GNOME 2.3 Snapshot, KDE 3.1.2 Released 250
BSD Forums writes "The GNOME Development Series Snapshot 2.3.1 "Daddy Walrus", is now available. FreeBSD's Joe Marcus Clarke has ported this release (2.3) on FreeBSD and is looking for your testing help. Also, the KDE Project announced the immediate availability of KDE 3.1.2, a maintenance release for the third generation of this UNIX desktop."
I have to say I'm psyched! And I just can't wait (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I have to say I'm psyched! And I just can't wai (Score:5, Informative)
what about pulling it right now?
just use unstable as i do... if you want debian as a desktop unstable is a very good choice, don't think this unstable would actually mean unstable in the commen sense.
in fact, it is even considered to be more stable that testing by many people (not all people, no flaimbait please)
ATTENTION!!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ATTENTION!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
the purpuse of Debian stable is to be stable (Score:2)
Oh really. So you'll be interested to know that kde 3.1.2 is not a development release. It's a STABLE release, in fact it's a bugfix release to a stable release which in itself didn't have any serious bugs. Just look at the changelog.
In fact, there have been several stable kde versions which have not found their way into debian.
If you want to stay away from development versions of kde, just don't instal
Re:I have to say I'm psyched! And I just can't wai (Score:4, Informative)
deb http://ftp.us.kde.org/pub/kde/stable/3.1.2/Debian stable main
And you can have the latest & greatest KDE running on stable.
I had no idea.... (Score:5, Interesting)
But now that i switched to gentoo (this is not ment to be gentoo praise), i finally realise how much can i customise KDE.
But then again i am not sure if RH crippled KDE enough to be non-customisable.
ROCK on KDE.
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:5, Interesting)
A while ago I upgraded to RH9, nearly tore my hair out after seeing what they did to KDE, and promptly switched to SuSE 8.2 professional (plus got a cool T-shirt from SuSE).
I have long ago decided that if the stories are true I would let my wallet speak for me, and I believe RedHat 7.3 was the last RedHat I will ever have paid for. I am a SuSE user from now on. I wish RedHat better luck with GNOME, but I have made my choice, and it is KDE. Honestly, I wish RedHat would not support KDE at all instead of making changes to it that will never be accepted back into the KDE source tree, it's just a waste of effort that could be better spent on GNOME.
Paul.
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Personally I don't see what the big deal over KDE was. Mandrake also use a global theme. The other changes they made were minor, except altering some apps to use the best, instead of whatever happens to use Qt or KDE. As I always had to do that mysel
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The solution appeared to me to upgrade all four boxes to the same level, and I was pissed off enough at RedHat to have gone to SuSE instead. Why? Because their KDE does not suck as much, and because all of their system configuration tools are written in Qt, which makes them consistent with the rest of the desktop.
I know that this is getting off topic, but I also would like to mention that SuSE is cheaper (the Pro version), comes with great documentation, and supports ALSA. Also, RH9 did not recognize my TV card on setup, but SuSE did - more points for SuSE. And another thing - SuSE employes KDE coders, so I would rather compensate them by purchasing the SuSE Linux.
Paul.
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:2)
Suse is only Free as in Beer (Score:2)
I know most people could give a crap, but I'm not one of them.
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:5, Informative)
Cheers!
Darryl
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:2)
Re:I had no idea.... (Score:2)
The problem is that RedHat has no qualms about releasing prerelease software and labelling it as "release". Granted, fontconfig adoption might have taken slightly longer than it has if RedHat had not pushed it so heavily in their distro, but the problem lies in things like RedHat using their own custom patches to a stable Qt version to add fontconfig/Xft2 support, and installing prerelease glibc versions
Don't bother to install Gnome 2.3.1 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Don't bother to install Gnome 2.3.1 (Score:4, Informative)
Oh, and 2.3.2 will take more than 2 days. There is a delay on the schedule that you can notice if you look at the release date of 2.3.1
Re:Don't bother to install Gnome 2.3.1 (Score:2)
Re:Don't bother to install Gnome 2.3.1 (Score:2)
- Jeff Waugh
Release co-ordinator, The GNOME Project
Re:Don't bother to install Gnome 2.3.1 (Score:5, Funny)
A heritage desktop for Linux? (Score:4, Funny)
Personally, I still find myself using FVWM. It's fast, lightweight, and (as far as I know) it's homegrown. However, it's old, and FVWM users such as myself are missing out on some of the newer Linux technology. Are there any plans for an American desktop environment? And do all Americans who are serious about boycotting products from states of concern really realize where KDE and GNOME come from? I think a lot of people might be unpleasantly surprised if they found out some of the things that they're supporting by using some of these foreign environments.
