KDE 4.1 Beta 1 Released
appelza contributed a link to Tuesday's announcement of the next step toward KDE 4.1: "The KDE Project is proud to announce the first beta release of KDE 4.1. Beta 1 is aimed at testers, community members and enthusiasts in order to identify bugs and regressions, so that 4.1 can fully replace KDE 3 for end users. KDE 4.1 beta 1 is available as binary packages for a wide range of platforms, and as source packages. KDE 4.1 is due for final release in July 2008." I haven't used KDE much for the past few years, but the screenshots of a "grown-up" plasma are enough to make me correct that.
depends on what linux distro you're using. so far there are packages for mandriva, opensuse, debian and fedora. the release has also been ported to windows and mac with a set of packages for kubuntu coming up in a little bit however you can compile from source if you really really need to have the beta on other distros/OSes
Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
I think that besides whats already been stated about the obvious nifts 'n gigglez with eyecandy, it looks a little less "overdone" than the previous ones. I'm not a big KDE fan myself, but in this particular period in time, I'm mostly happy that large free applications are being updated at all. :)
It's all fun & games until someone loses the game.
Impressive!
My concern is not so much the desktop environment itself.
How many KDE3-guified apps are going to switch over to KDE4? I don't expect to see very many this year, but next year should be very telling regarding the desktop's popularity.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
I am not a window manager guru by any stretch. I use Gnome since that is what a lot of my friends use, and at the time I made the choice KDE didn't seem as capable. Now I look at KDE and get the impression that Gnome is falling behind in breadth and depth of features, configurability, and ease of use. Is that an accurate view of the situation? If so, why isn't Gnome able to keep up?
if you're trying to use the debian port, know that Linux Mint being based on Ubuntu which is based on Debian is no longer close enough to use Debian's experimental branch packages. for an experimental beta like this, you would probably be better off either compiling from source [pain in the arse if you ask me] or installing the debian port on debian through a virtual machine of course any of the other OS/port combos would likely work too.
Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
x.5 has more features than x.0 or x.1. Who would have guessed? 4.x will eventually outdo 3.5's features. Just not 4.0 or 4.1.
Not that you shouldn't stick with 3.5 if you feel that best serves your needs.
What?! The first beta of beta?
You can have 0, 1 or more of these folder views in your plasma, all viewing different (or the same, I suppose) folders. You can put them on different activity areas (aka "desktop containments") as well.
In the future we'll have a little label in the folderview telling you which folder you are looking at, it will turn into an icon with a menu listing in horizontally constrained containments (e.g. panels), it will be collapsible on the desktop with a single click (it's already resizable, rotatable and removable) and you will be able to use it as a containment itself.
That last bit is important: it means that you can have an Old Skool(tm) desktop with an icon mess if that's what you really, really want. So don't bother with that flame, nobody has anything to complain about.
Or BSD desktop?
*ducks*
"Hannibal's plans never work right. They just work." Amy/A-Team
I am using the what appears to be Kubuntu repo's btw:
http://ppa.launchpad.net/kubuntu-members-kde4/ubuntu/
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
Debian has KDE 4.1beta1 in the experimental branch. debian unstable and experimental should satify the requirements for KDE4.1: eg.
deb http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/ experimental main non-free contrib
deb-src http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/ experimental main non-free contrib
Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
That would be the best thing ever. Desktop icons are an abomination. I find myself unable to use them with proper discipline, and my desktop becomes a complete and utter mess. All I can do is use a WM that doesn't support them (fluxbox). I might actually have to check out kde4 now.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Are you not aware that Qt4 uses less resources than Qt3? KDE4 is therefore less resource intensive than KDE3 (Or at least will be when the KDE3 apps are rewritten for KDE4. Until then, both Qt3 and Qt4 must be loaded).
It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
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And here is a memory usage test written by a gnome guy a couple of years back for KDE3. Gnome and KDE use more or less the same amount of memory: http://spooky-possum.org/cgi-bin/pyblosxom.cgi/kdevsgnome.html
So unless our troll is using emacs or windowmaker or something like that for his "desktop environment" he should take his anonymous coward business elsewhere.
What video card(s)/driver(s) are you using?
Mesa doesn't support AA IIRC.
