KDE 4.2 Is Released
OhReally writes "It's a great day for Free Software: KDE, the desktop environment for Linux, Windows, Mac, and (Open)Solaris, has just reached version 4.2, exactly a year since the release of 4.0. This is a version suitable for broad usage, with many improvements all across the board, and lots of bugfixes. You can leave a comment or congratulate the developers here."
i win
GNOME BLOWS
It's pretty
In what state is it?
pre-alpha?
alpha?
beta?
rc?
actually functional?
It's laughable that /. bashes Windows for it's SP2 is functional development but has little to no criticism for open source software(and especially KDE). If somebody releases x.0 I expect it to be functional with major bugs as they should be caught in alpha/beta/rc. Should we have to wait for KDE4.5 instead?
Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
Server's down,
the overlords have arrived...
you lost.
I've been tracking the 4.2 betas on Kubuntu's repositories, and the final release is working very nicely. KDE 4.2 is finally at a stage where the 4 series can replace the 3.5 series for the large majority of users, and I've been using KDE since 2.0 came out.
Now I know there are going to be a ton of complaints about how "broken" KDE 4 is... but I have my own response to the critics. Is KDE 4.2 perfect? No, but I challenge you to show me a desktop that is "perfect". KDE 4 has finally gained critical mass, and even more great stuff is in store.
Thanks again to all the KDE 4 developers and bug testers who kept working even when it wasn't easy or popular! Your perseverance has paid off.
AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
Sorry if this sounds like a dumb question, but I only ever used MS-DOS, Windows 3.11 up to Windows XP and then switched to Mac (10.4 and 10.5). I also installed Ubuntu with default settings.
My question is: why would people want to install KDE on Windows or Mac? To mess with system-wide capabilities? To break applications that weren't tested on anything but their default desktop settings?
This is actually the first KDE 4.x release that I'm proud to say I use. Unlike the disastrous KDE 4.0 and a somewhat less disastrous KDE 4.1, I thought that KDE was going down the road traveled by Microsoft with Vista. KDE 4.0 was Windows Vista. Bloated. Slow. But it had potential. KDE 4.1 was a bit better; Windows Vista SP1. It was getting there. But did it amount to its fullest potential? Nope. I feel KDE 4.2 is pretty damn close to fulfilling it, just like Windows 7.
There are still some slight problems I have with KDE 4.2, but I assume they'll be fixed in a bug release later. Kudos go to the KDE devs.
Its no secret that the majority of /. users Are WINDOWS users. Linux users happen just to be "The Largest Minority". People here attack F/OSS Software almost constant. It never stops. Trolls, astrotufers, you name it, they troll it.
Windows users and OSX users are going to attack Linux users on every front in every way endlessly and relentlessly.
It's good to hear KDE isn't garbage anymore.
Unfortunately, for all its cool tech, I still find the default look and feel hideous.
Is there some kind of "style" they're going for or is everything just kind of randomly put together or what?
Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
I just upgraded on kubuntu 8.10, and I'm very happy with it. It's considerably more polished than 4.1. The dialogs look more polished, the eye candy is faster and smoother, the new taskbar looks great -- and you can now have other applications cover the taskbar.
I was thinking of switching to XFCE this week (after about 8 years on KDE), but I think I'll hold off.
good job devs!
Don't Feed the Trolls.
Well, in the infancy of KDE 4, there was this project that was supposed to provide a consistent look and feel to KDE called Oxygen.
The early mockups looked fairly different from the first incarnation, and both look very different from what we have today.
Overall, it does look more consistent and polished. The taskbar looks sharp. The plasma theme looks sharp. The Oxygen widgets and window decorations are still plain and boring. I also still don't understand how Oxygen was largely plain white with no contrast for a year, where as the Plasma theme and taskbar was plain and black.
It was jarring and inconsistent.
However, the icons (save for the horrible folder icon) do present a very consistent, very professional appearance. It is hard to argue with the icon set on the whole.
I just want to see an Oxygen set for OpenOffice. I know OpenOffice isn't a KDE project, but most every distro ships with OpenOffice, and it would be nice for integration to see some Oxygen-based icons for OpenOffice.
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
Now that KDE has laid the framework for development, and recreated most of the features from KDE 3 as well, where do they go from here? Can they do something truly innovative?
(No, widgets aren't innovative).
The folderview, as a fullscreen containment with wallpaper theming is a plus. I'm looking for other innovations in how we interact with software.
