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Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
What do you mean "switching"? ;)
PS In before it was cool. :P |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
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Ultimately it depends on the quality of the packages/repositories and on the distribution policies, not on the packaging system itself (deb and rpm have more or less the same features). |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
I use GNOME (recently with a tiling window manager - xmonad) and I'm mostly happy with it, don't expect I'll be switching to KDE any time soon. I used to try every new significant KDE release and always went away disappointed finding it incredibly unusable, bloated and unstable. At some point I just lost any hope and interest and stopped trying. Maybe I'll take a look at 4.3, but I don't have high hopes.
I also generally prefer GTK applications over Qt applications as most Qt apps seem to insist on being KDE apps and seem to possess same bloated unusable feel. Having said that, I am currently rewriting Aard Dictionary UI in Qt (PyQt4) - mostly to take advantage of Qt's WebKit integration, but also for more native look & feel on various platforms and for the fun of it - and I am pleasantly surprised with Qt quality and ease of development (and it looks like GTK when running in GNOME:)). Nokia's announcements regarding Qt on Maemo is certainly another strong argument for Qt. Not sure if it does much for KDE though. |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
no need for switching, as long time KDE user since 0.beta4 :-)
You can ask the question also in a differend way: how many "Gearheads" (aka KDEler) start to discover Maemo? http://dot.kde.org/2009/10/12/free-n900 http://www.kdedevelopers.org/node/4078 Bye Thorsten (1st post) :-) |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
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Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
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Like someone else said, no need to switch. My Hildon-Python apps run in Kubuntu just fine. 95% of my code is developed in that environment. And the Webkit Qt integration should result in more browser choices for Maemo. |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
As a complete noob to open source and linux, I am trying to decide whether to start with Gnome or KDE. I think I have decided on Ubuntu for my starting distro.
The whole reason for even considering the switch is due to the possibilities I see with the N900. Nokia may think that this device has a limited target audience, but they may be surprised how many people (like me) there are that are looking for a mobile computer with phone capabilities. I am even making the switch to Linux so that I can better understand my N900. |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
Another issue that I've always had is I'm not a fan of the KDE compositioning manager, I prefer Compiz. And never had the time to set down and get it working 100% (disabling/removing KDE's and replacing it with Compiz).
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Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
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Next up: OpenSUSE (11.2-Milestone8) with KDE 4.3.2 and kernel 2.6.31. It is installing as I type. :) But I might have the same issues with OpenSUSE that I had with Kubuntu: http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Instal..._ThinkPad_T61p If I don't stick with OpenSUSE, I'll try Mandriva or PCLInuxOS next. Just figured I would let everyone know what I'm trying. Thanks again for the tips. And, right. Microsoft's the devil. ;) |
Re: Anyone else switching to KDE thanks to Nokia?
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If you go with Ubuntu, Gnome seems the way to go because, as I found out today, most the Ubuntu help seems oriented toward Gnome. When I had Kubuntu questions today I realized how much harder it is to get quick answers. For a noob who has decided on Ubuntu, your life will be easier with Gnome. I've been pretty happy with Ubuntu these last couple years. I think it was the right way for me to get started with Linux. BTW, why does everyone call it "Gnome" instead of GDE? |
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