Feel free to mod this redundant or OT but I just ordered a Dell Inspiron 1420N with Ubuntu and I feel really good about it :)
/. posts a story about Dell being hammered in court for false advertising but I really don't care. I've been using Linux since '97/'98 and this is the first time I've bought a computer that's had Linux pre-installed and I can't even begin to tell you how good that feels.
My wife and I have been talking about me getting a laptop for the last 4 years since I work from home, so this is going to give me a lot more mobility. I may finally be able to take a vacation. Anyway I really didn't want to pay the MS Tax and at the same time I wanted to send the message that I want Linux. It's a little ironic that this comes the same day
This really IS the year of Linux on the desktop even if most people still don't give a flying fsck.
Actually, KDE 4.1 is what the average user considers to be "KDE 4". 4.0 was mainly the technical basis on which the actual GUI would be built.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
Gnome has a reputation for being more stable than KDE. On the downside it doesn't have as many features as KDE. (I'm on Gnome, I'm jealous of those sexy screenshots.)
Kind of makes sense that with most of the money coming from business they would rather have something more solid than feature-rich. But this is just a guess on my part.
Sure. And on Mac OS X and on Windows too. And even on BSD (although I heard that it is dying).
4.0 was advertised as a "base" platform for application developers and bleeding-edge adopters, a feature-freeze for the KDE 4.0 frameworks, not necessarily a feature-complete desktop environment. Was there somewhere or someone that said otherwise? If so, they should be slapped with a trout.
My blog. Good stuff (when I remember to update it). Read it.
Gnome has a reputation for being more stable than KDE. On the downside it doesn't have as many features as KDE. (I'm on Gnome, I'm jealous of those sexy screenshots.)
Reputation for stability among whom? Gnome users?God is imaginary
I kan't stand it, either, komrade.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
KDE 4.0 was never intended for mainstream use, but rather as the first implementation of the new KDE libraries that allowed developers to begin porting their KDE 3.x applications to KDE 4. As such, KDE 4.0 was largely unusable. However, its goals (the main porting effort) were achieved, so it was considered a success.
KDE 4.1 is supposed to be the first KDE 4 version usable by real people. There was a lot of space between 4.0 and actual usability; but the developers have been making rapid progress, and KDE 4.1 seems good in the article, so I'm allowing myself a bit of optimism that it might have enough of 3.5's functionality to be useful -- especially if I can uninstall Dolphin without trashing the rest of the desktop.
Yes, having an unix underneath a nice graphical desktop environment.
:wq!
Warning, if KDE3 is your working desktop, you may be wise to copy ~/.kde to restore it if KDE4 doesn't work for you.
/etc/apt/sources.list
1. use the url's above minus the [bracketed] words in
2. Set pin priority. I borrowed from http://wiki.debian.org/Kde4schroot I also prioritized a couple of packages to be sure they didn't get upgraded. (mythtv-frontend is my biggie)
3. apt-get update
4. aptitude install -t experimental kde4 (this might take a while to calculate a solution that works for your system)
5. Restart X.
Big thanks to the author of the kde4schroot page.
http://wiki.debian.org/Kde4schroot
http://packages.debian.org/experimental/kde4
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
Does Apple?
DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
iThere iAre iTwo iOther iCompeting gschools gof gthough, i'll grant iou.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
If it was meant for bleeding-edge adopters, it should have been called alpha or beta. If it was meant for application developers, call it a release candidate, or split it into two projects and call this one "kdebase 4.0".
Calling it "KDE 4.0" was a mistake.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
I heard there are no more icons on the desktop in KDE 4.1...
That is not entirely correct. You can have icons and launchers (shortcuts) by dragging
them from Dolphin or the K-menu. What has changed is that the desktop will no longer
display the contents of the Desktop folder. However, you can show an arbitrary number
of folders (local or remote) on your desktop view, instead of being forced to display only
the contents of the "Desktop" folder. To do so, a new applet has been introduced, the
Folder View applet.
I've read it a few times .. and still vague on what the heck they are trying to do.. of course it's probably simpler to use than it sounds.. This whole thing has peaked my interest in KDE though.. I tried 4.0 on another partition, and immediately went back to gnome.. but I'll give 4.1 beta a shot what the hey.
waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
Agreed, I think a lot of people tend to forget that its been some 3 years since KDE 3.5x and basically everything with KDE 4 is still rather beta, whereas Gnome, has for the most part continued its path since 2.0 (6-ish years ago) and thus appears more stable because its more consistent, which arguably could be said is more stable, but I have yet to crash KDE 3.5x...