Adjusting dialogs and the interface to work well on small form factors is another step in the right direction, but honestly I think they also need an Oxygen-widget derivative specifically for minimalist screens.
Multi-touch gestures are trendy, but other than mobile devices, I don't expect to touch my PC screen.
The concept of a fully-realized semantic desktop sounds interesting, but is currently half-baked at best.
Would it be a crime for KDE to steal some of the better innovations from OS X and Windows 7? Should KDE offer an official dock, or revamp the taskbar? What about both?
Kwin, for all its nifty-ness could take a few pages from Windows 7.
What about a crazy concept? People keep talking about a Web OS, cloud computing, etc. I've seen a proof of concept of Plasmoids served via a web plugin. KDE runs natively on Mac, Windows, Linux and Solaris today. What if you could store your KDE desktop settings and sessions online?
Sit at any computer with most any OS, and have your desktop. Plasmoids that aren't installed locally could even be served up online.
Where do you think KDE should go in the future?
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
It's also a great day for sweeping statements.
Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
To all the flamers:
1. Free Software
You didn't pay anything for this software. No one paid the developers anything for this software. You have the capacity to change this software if you don't like something about it.
2. Don't like it, don't use it
No one is forcing you to upgrade to KDE 4. If you don't think it's ready, don't use it, use KDE 3, gnome, or whatever else you want.
1) does it have the "kde classic" icon theme?
I got used to the look of those icons, why should I change, unless there's a *compelling* reason to do so? (no, your opinion that such and such icons are prettier is definitely not compelling enough for me to memorize a totally different set of icons)
2) does it have the K menu working exactly the same way it did in KDE 3?
Again, it works for me, why should I change unless it's definitely a better alternative?
3) does the taskbar work exactly the same way it did in KDE 3?
ditto
Attention, KDE developers: users do not care how much easier the developer's job has become with KDE 4. If the user's interface changes, it should be for the better. Not slightly better, not better for some people. If it does not become absolutely better for everybody without exception, or, at least, better enough for the vast majority of people, then please do NOT change the user interface.
Remember this, we, the users, do not care for eye candy, we do not care for how much better the system is for developers. We USE the computer, we do not play with it. The computer should HELP us, not get in our way. If we have to learn new things, it should be only things that make our life so much easier it's worth learning new things. Otherwise, let KDE 3.5.9 alone, it's a wonderful system.
Simple question...
Is this what's called a straw man argument? I guess it's possible you aren't trolling and actually missed all the criticism free software (and especially KDE) has received.
Linus Torvalds himself thinks KDE 4 is a 'disaster' and I'm sure you'll find many who agree with him on this slashdot story, just as you'll find people who don't but trying to make it look like free software get no criticism and everyone is bashing Microsoft? That's just bullshit.
http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/01/24/1842218
Cool, they duplicated the Vista/Windows 7 look almost down to a T.
My grandmother used anecdotal evidence all the time, and she lived to be 120 years old.
Yes, because they did away with the well-established themeable, accelerated, accessible, translatable, Qt GUI Widgets, and based made up a new "plasmoid" system that's almost entirely incompatible with all that. It's pretty, but most of the features have been sacrificed for that, and it'll take AGES to get those features on a parallel, if they ever can.
"The desktop environment for Linux, Windows, Mac, and (Open)Solaris" The definite article! Oh Really?
In this case, I don't think that that's the root of the problem. Yes, you're going to get people trolling about any contentious issue, but the fact is that many people that have been bitching the loudest about KDE4 are those that were strong users of KDE 3.5. I would include myself among those, as one of the first things I tended to do when setting up a new 'nix machine installing KDE in favour of gnome. However, KDE4 has been a big mess. A lot of functionality that one might almost take for granted in the previous version was dropped, apps haven't been ported, or didn't work properly. The whole configuration system has changed, and overall it looks like a lot more focus seems to have been put on "prettiness" VS functionality.
I don't doubt that eventually KDE4 will turn out fairly polished, but for the current release the existing quality has been more on par with a beta than a proper release. With major distros pushing KDE4 over KDE3 (and tending to drop 3.5 overall), it's certainly ticked off a lot of users, and in many ways rightfully so.
Ok pardon the ignorance but I was under the impression that OSX and Windows had pretty stable window managers already. What would be the benefits / drawbacks of installing KDE on a non *NIX system?
---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
thi5 post up. contaminated while Lesson and Of Jordan Huubard of OpenBSD. How over to yet another of OpenBSD. How appeared...saying is part of the trouble. It
I cant hardly wait to run it but I'm still waiting for good apps.