Re:A heritage desktop for Linux? (Score:5, Funny)
Real, patriotic Americans, stimulate the economy by purchasing new Dell [dell.com] PCs, which come pre-loaded with a genuine copy of Microsoft Windows XP Professional [msftstores.com].
Socialism, Communism, and Linux are for backwards European countries and for jealous nations like Canada--a country that silently ignores the fact that 90% of its population live within 250 miles of its border with the United States.
Re:A heritage desktop for Linux? (Score:2)
It's about as ugly as FVWM, but it has an American-sounding name and features Warner Brothers cartoons on the screenshot.
It is also inspired by a long-forgotten Conputer OS built by those effing Pearl-Harbor bombing Japanese, but the went out of Business (Ha) because of their bad Marketing Dept.
How Much Longer (Score:5, Funny)
I assume that will be followed by KDE 95....
Re:How Much Longer (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How Much Longer (Score:2)
Yeah, in 2095. I can't wait for Mandrake 8589934592!
So when (Score:5, Funny)
It seem SCO Group only considers suing the best..
Re:So when (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, cool! We'll finally get the answer to the long GNOME-or-KDE religious battle... just wait and see who gets sued by SCO first...
;->
Re:So when (Score:2)
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/05/19/105
Re:So when (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So when (Score:2)
Re:So when (Score:2)
whither Ximian GNOME 2? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:whither Ximian GNOME 2? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd agree that Ximian Gnome 1.x was a great product. I compared it to (the then current) KDE 2.x, and Ximian just blew KDE away. I've been a devoted Gnome user since. However, I recently migrated from Red Hat+Ximian to Gentoo/Gnome 2.2. At least that was the intention, until I took a look at KDE 3.1. Wow - instantly konverted! It's uch slicker & more usable than Gnome. Maybe Ximian will redress the balance. Gnome/GTK still has the best apps though. Nothing can touch Evolution or Galeon (so far), though Konqueror is catching up with Galeon.
HH (waiting to emerge -u kde)
--
KDE 3.1.2 Changelog (Score:5, Informative)
Re:KDE 3.1.2 Changelog (Score:5, Informative)
Bring on 3.2
Uggh, released already? (Score:5, Funny)
my ancient Sun box. And now I need to stop that and
install kde 3.1.2? Probably by the time I'm finished with
that the kde folks will be up to 3.1.3
Well, the good thing about GNOME is it won't compile
at all on my Sun box, so no need to even bother.
Re:Uggh, released already? (Score:2)
Larry the cow says. (Score:5, Funny)
/ just great, another \
\ all-nigher emerge!
------------------
\ ^__^
\ (oo)\_______
(__)\ )\/\
||----w |
|| ||
My one KDE feature request (Score:3, Interesting)
I want ARBITRARY keyboard shortcuts. I want to be able to write a shell script (or any executable), and have it execute when I hit (ctrl)-(alt)-w (My keystroke to bring up a vertically maximized terminal window).
I was quite scared with gnome 2.x when they seemed to take this feature away, but I found out how to do it eventually (gconf-editor under the metacity stuff).
Re:My one KDE feature request (Score:5, Informative)
Right click on the K menu to access menu editor.
Re:My one KDE feature request (Score:2, Informative)
Re:My one KDE feature request (Score:2)
there are also snapshots of it for KDE 3.1 around, google it.
proposed modules for GNOME (Score:3, Informative)
The following modules have been PROPOSED for inclusion in the next major GNOME release. Keep in mind that not all of them may be accepted.
battfink - Energy saving and battery status utility.
epiphany - A GNOME web browser based on Gecko.
fontilus - Font management and information tools.
galeon - A GNOME web browser based on Gecko.
gcalctool - A full-featured calculator.
gedit-plugins & gtksourceview - Split off plugins and a syntax highlighting textview for gedit.
gnome-mag, gnome-speech, gnopernicus & gok - Screen magnification, text to speech, on screen keyboard and accessibilty features control tool.
gnomemeeting - Standards-based audio and video conferencing.
gnome-system-tools - Cross-platform user-friendly system configuration tools.
gpdf - An xpdf-based PDF viewer.
gswitchit & libxklavier - Keyboard layout switching and configuration tools.
gucharmap - A full-featured unicode character map tool.
nautilus-cd-burner - Integrated CD burning tool for Nautilus (requires as-yet-unreleased changes to Nautilus for full integration and is currently Linux-specific).
seahorse - GPG/PGP key management utility, with Nautilus integration.
themus - Theme management and information tools (will most likely be added to the control-center module).
totem - A sound and video player (currently based on Xine, with GStreamer support being worked on).
zenity - Provides graphical prompts and dialogues for shell scripts.
