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Every of the listed programs has his adventages and disadventages. If you want to edit something very quickly, kedit is your textbrowser. If you want a lot of extra things like syntax-highleithing, you open kate.Quoted
Original von dawynn
Why so many duplicate applications? Take for example text editors. Windows comes standard with Notepad. That's it. If you want something a little more like a Word Processor, without paying the price for it, Windows has Wordpad.
But KDE is free. So, price is not an issue. So why do we have Kate, KWrite, and KEdit? Text Editing is such a simple thing, that we should be able to agree on how to do it, and build a fairly simple tool that would also include bells and whistles for those who want them. It would seem to me that improving a single product would be far more beneficial than spending time writing three separate inferior products.
I don't know the exact situation on audio-players. It is likely that it there are designed for a certain propose, and then grow to each other.Quoted
Original von dawynn
Multimedia Players are also an example. Why both Noatun and Kaboodle? Juk can easily play everything, *and* it has supports for saveable playlists. If Juk could be skinnable, like Noatun, it would be awesome. Again, instead of building three separate inferior applications, why not just build one superior application?
In Open Source Software, the really basic things are in separate dependencies. Through that, it is a little easier to write the programs, and thus it is possible to make three of them, each with another philosophy. For example, the application does not decode mp3 itself.Quoted
Original von dawynn
I too believe that there's room for choice in the free market, but as long as everyone keeps building their own versions of each separate kind of application, we lose opportunities to build really superior products.
Thanks all for making KDE the great product that it is. Let's keep making it better and better!
Quoted
Original von dawynn
Why so many duplicate applications?
Quoted
So why do we have Kate, KWrite, and KEdit?
Quoted
Multimedia Players are also an example. Why both Noatun and Kaboodle? Juk can easily play everything, *and* it has supports for saveable playlists. If Juk could be skinnable, like Noatun, it would be awesome. Again, instead of building three separate inferior applications, why not just build one superior application?
Quoted
I too believe that there's room for choice in the free market, but as long as everyone keeps building their own versions of each separate kind of application, we lose opportunities to build really superior products.
Quoted
Original von anda_skoa
Kate is for people with advanced needs, for example programmers. You can't force everyone else to use Kate just because some people need it.
If a user doesn't need Kate, he shouldn't install it.
Quoted
Quoted
I too believe that there's room for choice in the free market, but as long as everyone keeps building their own versions of each separate kind of application, we lose opportunities to build really superior products.
How so?
Quoted
Original von daihard
Quoted
Original von anda_skoa
Quoted
I too believe that there's room for choice in the free market, but as long as everyone keeps building their own versions of each separate kind of application, we lose opportunities to build really superior products.
How so?
I *think* he means you can use the limited resources more efficiently by focusing on one product instead of dividing it into three or four applications that have similar, if not identical, features.
Quoted
Originally posted by daihard
You can't force everyone to use Kate, but if Kate was the only editor available, people would probably go ahead and use it without complaining too much.
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