Asses are for crapping, not screwing.
Irony can be pretty ironic sometimes. I just cross-graded to Xubuntu today, because I had finally had enough of Kubuntu's barely functional desktop. I mean, 5-7 seconds to make the equivalent of Windows' Start menu to appear? It's a wonder I stuck with it so long.
Edith Keeler Must Die
I have no words - can anyone point me to a sane sounding explanation as to why on earth is a full fledged RDBMS installation is required for using PIM?
What problem does it solve that hasn't already been solved by many people across many platforms time and again?
Wow.
Vista just to get shit done and now that I'm running Vista SP2 Beta (Win7-Beta) I can't see switching back to Linux just for principles. Sure I'm wearing my Abestos undies so flame away but the truth is, I simply couldn't get enough work done under Linux to justify using it.
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
I started compiling KDE 4 days ago and it just finished this morning. Now I have to upgrade already lol.
Why won't they let you turn off that stupid search in krunner so you can actually use the damn thing with out having to wait for it to catch up to your typing?
Sometimes when I'm working on projects things disappear, I suspect gremlins.
Does Firefox still look like ass on KDE?
I could never get KDE 4.1 to work with more than one display (other WM and KDE3 worked fine with same xorg.conf). Is that fixed now?
What video card doesn't support T&L?
T&L was added to the Geforce 2 series. Do you have a Voodoo 2 tucked away somewhere that you're wanting to use?
Trademark Notices. KDE® and the K Desktop Environment® logo are registered trademarks of KDE e.V. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. (who is no more a KDE user) UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the United States and other countries. All other trademarks and copyrights referred to in this announcement are the property of their respective owners.
So as far as I'm concerned this release is KDE 4.0 as it should have been.
Two criticisms, just by looking at it:
1. The taskbar won't scale to more than a few windows. The buttons are too wide, causing the whole width of your screen to be used up quickly. Instead of using a Windows 95 style taskbar, why not use NEXTSTEP style icons? OS X does it, and it looks like Windows 7 will, too.
2. The screenshots feature windows with solid grey backgrounds. I find this ugly. It's bearable if windows contain only small unused areas, but if those areas are larger, you'll find yourself looking at an ugly grey slab. Do something textured, like Aqua's stripes or the brushed metal in that old version of Enlightenment.
3. The screenshots feature windows in a variety of styles. I guess this is all hip these days, but I'd rather set up a pleasing theme for my applications and then have every window on my desktop use these settings. Sure, some applications have a good reason to look different, but, really, the vast majority don't.
4. Looking at the desktop screenshot, a I see an active window and an inactive window that look almost exactly the same. This is really bad for usability. It should be obvious which window I'm working in, even after a 10-hour working day at the end of a week with little sleep. Make the active window stand out!
As an interesting tidbit, my first impression was "wow, it looks like Vista". I think this is mostly a Good Thing; about the only thing I like about Vista is that it looks beautiful. On the other hand, I'm not sure you really want to be associated with it.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
Is v4.2.0 comparable in real features with v3.5.10?
If you throw away eye candies, styles and other cosmetic features, can I replace my v3.5.10 with v4.2.0 without loosing a single feature?
If the answer is "no" or "almost", the v4.2.0 is no better than v3.5.10.
And the bad news is that some mainstream distros are not taking this into the proper account.
Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
Take a look at the System Settings:
http://www.kde.org/announcements/4.2/screenshots/systemsettings.png
It looks _exactly_ like the one in OSX.
The rest looks like Vista.
Does every desktop environment has to become gay just because some people are using OSX to pretend you can work with a Mac?
All people I know that are productive with a Mac don't leave TextMate or the terminal anyway.
Put it this way: if you know any country singers who need a topic for a depressing song...
A couple of days ago some guy got flamed for saying "The alignment is off, doesn't anybody even look at their software before releasing it?", with the most useful response being "your font settings are probably different to the developer's, they don't see what you see"; and I agreed with them. But looking at screenshots for myself, even the official screenshots showing how good it looks, look bad. annotated example. (PS. Any idea where I can send that to to have people fix it?)
/me goes back to enlightenment 17, ever more appreciative of Raster's perfectionism...
I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
and it still sucks.
Yeah, but does it run Linux?
...
Firehed - Unfortunately, thanks to medical breakthroughs, common sense is not as common as it once was.
And slashdot wont update the topic icon until KDE 7 is released
-- I was raised on the command line, bitch
When KDE4 came out I switched to Gnome. Then I discovered wmii. Give me an accelerated tiling wm and then my life will be complete!
