KDE 4.5 Released
An anonymous reader writes "KDE 4.5.0 has been released to the world. See the release announcement for details. Highlights include a Webkit browser rendering option for Konqueror, a new caching mechanism for a faster experience and a re-worked notification system. Another new feature is Perl bindings, in addition to Python, Ruby and JavaScript support. The Phonon multimedia library now integrates with PulseAudio. See this interview with KDE developer and spokesperson Sebastian Kugler on how KDE can continue to be innovative in the KDE4 age. Packages should be available for most Linux distributions in the coming days. More than 16000 bug fixes were committed since 4.4."
Now we can have a thread with KDE haters AND PA haters in it!
# cat
Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
if i wanted to get raped by a mouse i would just go to a pet store, buy one and shove it up my ass
So you have a pluggable backend too?
Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
i like the new notification system, but it still feels hacked together.
if you close tabs or subwindows in your notification it resizes in a jerky way.
doesnt feel really smooth and looks unprofessional.
it would be nice if you could make the notifications "transparent" in front of
certain windows (the way its done with the ubuntu notifications).
it annoys me to no end having notifications pop up, while you are gaming.
but i hope they will fix that in later releases.
Still fugly and inconsistent I see :( I really want to like it.
Still a long way away from 23.2 ;-)
More than 16000 bug fixes were committed since 4.4
I'm not really sure whether this is a good thing or not.
At least for code quality.
Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
I think I'm the typical techy user. During the day I'll use xterm , open office, firefox and gxine. And maybe one or 2 other apps.
Can someone explain to me why I need a huge resource hungry window manager, sorry - desktop enviroment - like KDE running as my machine? This is a genuine question, not an anti KDE troll. I simply don't get it.
I really like KDE and I believe that it needs to be supported better by distributions. Kubuntu is a mess.
The investments of KDE in code quality and design will pay off. Unfortunately runtime quality was lacking, esp. reg. Plasma crashes in earlier versions. KDE is now in a state where it maturates. Here the SC split in three components really makes a whole lot of sense.
I am still getting massive RAM usage from plasma-desktop after moving from RC2. I understood it being higher in RC2 but 174mb in Plasma, in the stable version, is extremely odd. Anyone else getting it this high? Not using many plasmoids here, just a pretty standard set of clock and taskbar and such.
Anyway this release is strangely disappointing. I am not even sure of what I was expecting with it but feels the same with a new notification system (still bothersome when doing anything fullscreen, too). Oh well, much better than the old for sure, I think. At least you don't lose notifications forever if you fail to see them (due to being out of the room or doing something fullscreen).
KDE is doing a Miguel de Icaza lately and imitating Microsoft's "total integration," including their own version of the Registry: akonadi. Which may be nice, but it's also terribly fragile for something that's supposed to hold all of your data. See, for instance, bug 244250.
Lacking <sarcasm> tags,
It's Sebastian Kügler, not Kugler.
I use the Marble globe with satellite images as a background for my KDE desktop. After upgrading to 4.5 yesterday, I noticed clouds were added to it. "How pretty", I though. It turns out that clouds are not placed randomly for scenic effect, they are actually downloaded images of the current state of clouds all over the planet. Yes I checked yesterday, and today the image is slightly different and still consistent with satellite imagery from weather websites.
Call me easy to impress, but that blew me away.
Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
Can I run it under Gnome?
YankDownUnder Veni, Vidi, volo in domum redire
There's this huge KDE vs GNOME war that people like to tell you is all politics, that it's just a bunch of rabid overzealots, people on each side are horribly angry and flinging poo...
Of course, GNOME3 articles on Slashdot get tags like "gnome" "linux" "ubuntu" ... KDE gets tags like "shit" and "perl." I think we know who's winning.
Support my political activism on Patreon.
I always thought Konqueror was based on KHTML, which was Webkit by another name. Guess it's time for me to go figure this out.
I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
The 64-bit binaries have been released, the 32-bit haven't yet - at least not on the beta ppa.
I upgraded my 64-bit machine over FreeNX this morning and it appears to work fine.
we see things not as as they are, but as we are.
-- anais nin
16,000 bug fixes committed.
That's a lot of work, really.
But I don't know whether it's something to be really proud of, as it also means that there were at least 16,000 bugs in KDE 4.4. And no matter how you look at it that's no small number!
I hopped off the KDE4 train at 4.2 when Akonadi required MySQL as a dependency. IIRC, it can now use PostgreSQL as well, but the point stands: Why do I need a RDBMS to run a desktop?
I've got a fever and the only prescription is more COBOL.