Disclaimer: I havent used Gnome since about 2001 except for brief periods in Live CD's before installing and switching to KDE... so it may indeed actually be more "stable" however, its layout and style is "incompatible" with my preferences, and reminds me too much of (leaves before the tomatoes hit)...
But does it run on Windows?
Seriously, if there was a Windows version, I could replace the crappy Windows shell with it. I still need Windows for certain critical applications like Rollercoaster Tycoon and Battlezone. Losing the Windows shell (and I.E of course) would reduce the attack surface area somewhat and maybe allow me to connect to the Internet occasionally with it.
By slowly replacing Windows components with Linux ones (OOO, Firefox, KDE), it makes it much easier to convert someone to Linux later.
"Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
KDE is absolutely not bloated. A modern desktop SHOULD provide a wide range of services to apps --- including net IO, a web browser component, rss, clipboards, drag and drop, color management, printing, contacts, emailing, calendaring, multimedia, threading, event passing, IPC, tagging, database access, URL shortcuts, launching, file management, thumbnails, etc. Many modern apps use these these things, and it makes absolutely no sense for them all to have dis-integrated separate implementations.
If you want to see bloat, look at the apps for any popular desktop that DOESN'T provide a solid, modern, complete core. Run any modern workflow, like quoting a webpage and editing photos to embed in your spell-checked word processor document, to email to someone whose name is all you can recall. Compare memory use, workflow, and integration, AFTER getting used to each desktop for a few months and learning all of the little integration features provided by each solution. I challenge anyone to do it on linux and find a desktop that beats KDE.
This is distribution-specific. At least in Kubuntu, the users' KDE directory is ~/.kde4, which allows you to have both versions installed without them conflicting with each other.
IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
I appreciate that you're looking for a pat on the back and feel proud about this moment, so for what it's worth Good For You!! You make me proud.
A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
Agh! That's it! I'm just going to switch to Knome!
Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
- Finder
- Address Book
- Automater
- Calculator
- Dashboard
- Chess
- Dvd Player
- Image Capture
- Mail
- Preview
- Quicktime
- Sherlock
- Stickies
- Spot Light
- Final Cut Pro
- Aperture
- Dock
- expose
Gnome apps without a prefixed "g" included with Gnome:- Tomboy
- Beagle
- File-roller
- AisleRiot Solitaire
- glchess
- Totem
- Nautilus
- Evince
- Rhythmbox
- Pidgin
- Epiphany
- Ekiga
- Firefox
- Thunderbird
- Banshee
- vinagre
- empathy
- Evolution
Remember, I want at least 10 different KDE programs. They should be notable because they are included or many people use it, and it is preferable that the executable itself does not have the k in it. Go!Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
It might be a Gentoo patch but my KDE 4 uses .kde4.0 and .kde is a symlink.
1. Amaro..damn it! 2. Kaffe...argh 3. Konque...)(*&*) 4. Kaffei...*sigh* 5. Kopet...wtf 6. JuK....:( 7. Akregator 8. KSnaps...(&* 9. Koffi...fuck 10. Kmai...bob saget OMG I found one! Gwenview! -KDE User
"I completely disagree. I put many frequently used icons on my desktop as it speeds up my access to them."
The desktop is covered by one or more windows most of the time, so how is it easier to move or minimize windows to launch a program or browse a directory? Any time one important thing is covered by another important thing, it's broken. That's why I hate desktop widgets, desktop icons, and windows that cover each other (not that I have a better idea for that last one).
From my perspective I think KDE 4.1 should put a lot more focus on Krunner (the run dialog). First, they should give it a quicker shortcut so it's easier to launch. I use ctrl-space. It's a better program launcher than icons on the desktop or the K menu because I just start typing the name and after a few letters I can hit enter and it launches. It handles web site bookmarks as well. If it worked that easily for directories and previously connected ssh sessions I'd be all set.
