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This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "susegebr" (Mar 14th 2008, 1:46pm)
what does "specs" mean? Can you write so that non-technical kde users understand.Quoted
Originally posted by susegebr
One other remark.
We take kde3 as base for anything new "they" make.
So KDE3 are the specs for developping KDE4
See www.kde-look.org and www.kde-apps.org and not to forget XGL and Compiz
Throw this overboard and start from scratch with KDE4 , this has to lead to a total disaster.
Keep this as a precious gift and use it in KDE4 XGL COMPIZ ICONS PROGRAMS
then you are making sense,
Now with KDE4 we are back to the time off KDE2 no apps and no programs, killing nearly 10 years off hard work by numerous volunteers.
I can drag one window on top of another window around the screen randomly without it leaving long traces at last, FFS YES I DO WANT IT.Quoted
Originally posted by susegebrDo We Need That ???????
This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "kristjan_" (Mar 15th 2008, 2:31pm)
This post has been edited 2 times, last edit by "Supreme1012" (Mar 20th 2008, 6:20am)
Quoted
Originally posted by Supreme1012
For a KDE forum user group im really surprised at how simple minded some of you can be. The idea of KDE 4 isnt to slap on some new glossy paint and call it a new car. In KDE 4 not only is the look much more sophisticated (personally Ive always hated the old third grader look of some of the older unmodified KDE apps and controls, especially the panel). But really thats just the cream at the top.
Quoted
Originally posted by Supreme1012
The real reason why KDE 4 was needed as a serious rewrite and rework was the basic OS and computer operations and interactions that before were often thrown together and didnt provide any all in one wrapper for hardware interaction or driver support or different language ports. With KDE 4, not only will hardware(including plugin devices like usb and external hard drives, headphones, etc.) be better controlled using Solid but the new media system phonon will make the nightmare that is multimedia hell in linux into a much simpler process for both the users and application developers. I could write more about both of those programs but Ill just suggest that you google them yourselves and read about how they will improve KDE for the better.
Quoted
Originally posted by Supreme1012
And Plasma itself has been severely unappreciated for some of its biggest contributions (or potential contributions) than it deserves. Its not done yet, but already its set some pretty amazing groundwork. Plasma basically acts very much like containment fields, which is why it works so well with widgets, because basically the desktop is just a giant widget containment area itself. This definitely changes how we interact and can think of the desktop.
Quoted
Originally posted by Supreme1012
And with changes to Qt4 new definitions of interoperability are defined. Not that it suddenly makes everything from Mac and Windows work on Linux, but it will makes it a hell of alot easier to port Qt apps from those OSs onto Plasma (such as the OS X widget support) and with very little code changes programs written for plasma will be able to be ported from KDE to Windows or Mac(or even ran natively in the KDE4 environment on Operating Systems not Unix based).
Quoted
Originally posted by Supreme1012
EDIT: Almost forgot to mention. I cant stand the KDE4 Kicker main menu. Who would thinking clicking and scrolling a million times to find anything would be an improvement? But Im sure a new Menu could be quite easily written and if not done in the KDE release then Ill keep my eyes open for new community packages that will substitute my kicker menu for something better.
Quoted
Originally posted by Supreme1012
Shit! I didnt even mention Nepomuk integration. Can u imagine a common tagging and ratings database for different applications? KDE can! This will allow for more intelligent searching indexing, making it possible to find all files tagged with a certain tag, such as finding a file named "giugyigf" just by typing in wallpaper if you had tagged the file with wallpaper in dolphin. I mean who wants to search for "giugyigf" or find the directory like you would have to do on other desktop search engines. Plus this way you could tag all of your wallpapers and then do a search for wallpaper and receive the results for all the wallpapers you have on your computer(or even internet and external devices, music, mail, and instant messages all sorted) regardless of different file directories or file names. This could work with metadata tags in audio as well. So you could potentially search or filter for specific music genres from your desktop search just like some of the more popular audio players implement. The potential is crazy and brings us one more step closer to menu-less computing.
Quoted
The team didn't like the standard KDE menu anymore, both its design (eg the recently/most used application section at top) as its lacking functionality compared to other modern start menus (eg desktop search). Another opinion was that starting your every-day applications not found on the panel was both too complicated and required too many mouse clicks.
With this start menu research we also hope to enrich the on-going discussion how the start menu of KDE 4 should look like.
This is the source of my most bitter disappointment too, I'm afraid. I normally work with a different configuration from yours, but it sounds somewhat similar, with two panels. KDE4's kicker replacement has no child panels, no grab bars to move things around, no move options on the right click menus to move things around, apparently no way to add icons for anything, and all of my usual taskbar applets are missing, so I have no dictionary, no KSysGuard mini monitor, no world clock, no color picker, or character selector. I can't even figure out how to change the color. It's extremely Spartan, and this fact above all makes KDE4 feel so much like GNOME that it makes me despair. I don't even see any indication that I should expect major progress in any of these areas for 4.1.Quoted
Originally posted by antaresMy first steps after installing KDE4 were to personalize the panels. In 3.5, I have two panels, one on the top with the menu and the applets, and one on the bottom, with the task manager and, an icon to show the desktop and the virtual desktops. I've been many years working with this configuration, and in kde4 I can do none of those things.
This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "susegebr" (Apr 9th 2008, 3:37pm)
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