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pk wrote: |
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> Dale wrote: |
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> |
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> |
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>> You say they dropped support. I call it dropping the ball. Same thing. |
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>> |
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> |
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> Sorry for "butting in"... |
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> |
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> As I understand it, KDE development is mostly driven by volunteers (like |
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> most OSS projects). Yes, some are probably paid/employed by interested |
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> parties but this doesn't really change the fact that there are limited |
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> resources that might be better to concentrate on the latest (and |
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> "greatest"). Not trying to be flame-baiting but, as with all OSS |
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> projects, if you don't like something, you can sharpen your hacking |
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> skills and contribute/fork/whatever to get what you want. Besides, |
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> comparing KDE with Microsoft is a bit unfair, don't you think? MS |
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> products is payed and supported through the sale of their software. KDE |
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> is free, unless you pay for support... Perhaps it's time to look around |
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> for something that suits you better? For me I like simplicity/minimalism |
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> and I've settled for xfce4. |
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> |
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> For the record I used to run K3b with a minimal kde-support environment |
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> (kdelibs, qt etc.), still under xfce4 of course, but I stopped |
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> using/removed it when KDE4 was enforced. Not that I have anything |
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> against qt4/KDE4 but it mandated installation of "accessibility" |
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> libs/utilities + "the kitchen sink" (why that would be required is |
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> beyond me; I thought accessibility was the exception and not the norm)... |
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> |
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> Again, just my opinion, not meaning to upset you, Dale, or anyone else... |
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> |
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> Best regards |
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> |
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> Peter K |
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> |
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|
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And this is the same thing that has already been said before. Volunteer |
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or paid, they dropped the ball. |
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|
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Dale |
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|
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:-) :-) |