The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
most of the kde programs are going to be ported to windows, but not the kwin desktop environment itself. so you will be able to run amarok, kate etc in windows, but it will still look like boring old windows with the explorer shell.
porl
I'm bored, so:
1. Basket
2. Anymeal
3. Bibletime
4. Dolphin
5. Labplot
6. Filelight
7. Gwenview
8. Mailody
9. Strigi
10. Tellico
11. Vym
12. Wlassistant
13. Videocut
14. Taskjuggler
15. Rsibreak
16. Score-reading-trainer
17. Picwiz
18. Icecc
19. Eyesapplet
20. Fifteenapplet
21. Bulmacont
22. Bulmafact
23. Bulmages
24. Biblemeorizer
Most of them probably aren't considered "notable".
So has KDE for new applications:
Phonon
Solid
Plasma
Gwenview
Decibel
Strigi
Soprano
Dolphin
Sure, there are the obligatory "K" apps, many of them having been around for quite a few years and unlikely to change names for no good reason. The new stuff is pretty unconstrained, though, and certainly no more so than their Gnome counterparts.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
Go check out http://windows.kde.org/
I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
I checked and rechecked Trolltech site for license... If you chose GPL'ed version of QT, it is "GPLed" with just one exception, if you _do_ have the porprietary license and develop qt app, you can link this app with GPL'ed qt and need not open your source. But apart from the exception.... it is _GPLed_ and as long as you stick to gpl nothing prevents you from distributing qt with your app...
BAIN http://www.devslashzero.com
The plasma developers are aware of the fact that a black box is ugly, but they like to implement the applet background mechanism in a generic clean way first. Not something hackish which causes compatibility issues later.
The idea is the following:
So instead of grouping icons yourself in various corners by theme, you can have multiple folder views for your desktop, documents and download folder. I think it will be far more powerful then grouping icons yourself.
Since the desktop background is just an applet, you could technically use every other applet for it. Like an animated applet or 3D planet instead of a boring wallpaper :)
Plasma gives you all the building blocks to build your own desktop. The background, panels, taskbar and systray are all applets. Eveything can all be torn apart, replaced, and put together as you like.
How is that for a change?
On the developer side, everything is scriptable too. So nothing stops you from making a desktop visualisation or taskbar in python :)
API's are provided to get the required data for the taskbar, window, clocks, icons, rss feeds, devices and more.
That avoids code duplication and makes it really easy to write applets.
You could imagine it takes time to implement all building blocks properly. With the details I sketch here, can you imagine what would be possible in the future? So we need some patience here. Plasma is going to rock!
The best way to accelerate a windows server is by 9.81 m/s2
All Linux distributions have the option of using KDE or Gnome or any other GUI if you wish, it really is up to your preferences and what is installed on your system. Personally I always install both KDE and Gnome since it gives everyone in my family a choice.
I use Fedora 9 which has KDE 4.0.4-2 (latest update) however I was disappointed when I compare it to KDE 3.5 which seemed to scale its fonts on the task bar correctly. Try putting the KDE 4 task bar to your right or left on the screen, KDE 4 now has a widget to do this instead of drag and drop. I would not mind this since it is easy to do but the fonts don't scale accordingly. In fact not only did I find KDE 4.0 annoying my wife was not impressed either until I showed her how to switch to Gnome by selecting Gnome just before you login (you have been able to do this for years). I did some minor customisation for her (hide the task bars) and she is very happy. I also made the switch as well.
Before anyone makes a comment on saying "we have another convert to Gnome" I have also found some annoyances with Gnome as well and from my perspective it is just that the current Gnome IMHO is much better than 4.0 (I found KDE 3.5 much better) but I do realise that KDE 4.0 is what I would call a Beta and definately needs some fixing.
To the KDE developers "Bring back the old 3.5 configuration widget although do enhance it for 4.1 but please don't have lots of little widgets, that is so annoying". Also bring back the drag and drop menu bar and make sure your fonts scale accordingly when changing the position of your task bar.
When KDE 4.1 comes out I will make the switch back from Gnome because I personally like KDE over Gnome but again like I said it is a personal preference. Of course I will switch back if KDE 4.1 is not what I consider better. If they are equal I may have KDE and Gnome days depending on what I want to do.
There ain't no such thing as proprietary standards only proprietary formats. Standards are by definition open.