On Sunday 14 February 2010 12:40:59 Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Sunday 14 February 2010 13:02:48 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> > > I highly recommend drivers to gain the skill of driving a vehicle
> > > crash-style without a clutch. Comes in useful sometimes.
> > >
> > > :-)
> >
> > the point was not stick but unsyncronized ;)
> 
> I know. I just felt like tossing sounding in that sounded awfully clever
>  :-)

I also like manual gearboxes and for some years I was driving an old Series 
IIA Land Rover which had straight cut gears on first and second and it whined 
when driven at any speed.  If you didn't double declutch to go from 2nd to 1st 
and occasionally from 3rd to 2nd you would eventually end up with a box-full 
of gears and no forward drive!

I also happen to own a couple of old PCs which I try to keep lean and I don't 
mind the odd double declutching to change gears.  Now, I understand the 
development philosophy of KDE4 since this was very well explained, but that 
does not stop me wishing that the developers were a bit more modular in their 
approach.  This is because I would like to use a few KDE apps, but do not want 
to have to download and install a load of ever increasing dependencies.  I am 
after a pick 'n mix from the sweet shop, rather than being 'forced' to have 
one of each.

However, the point has been well made by many.  KDE4 is not KDE3.x and with 
KDE4 you get the full enchilada because that's what the developers have 
produced.  Since I do not have the ability (or time) to fork KDE4 into my own 
flavour I will very much have to make do and be grateful with what developers 
care to offer.  As I progressively upgrade my hardware all this aforementioned 
'bloat' will no doubt be less of a concern, but as things are maturing in the 
Linux land my old laptop has been getting slower and slower over the years 
when running X.  I can blame this on Xorg, but the applications themselves are 
getting <aheam> heavier somewhat too.

I wonder if there is enough of a user requirement here for some of us to knock 
up a few wiki pages of how to build a slimmer gentoo, choices of lightweight 
WMs, desktop apps of choice, etc.
-- 
Regards,
Mick

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