Hi Laurie and all,

On Thursday 03 Dec 2009 17:22:30 Laurie Clark-Michalek wrote:
> In the spirit of all the desktop haters, is anyone here (apart from
> me) looking forward to KDE 4.4? From this angle, that is, not minding
> dbus too much, it looks to be very promising. They have some
> interesting stuff due to be merged into the trunk, like tabbed window
> management, revamped oxygen, and other such things. I took the time to
> read their feature list for 4.4 and it all looks good.

Yeah, as someone who's used KDE since version 1.0, I find myself looking 
forward to new KDE releases more and more at the moment, since the pace of 
development has been so fast lately when compared to other software. I think 
that the tabbed and tiling window management has the potential to change the 
way I work quite a bit.

One thing I do miss (though it's still present, it hasn't received much 
attention lately) is the canvas functionality of Konqueror. I loved the idea 
that I could throw any kind of file (html, pdf, directory, text etc) from any 
location (disk, sftp, http etc) and it just knew what to do with it and handled 
it transparently. I always used to have programs running as their kparts inside 
Konqueror and use konqueror windows to logically separate my activities (one 
for work, one for web pages I'm reading etc). The shift in recent months 
(years?) has been towards standalone applications, which I think is downplaying 
what has always been one of KDE's strongest features. I'm hoping that whenever 
the KHTML / Webkit argument is won and a top of the line KDE web browsing 
component is all polished, that it doesn't signal the end of Konqueror as a 
kparts canvas in favour of only having the choice of a standalone web browser.

Then again, perhaps the KDE strategists have in mind the tabbed window 
management as a different way of doing this, but I don't think that can provide 
all the functionality.

> Also, does anyone have any opinions on their changing of KDE to KDE SC
> (KDE Software Compilation)? Personally, it feels a bit silly, and I
> imagine KDE will continue to prevail, but it's not too important
> anyway.

I guess they're trying to reflect the fact that there's much more to KDE than 
just a desktop environment these days... depending on what you call a desktop 
environment!

It's potentially not the best exercise in brand management though...

Pete.

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