OK, I didn't check this rigorously (Why should I? This is slashdot!), but it seems to me that every single one of the past five releases of KDE/Kubuntu and Ubuntu featured a significantly improved/totally reworked notification system. Each time I was expecting some breakthrough experience, and it just always looks like a more or less OK notification system. And this is one of the top 5 highlighted features? Was it so broken to begin with? Did it really get so much better? Am I missing something here?
I definitely appreciate very much the developers fixing bugs and making the system more stable and polished. Thanks! However, if some trivial things get sold in an exaggerating way, this may actually not help the image of KDE (GNOME, Linux, etc.). After all, one of the reasons I am using FOSS is because I am really tired of stupid bullshit advertising crap.
Yep, that's right! I am still not buying Fords since their disaster model Pinto in the early 1970s. And it'll take them many more decades to regain my trust!
I am not stubborn or anything, but if KDE made a mistake once, they can never be trusted again! Ever! Especially in the software business, where hardly anybody takes any wrong decisions these days.
I've been using Gnome on Ubuntu for about 5 years.
I know that Kubuntu is not as polished as Ubuntu. What would be a good KDE distribution to give a try, to see the desktop environment for all it is?
Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
I'm suprised no-one mentioned it, but considering the shortages of phonon-xine-backend, the inclusion of the vlc-backend in 4.5 provides a huge improvement.
"I can't comment on the rest of the Linux UI experience (my Linux knowledge is firmly positioned in the headless server region), but come on - audio is something that shouldn't even be on a users agenda for worrying about these days." - by Richard_at_work (517087) on Wednesday August 11, @06:58AM (#33213484)
Yea, that's right, per my subject-line above:
Yes - Even though I am a "huge Windows fanboy", I have been running Linux 10.4x (latest/greatest) via KUbuntu here, and it's pretty damned nice Richard!
Sound's been NO hassle @ ALL either, bonus!
(I've even been comparing Linux & BSD running on this laptop. Currently, its LINUX & even earlier, I was using PC-BSD (which also has a default KDE Desktop), & Linux seems faster in GUI tasks, whereas I feel that PC-BSD seems faster in filesystem/disk I-O bound tasks)...
Again, I like both, especially on KDE... &, do remember: That's coming from ME, the "poster boy of /. for Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003/Windows 7" - I have to admit that Linux has FINALLY come into its own and is a decent enough OS to use daily.
APK
P.S.=> See, I decided to give PC-BSD & Linux a go while I am on vacation in Europe (I tend to do a lot of tty terminal/console work though, "old 1980's *NIX habits die hard" here, but I am slowly "going GUI" here), & while in London, Berlin, & Madrid I used PC-BSD & liked it (especially the KDE desktop being the default GUI vs. GNOME (Gnome's "ok", but I am definitely a KDE man))... &
Now/lately, while in Warsaw, St. Petersburg, & now Prague/Czech Republic, I am using KUbuntu 10.4.x & like it (again, especially KDE))... Heh - "imagine that": Me, the Windows fan, saying I like *NIX's! apk
If you do it by yourself it's not rape.
"It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
Quality would have remained at "stellar" had those 16,000 bugs not been fixed. Hell, they should have called it a day at 4.0, when there were 16,000,000 bugs left to fix.
I'd rather have just the working backend; not as a default, but as the only option.
How is the distributor supposed to know, in advance, which backend is the best working backend for your particular hardware? The options are there in case automatic detection fails, so that you can at least have sound for the six months between when you install a distribution and when the distributor releases the next version that may or may not correct the defect in automatic detection of your particular hardware.
I dont really understand it either. On ubuntu ver. 7 or something I remember ark (old KDE sound system) was really screwed up and would take 100% CPU. I also remember pulse audio messing up a few games and the solution was to always kill pulse audio before launching a game.
After switching to gentoo the only sound system I use is alsa. It works. I've been using alsa, and only alsa, for years now. I dont understand why you need ark, phonon, pulse audio etc etc. What exactly are these things supposed to be doing that alsa doesn't already do? Those systems exist on top of alsa as another audio layer so I would expect them to be doing something that alsa doesn't handle natively -- otherwise you wouldn't be using them.
Unless the paradigm in the future shifts so that RDBMS' become the new file system.
SQLite has helped this shift happen.
I see you use XFCE as well!
Now, if they'd just get XFCE 4.8 out the door WITH A DAMNED MENU EDITOR we'd be set.
But, just because it isn't, doesn't mean you can't claim it is.
Just another version of "I didn't say it was your fault. I said I was going to blame you."
"Be particularly skeptical when presented with evidence confirming what you already believe." -
Yes, but have they made it not suck yet?
(KDE 3.x user here...)
Pretend there is some witty statement here.
