart kdeinit/dcop, or unrelated errors.
I know how to restart
I've been using kde on various versions of Linux for a few years, and help out on irc channels myself in newbie type channels, but I'm not a programmer so I can't figure this out myself. Help would really be appreciated.
Hopefully this latest version of KDE will solve the problem, but it won't help my current install because I'm planning on following Sarge into stable and I doubt this latest RC release of KDE will make it into Sarge though it wouldn't suprise me if it did with the delays on Sarge getting to stable, something I thought was going to happen last summer.
ps, thanks for the efforts on kde, and on debian. My experience above hasn't soured me on kde or debian, its just very frustrating. And hopefully won't be a problem with Sarge at stable.
Anyway, in T-bird you would have to set its default handling of URIs too... (T-bird would not use the setting in kcontrol)
It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048