Why do people not like kde
Does it have an expose style feature? I started using Gnome a few years ago almost by accident, and since then I can never go back to a window list. As Gnome started pissing me off it is very unstable, in a version-to-version change way, not in a crash way I discovered that I am too addicted to it and couldn't find expose style elsewhere. Does Sawmill still work on new systems? Every time I install it gets more and more difficult, to the point where when I tried installing in on Ubuntu There's been enough said here recently about the problems with Gnome 3 and the attitude of the Gnome developers, but the 10, ft view is that they refuse to stop pretending that my desktop PC is an iPad.
Gnome 2 had these things, and then early Gnome 3 got rid of basically all of them. If some fancypants UX researchers want to experiment with replacing menu bars with hamburgers, that's fine, but I'm just not interested. I've done more than my fair share of WM hopping I still use i3 on my laptop because I like being able to resize windows with my keyboard when I don't have a mouse , but XFCE is my workhorse.
It may look boring, but it's reliable. It has more than enough features for working productively, and I appreciate the fact that the development team doesn't completely change the way everything works every few years just to chase the latest flashy trend. Ygg2 10 months ago parent next [—]. Funny you say that, but on a limited Linux VM, it's the only environment that runs and looks relatively decent. KDE - Looks great, runs like a slug stuck in molasses.
Gnome - Looks meh, runs slightly better. Unity - Looks great, same performance as KDE. It looks fine out of the box, better with some minor tweaking, and is fully themeable if you're into that sort of thing.
KDE always had a reputation for being a bit of a resource hog. Gnome 3 was a rewrite in Javascript, so no surprises there. I never personally used Unity, but it always felt a little annoying when I had to use it on other computers, probably due to the layout and corner gestures. The result is a really fast and responsive user experience, that will run fast even in low spec machines. I am not a fan of the default panel layout and overall configuration, but XFCE panels are easy to configure as well as highly configurable.
You can create as many panels you want, position them anywhere you want and put any elements on them There's even a way to create a macOS-like global menu, although I don't recommend it. Everything else is true as far as I know Then Ubuntu switched to that DE-which-I-cant-recall-the-name, with the sidebar and what appeared to me to be a strange desktop which made me lose some reflexes.
So I switched over to Xubuntu and it made me feel more at home, it was a desktop as simple as I could ever hope, in fact, its logic was for me intuitive. I never felt the need to customise it beyond its defaults: it just worked. ChuckNorris89 10 months ago prev next [—]. I'm also curious. Hopefully there are some up to date DE connoisseurs on HN to shed some light.
If you mostly use GTK applications, it's a great way to use them in a well-rounded desktop environment that isn't Gnome. That's appealing enough for a lot of people, even 10 years after the first Gnome 3 release. Some people like yours truly just ditched the applications and moved to other things, like KDE land.
Some didn't and just ditched the DE. When it asks you to login you will see a gear or cog. One of them will be Plasma. Select this, and exit back to to the login page. Depending on how many Virtual Desktops you have on the Panel, you can do any number of projects all at once.
Then came KDE 5 and screwed everything up. Just as in KDE 4. These cookies collect information in aggregate form to help us understand how our websites are being used. They allow us to count visits and traffic sources so that we can measure and improve the performance of our sites. If people say no to these cookies, we do not know how many people have visited and we cannot monitor performance.
Ettrich chose the Qt framework from Trolltech now the Qt Company to build it, later becoming an employee. Click to enlarge. They get something out of it from us testing all of these obscure cases before they get to their clients. We gain because we have this rich, very powerful toolkit designed for these industrial applications where they have to care about safety-criticalness.
We had Xfce and others coming along, wonderful nerdy tools, but if you want a full featured desktop Plasma is the way to go. Qt offloads more onto the graphics card. The Linux display system, X Server, may be all but abandoned , but its replacement, Wayland, may not be quite ready.
What is the status of Plasma with respect to Wayland? The problem is that Wayland is a moving target. Whole new protocols come in all the time. He instanced the clipboard implementation as an area where new protocols have come in to handle things like clipboard history after you close an application. But the danger is that there are hardware types like Nvidia that may not work so well with Wayland because they are not open source friendly.
Org maintainer Adam Jackson right in saying that the community needs to move more wholeheartedly towards Wayland to get it to a mature state? What about Systemd, another hot topic in the community? Nevertheless, he said that it solves a number of problems. Edmundson posted recently about how Systemd enables management of cgroups, which group processes into units that make sense to the user, such as the application or service to which those processes belong.
It is currently opt-in, off by default. I hope to make it the default where available after more testing and feedback. The team is also seeing increased interest from the far east. Money though is not a pressure at the moment, according to Edmundson.
Is it frustrating that that in projects such as Ubuntu, KDE always seems to be a secondary option? Riddell is an enthusiast for packaging formats like Snaps and Flatpak which let developers update their applications once for a store, rather than relying on others to compile and package them for specific distros.
Does the general public have an accurate perception of what KDE is today? It is lightweight and powerful if you need it, and it can be bought directly on laptops. The Philippines' Department of Foreign Affairs DFA has disabled its online passport application tracker, citing a "data privacy issue" and hinting that information could have leaked.
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