Yet Another Web Browser, Themes = waste of time (Score:2, Flamebait)
So, in another 6 months, we'll have Revelation, based on Epiphany? I mean, holy crap, when are people gonna learn to contribute(or use) existing work, instead of just making browsers that are nearly identical except in appearance? See the same comment about Totem("based off Xine"), gpdf("Based off xpdf")...
I hate idiots that tote open-source this, open-source that...but refuse to play together, missing most of the point. themus - Theme management and inf
Re:Yet Another Web Browser, Themes = waste of time (Score:3, Interesting)
Epiphany uses Mozilla (GRE when it's available).
Totem uses libxine.
gpdf uses xpdf.
They are not "based off". They use the libraries provided by other apps to offer an interface integrated with gnome (drag and drop, bonobo widgets, gtk themes, HIG compliant interface...). Cause they are not intended to be stand-alone apps, but apps for the gnome desktop.
Re:Yet Another Web Browser, Themes = waste of time (Score:3, Informative)
Here is the answer on your rant/fud/troll: Gentoo forums [gentoo.org]:
You can read more details in Epiphany mailist [mozdev.org]:
KDE obnoxious bug still in 3.1.2 (Score:4, Interesting)
KDE is IMHO awesome, but its habit of automatically switching focus to error dialogs on another desktop is driving me insane. Especially since, statistics aside, the switcheroo invaribly happens when I'm writing a Slashdot post, and in my furor hit "enter" just as a warning dialog comes up.
--
Just another 2 minutes that I should have been writing my thesis.
Re:KDE obnoxious bug still in 3.1.2 (Score:2)
It often catches me off gaurd. I often am looking at the dog (not house broke yet) while I'm typing. (This is not the cause of my poor speeling and grammer, though it contributes) Combine that with my slow computer and my habbit of opening several different windows all at once, and I often am working in one window for a while when suddenly some other one pops up on me.
Screenshots? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Screenshots? (Score:2, Informative)
Gnome 3 (Score:4, Interesting)
Unlike Mandrake 9 and MSN 8. None of which had version 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 etc. They just upped the numbers to match their competitor. (RedHat 9, AOL 8).
Re:Gnome 3 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Gnome 3 (Score:2, Informative)
at the time it made sense- up until about version 6.1, mandrake version x.y was not much more than redhat x.y + precompiled kde packages and a slightly different installer. they used the same version number as redhat to indicate package compatibility. it wasnt until around mandrake 7 that they truly distinguished themselves from redhat. at that point it wouldn't have made much sense to jump backwards to mandrake 1.0, would it?
Re:Gnome 3 (Score:2)
Personally I think they should all just start using a less arbitrary versioning system, like Mandrake Linux 2003.
Re:Gnome 3 (Score:2)
There is no point in copying MS versioning scheme anyway
Re:Gnome 3 (Score:2)
Pfff.
Mandrake Linux 2003.May
grnbrg
Maintenance vs New Functionality (Score:5, Insightful)
I've seen too many patches and fixes that insist in introducing new components or functionality at the same time as a fix. The separation of "fix" and "feature" is a critical one for minimizing the number of new bugs introduced.
While KDE is by no means the only project where this is practiced, they are a big one and it is a method that should be praised and emulated whenever possible.
I run Windowmaker... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I run Windowmaker... (Score:2)
Redhat vs Mandrake (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Redhat vs Mandrake (Score:2)
Uh, *bsst* troll.
The latest stable versions of KDE and GNOME, KDE 3.1 and GNOME 2.2, both use fontconfig+xft2+freetype = SAME FONT RENDERING.
Neither Gtk nor Qt do any font rendering by themselves. They both use freetype/xft. Qt just has been doing this for a far longer time (since Qt 2.3), while gtk has had this since gtk 2.0 (gtk 1.x had gdkxft, which was unfortunatly rather hackish
Btw, application preferences are based on the user. The only gtk2 app I use regu
My vision of "the perfect desktop" (Score:3, Funny)
*Konq is the file manager. The rest of KDE is useless.
*GTK is the widget library. The rest of Gnome is useless.
*GTK AA-text and font-prefs work without launching gnome-control-center when not running Gnome.
*MozFirebird is the browser, with proper native GTK widgets. (XULGlade Theme?)
*OpenOffice document engine & rendering engine with Gnumeric or Abiword interface.
*QT becomes a theming engine ontop of GTK.
*Abandon all dockapps, panels, kickers: replace it with Karamba + OpenGL to compete with Longhorn & OSX.
*PDF viewer: rendering engine of Acrobat, UI functionality of KGhostview, using GTK widgets.
That's all I can think of for now. I hope you can see it in your mind now.
Re:My vision of "the perfect desktop" (Score:2)
Re:My vision of "the perfect desktop" (Score:2)
Re:My vision of "the perfect desktop" (Score:2)
Let's see now... you want to dump eyecandy, but replace the panel with Karamba... use GTK+ for all your widgets but Qt for all your theming...
I just can't see this in my mind without some of that stuff you're smoking.
Re:My vision of "the perfect desktop" (Score:2)
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2, Insightful)
-- shayborg
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
-- shayborg
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:5, Funny)
S
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, but perhaps you can claim that Windows XP has a standard UI. In that case, you can similarly claim that Mandrake Linux has a standard UI.
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
Oh, and the Start Menu has stuff that used to be on the desktop.
Is that all you have to offer? In comparison, Mandrake Linux is a composite of conflicting windowing libraries, desktop environments, and poor cut-and-paste.
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
Oh, of course I need to have the Gnome libraries installed. But that hardly means I have essentially two splintered OS's on my system. I have one. When I fire up Gimp or Gnumeric, I'm not even aware (apart from the name) that these are Gnome apps. I run them at the same time as running, say, KMail.
So I'm not quite sure where you
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2, Insightful)
-- shayborg
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
MS office is the best office suite around! Therefor under your logic we should not use any other app but MSOffice. Oh wait it happens to only run on Windows. Well I guess we can ditch Linux too then. Wait we can't integrate our palms with outlook as well as windowsce, well i guess we can replace our pda's as well, etc.
I prefer choices and there needs to be a distinctive differences between products and standards. TCP/IP and
Re:Woohoo! More Format Wars! (Score:2)
Re:Desktop war in news? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Desktop war in news? (Score:4, Informative)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=64474&cid=597
Re:Desktop war in news? (Score:5, Interesting)
1: You should install both if at all possible. There is a large and growing level of interop between the two libraries, and some of the GNOME applications are extremely advanced and powerful (Gnumeric, Evolution, etc.) Also KDE has many applications, so you may want to use them. And if you have both installed, you can use KDE apps on GNOME and vice versa.
2: As for which one to use, I think you should evaluate both. Gnome 2.x and Kde3.1.x are both very mature and useable desktops.
Here is what I would do. I would take 10 employees that seem of typical skill, set up GNOME and KDE on systems, and ask them to evaluate their uses.
One think I will say as a network admin, though is that once the LDAP backend is completed for GCONF, that will be very helpful for network support. Of course until it exists, treat it as vaporware, and judge based upon the current capabilities, not the promised future.
Re:Desktop war in news? (Score:2)
Re:Desktop war in news? (Score:2)
It's nice to hear that you would have no problem with Qt for in-house development too. Because I wouldn't know where to get commercial support for Gtk. Anyone else?
Re:It's about time... for switching desktops (Score:4, Informative)
Moderators on acid again (Score:2)
Hellooo, anybody home? Have you never seen a troll before, moderators?
Re:It's about time... for switching desktops (Score:2)
>>>>>>>>>>
I get a lot of this handwaving and shouting. Precisely what do you want that XP has but KDE does not?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:why gnome/kde (Score:2, Funny)
Re:ACK! (Score:2)
Re:ACK! (Score:2)
Re:ACK! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ACK! (Score:2)
SYN! (Score:4, Funny)
The would implement Klippy.
Re:When will nautlius have splitpane and fish supp (Score:2)
If they don't start giving the users what they want, then I can see a fork coming right this way.
If there was going to be a fork, it'd have happened way before now.
Re:When will nautlius have splitpane and fish supp (Score:2)
The nice thing about KIO is that almost all KDE applications use it by default. You can just open up a random KDE application (just tried with kview) and type a KIO url (fish://elf/storage/graphics) and it'll work transparently. GNOME-VFS does the same thing, but it doesn't have as wide a base of support. The main problem with GNOME is that far too few applications a
Re:Sometimes I think I'm alone in loving FVWM 1.24 (Score:2)
I always try the latest and greatest desktops, but keep going back to FVWM.
Nothing on the desktop but a pager, everything is in the root windows, including a handy tasklist. (like an auto-hide taskbar, 'cept better.)
I've got keyboard shortcuts to open all of the apps I use frequently.
FVWM would be perfect if only it had anti-aliased fonts...oh well. I can live with that.