But it is pretty obvious that KPDF mean KDE PDF viewer, and it is much easier to remember/type into a console kpdf than kdepdfviewer...
Say I didn't use Windows, if someone was telling me they opened something in Acrobat, I would have no idea what they are talking about, but if it was called, say, winpdf (I know MS doesn't make it, it is Adobe, but you get the idea) I would know right away.
So if a KDE program is called koffice, which I've never heard of, I could make a good guess as to what it does.
Acutally that sort of naming scheme excellent, it gives which DE it is built for, and then what it actually does.
KPDF is much more intuitive than say, Acrobat.
Sorry, I know EVERYONE was thinking this too... exponentially, not logaritmically
But it is pretty obvious that KPDF mean KDE PDF viewer, and it is much easier to remember/type into a console kpdf than kdepdfviewer... Say I didn't use Windows, if someone was telling me they opened something in Acrobat, I would have no idea what they are talking about, but if it was called, say, winpdf (I know MS doesn't make it, it is Adobe, but you get the idea) I would know right away. So if a KDE program is called koffice, which I've never heard of, I could make a good guess as to what it does.
Kome on.....
Acutally that sort of naming scheme excellent, it gives which DE it is built for, and then what it actually does. KPDF is much more intuitive than say, Acrobat.