HA!
Maybe I learn something after all...
I did learn to hate KDE years ago when there were so many things running
under the hood that it killed all performance.
Unity I just can't digest it...
I'll install a KDE virtual and give it a try, I may change my mind!
Rant away! 8-)
ET
Brian Cluff writes:
On 06/21/2014 11:05 AM, [email protected] wrote:
And/or the M$-like bloated KDE.
Since your ranting, I will too...
I really hate seeing people continue to spread that KDE is bloated. It
might have been true in the KDE 3.5 days, but these days it's quite small.
As far as ram usage it isn't the smallest, but in the class of the full
featured desktops it's usually among the lowest. It's certainly lower
memory usage than both Unity and Gnome.
Even if it wasn't lower, why would you throw out all the time saving,
integration you get with KDE for what amounts to the ram space of a single
dollar worth of ram that you get back with the use of one of the "lean"
desktops.
I've watched people use the "more efficient" distros over and over and
spend a ton of time trying to get the features that are built into the
"bloated" distos.
...and if your answer to why you have to run a slim distro is that your
machine is too old to run anything else, I would recommend spending one of
the hours that you'll be spending trying to get your machine to work right
or waiting for the machine to process something and mow your neighbors
lawn. The money you will make from a single lawn mowing job would buy a
computer that will run a lot better than that or at least buy enough ram
to have your current computer run without you having to worry about it.
Remember that once the libraries are loaded the apps themselves don't
really take much more ram. I once had a machine with only 4 gigs of RAM
serving up KDE desktops to 45 xterms, and it usually had a couple of gigs
free...amazing.
Unless your talking about running very specific programs in an embedded
environment, it's better to pick a desktop that makes your life easier,
especially when any of the desktops out these are smaller that a single
copy of firefox with a single tab open to a single web page. If I could
find an environment that would save me a bunch of time but used 4 times as
much RAM as the largest Linux desktop, I would happily run it.
As for your M$-like comment, other than the initial layout which can be
easily changed to pretty much anything you want, I don't see it. Even if
it was more M$-like, what's wrong with incorporating some of the better
features that windows had (Yes, past tense). I'm no MS lover, but not
everything MS did was garbage. It would be foolish to implement
everything "different" just because that's the way it was done by
someone/something that you don't like.
And just to clear things up, KDE is an open source port of the proprietary
(at the time) CDE, which predates the windows look that Microsoft adopted
for windows 95.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Desktop_Environment
If anything, Microsoft copied the layout from CDE, not KDE from M$.
Another thing to consider, is that KDE has kept a similar initial layout
to it's interface for almost 20 years and almost all changes have been
very incremental often times with a way to use the legacy interface, so
there has never been a need to completely relearn everything just because
a newer version of the distro comes out that they felt the need to
continue to call the same name even though it's now sporting a completely
different interface... I"m looking at you Ubuntu and Gnome.
OK, rant over.. I have to end it or I'll go on all day.
Brian Cluff
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list - [email protected]
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list - [email protected]
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss