KDE confusion under F7
Kevin Kofler
kevin.kofler at chello.at
Fri Oct 19 10:53:55 UTC 2007
John Summerfield <debian <at> herakles.homelinux.org> writes:
> Where were you when NULL came out?
Do we really have to rehash RH8 here now? As I said, this history lesson is
entirely irrelevant to current Fedora.
But if you really want to know: I actually went from RHL 7.3 straight to FC1.
At that point there had been lots of flames about Bluecurve, so I wasn't sure
what was awaiting me. I decided to just try it out, and liked it, to the point
where I'm still using it now in Fedora 7 and even ported it to Qt 4.
> I installed it with KDE and Gnome, and found I had to look closely to
> tell the difference.
I know what you're talking about there, I've seen the screenshots and to some
extent it was still like that in FC1 (though these customizations were already
on their way back out, the similarity was higher in RHL 8 and 9). I don't
really see the problem there, it was just a matter of default settings. Mainly
just how the taskbar and menu were set up. That said, Red Hat quickly figured
out that this amount of consistency wasn't actually necessary because a desktop
is only running either GNOME or KDE on the same screen at the same time, so
they gradually removed those customizations in Fedora. The default settings for
both KDE and GNOME in Fedora 7 look like a lot more like the respective
upstream defaults than like each other.
> It was the immediate cause of my not upgrading past RHL 7.3, and a very
> talented and all-round good gent, Bero, left RH over it. He was
> responsible for KDE, he had his own website of extras for KDE (including
> advocacy stuff),it was he who added DVD burning to cdrecord, and I think
> it was he who made the first rescue disks.
It was sad to see Bero go indeed. He was doing a lot of stuff, he also did much
of the GCC 2.96 work (another endless source of flames, but in that case he was
on Red Hat's side). But it was simply his personal dislike of what was
happening which made him leave. Unfortunately, differences of opinion like this
happen all the time, in all projects and companies.
Kevin Kofler
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