Curious the schedule for it to hit the ports tree.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Taskbar buttons now has a 1-pixel inactive border at the very bottom edge. The taskbar buttons no longer extend all the way to the bottom of the screen! A most annoying change. I can no longer just "fling" my mouse pointer to the bottom of the screen and then just quickly click on a taskbar button. Now I have to be careful NOT to make the pointer go all the way to the bottom edge. What's up with that? KDE even has a Fitt's law guide somewhere on its website (if I remember correctly).
Okay, I am getting a serious case of déjà vu here...
I.e., Vista's initial release.
Vista SP1.
Vista SP2.
Windows 7.
So, basically, the same (valid, IMHO) argument that people have been making about Microsoft's OS branding.
Egad! Ballmer's infiltrated the KDE team!
Cheers,
"What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
"A four-foot prune."
Taskbar buttons now has a 1-pixel inactive border at the very bottom edge. The taskbar buttons no longer extend all the way to the bottom of the screen! A most annoying change. I can no longer just "fling" my mouse pointer to the bottom of the screen and then just quickly click on a taskbar button. Now I have to be careful NOT to make the pointer go all the way to the bottom edge. What's up with that? KDE even has a Fitt's law guide somewhere on its website (if I remember correctly).
Pissing contests in order of their usefulness to society:
1)Inter-religious pissing contests (aka "war") ... ... ...
2)Physical pissing contests
3)The World vs. Microsoft pissing contests
4)Linux distro pissing contests
5)Programming language pissing contests
6)The World vs. Apple pissing contests
(as N tends towards infinity)
N)THIS THREAD
Is the interface still five years ahead of Microsoft Windows? It's hard to tell from the screenshots.
I remember seeing features in KDE several years ago that would later show up in Vista.
KDE is one of the few truly innovative projects in the open source realm - they're actually moving forward and trying new things rather than trying to clone existing products. Which is what we need more of in the open source realm.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
KDE 4.x series has reached alpha quality. Good job tards!.
You can put KDE on Windows?
4.0 is year old release = old. Why are you still talking about it anyway? I'm pretty sure gnome 2.0 kde 3.0 and so on sucked back in their days.
4.2 is what we have today and i love it and want to say congrats to everyone involved! It's awesome!
Positive/encouraging criticism is a lot more you know nicer and saying things like good job is actually pretty cool...
On Digg.com everyone is like "Congrats" and on here are just some stupid short sighted assholes ranting about a year old release.Seriously WTF is wrong with you people!?!?!?!? :D
Anyone found some live CD's of the final 4.2 release?
I'd rather test it in Vmware before switching....and yes I do know the 3D effect aren't fully support in Vmware Workstation...I turn them all off anyway. I just use a basic KDE 2.2 theme I made years ago.
Sweet as hell, i love KDE. :-)
Okay, I feel your pain (literally), but you can fight back against the third-degree if you want -- admittedly though, it requires some determination, and you can probably only get about 95% of the way to success.
The first step on the road is Firefox Edit-Preferences-Content-Colors Then you can choose your own colors -- I use a black background, a light green foreground, and I make the link color a light-blue and the visited link color a light-pink/purple. You will also probably need to uncheck the boxes "Use system colors" and "Allow web pages to choose their own colors".
That gets you pretty close -- but you'll still have to deal with white text edit boxes, but even worse are the occasional form that has you typing black text into a box with a black background. Further, if a webpage uses color as a UI element (e.g. error messages colored in red), you won't see those. The solution will probably be to keep another browser around (Konqueror?) to use when your customized Firefox fails you. (It would be nice sometimes to be able to start a second, virgin Firefox on occasion -- there are ways to do it, but Firefox fights you.)
It also helps to find a good, dark, firefox theme (I use "In The Dark" myself).
Then of course, you'll need to deal with the "themes" for you desktop environment. (I have a slight preference for KDE over gnome, but really I use icewm as my window manager, with the "Infidel2" theme).
But there's always going to be that irreducible 5% of software where some idiot hardcoded a white background on you... the way is hard, but well worth traveling. If enough of us do it, our complaints might reduce some of these problems some day.
(Particularly frustrating to me are both "gdm" and "kdm" which have very limited "themability" as far as I can tell -- when I start up my laptop late at night to read in bed, I get flashed by some super-bright log-in screen. I may just dump the whole "*dm" business -- I never had any problem with typing "startx" after logging in.