Ted, I appreciate your perspective and humor.

Pause for effect, indeed.

Personally, I don't care about having the latest stuff -- I'm not a prima donna prancing about with the latest this or that; nor must I have the latest renditions of any of the Arts. There's nothing wrong about being a prima donna -- General Patton was one. I care about what works with hardware and how that functions for me. You've made my case regarding YDL for me in your statement regarding hardware. And really Ted, what's the point of the software without hardware? I wanted to make an analogy using cars like having a dashboard without the rest of the car; but that doesn't work because the "dashboard", here software, can't exist without it. Now maybe in some distant future it may one day be possible to access some global holographic system from thin air from anyplace on Earth -- I believe the networks in Hell and Heaven are fully supported that way from wherever one is.

However, I begin to have a better understanding at what you are aiming at. And I believe your point does have value, although it doesn't fit my personal style.

Your experience with Kubuntu (I suppose it's Ubuntu within KDE) is revealing as underneath all that is Debian essentially. I've always admired Debian and it remains the only other distribution I've even seriously considered for my own use. However, your comment regarding hardware also reflects upon them.

KDE's responsibility only extends as far as providing source, so far as I know. Do I have it wrong?

Ted, I don't know. I have enough difficulty keeping up with what I'm supposed to know, what I should know and what I need to know. This question regarding who really does what will have to go on one of those lists just to get done. There are so many things going on in Linux, it's pretty telling regarding the nature of the world around us, when it's only you and I, addressing these kind of questions. As for myself, I agree getting clarification regarding what is going on and how things are done, let alone who does what -- would be rather nice. I shouldn't have to point out the enormous streak of independence evident in each project and distribution. Gimp is a good example of a project that is both very powerful and useful and amazingly cryptic regarding it's menu and command structure just so no one can confuse it with Photoshop, and GImp is not the only Linux application like that. There are plenty of odd and wild - powerful - Linux applications out there.

Ted, I think you've done a judo move on me and this question could be harder to address than is clear right now.


You can do that within ANY desktop environment, Ted. Really, you can. It's a matter of accessing the help system of that particular desktop environment to learn how. That's why the developers of each and every desktop environment put in their own help system. By the way Ted, all you needed to do to move the menubar in Gnome is the same as you would do in KDE. Just put your cursor over the middle of the bar where there are no applications on the bar, press the left key on your mouse down, hold it down and then drag the bar whereever you want it. Up, Left or Right. I like it to the right myself.

Er. Wake up. Menu bar. You know the little bar that usually is at the top of windows in Microsoft and Linux, and is at the top of the screen on Macs? That little thing that says "File," "Edit," and so on...

Its a menu bar and it belongs at the top.

Why?

Just because you are still following the indoctrination you got from school, from Apple or Microsoft, or where ever -- why should that matter regarding my choices? Besides, who other than myself, cares? This issue is that the work get done, yes? So what matters really is not where I put the menu, but rather will the software run on my hardware!

Ooops, back to that are we?

Best of Luck.... Derick.

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