*nix: The prime example of a love hate relationship in geekdom.
"It's ok, I'm completely secure as long as my iron is off"
And this is aided by having your data in a fragile repository ... how?
Try pulling the plug on your system. You don't have to be using KMail, it's OK if it's been sitting idle for hours. See what happens.
Lacking <sarcasm> tags,
Still sucked, at least on Fedora. I'll try again once 4.5 comes down the updates pipe. As someone that was a die-hard KDE user from KDE 1.0 pre3 through KDE 3.x, I keep KDE installed to keep tabs on it, in hopes that it'll start to work again.
So far, though, it hasn't. Unstable, incompatible, inconsistent, lacking features, kludgy, hacky, sloppy (can't even remember settings half the time, missing half of its plasmoid icons), etc.
Maybe it's Fedora's fault, maybe it's KDE's fault. Don't know, and GNOME 2.x is good enough that I don't care.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
If you do it by yourself it's not rape.
Tell that to the mouse.
I am not in anyway affiliated with Max Cannon
Well, it sort of quit sucking enough for me (a KDE 3.x user) to use, but that's only because it was in Kubuntu 10.04 which is a LTS, promising support for the next three years. Hopefuly it means Canonical will put some more work into it.
However, I continue to encounter ways in which it sucks, and in fact I am building up quite a collection of screenshots showing errors and such. For example:
- kmail doesn't work. Took me a while to figure out a workaround. If I suspend or hibernate my laptop and then resume, then it stops getting mail from my IMAP account. The solution is to exit kmail and then restart, but it's not as simple as it sounds: exiting the kmail program leaves behind about a dozen sleeper processes which all have to be killed, to the point that I had to write a script to identify all the child processes of kmail and kill them one by one. Can you imagine a non-technical user doing this!?
- the eye candy is too flashy. The pretty little icons on the "system tray" change their position and appearance under certain circumstances. For example, the "device notifier" is this shape with the USB symbol. When you plug in an external hard drive (for example), it changes to a checkmark and shifts downward a few icons (my system tray area is a vertical one against the right edge of the screen). It always takes me a few moments to look for the icon, and then remember that it is now a checkmark (or an exclamation mark). I mean, why can't it be a checkmark overlapping on the original device notifier symbol? It took me FOREVER to figure out what was happening.
- when widgets like the weather applet put up little dialogues saying "Error --we can't connect", you can't get rid of the dialogues. Yes, it's probably a bug with the widget, but a good DE should be able to get rid of the dialogues. I mean, what's the point of eye candy if you can't even manage your own widgets?
- the power management system is SOOO WONDERFUL that it even manages your screen brightness for you! For example, if your laptop is not plugged in and has only 4 hours left on battery, it goes into Powersave mode and automatically dims the screen for you. When you raise the brightness again, it has this COOL feature where it automatically detects that you raised the brightness (you bad boy!) and dims it for you again a few minutes later. Thank you, KDE, for knowing better than even myself what it is that I want.
- Krunner is a system where you can type in the name of a command, and KDE tells you what you really want to run. For example, simply type in "kru", and KDE knows that you want to run "Krusader in Root Mode". (Geez, does ANYONE run Krusader in root mode?). If you continue typing 4 more letters "krusade", it still offers to run "Krusader in Root Mode". But if you type the final letter "krusader", then it says, "Oh, you want to run 'Krusader'!" (not in root mode, which is what I actually want). Ummmm..... why???
- They have this COOL NEW notification system where messages pop up in little dialogues to tell you "Hey, I finished copying those files you told me to copy 2 seconds ago, okay?". Unfortunately, they fail to expand to make enough room for long messages, so good luck trying to read long error messages.
- the taskbar has its own ideas about when and how to show which programs are running. Sometimes the taskbar entries overlap, so there will be a two separate areas which correctly show Program A and Program C are running, and then overlapping them to make them unreadable is an area showing that Program B is running.
- KPackageKit fails to find packages that obviously exist; e.g. it tells me there is no such package as OpenOffice Calc in Ubuntu!?
There are too many others to list in detail, but I'll give a list of what screenshots I've collected. These are images of the screen, entitled:
- Does Not Highlight GIMP Though Focused.png
- Fi
404555974007725459910684486621289147856453481154 in hex is "You sank my Battleship?"
[GPG key in journal]
WTF is "Unbuntu" and "Kbuntu"? Are you one of those retarded people?
Yes, I am aware that there is a significant component of this that is Kubuntu and not KDE itself.
An understatement, to say the least. I haven't encountered a single one of those bugs on Debian Squeeze.
It's very nice the Perl bindings were updated and are now included in KDE. :)
It makes me itch to start playing with KDE again.