On 11 September 2017 at 14:19, Gerald B. Cox <gb...@bzb.us> wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 11, 2017 at 3:45 AM, Richard W.M. Jones <rjo...@redhat.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> On Sun, Sep 10, 2017 at 07:17:56PM -0400, Gerald Henriksen wrote:
>> > While you (and others) may well know the name of the software you like
>> > for a given task, new people will not have that knowledge.
>>
>> Isn't that really a discoverability problem?
>>
>> I could imagine having menu items pointing to best-in-class
>> applications which are not actually installed.  Selecting the menu
>> item would bring up a box asking you if you want to install it.
>
>
> That wasn't his main point which you removed:
> "But there is also the audience who are trying out KDE (or Gnome/etc)
> for the first time and providing them with an installed base of
> software to try / check out is convenient and the right thing to do."
>
> This is an issue about default applcaitons.  As I said above:
> "I believe you are missing the point of defaults.... which is to provide as
> complete environment as possible out of the box.  Since this is a KDE spin,
> we should be providing as complete of a KDE environment as possible.   Users
> shouldn't be required to go on a treasure hunt to seek out available KDE
> applications.  If you don't want to use a KDE default you can easily either
> go into settings and change the defaults, remove the package you don't want,
> etc."
>
>
>

To provide a purely anecdotal data point, what I use the KDE spin for
is to install a version of Fedora with the KDE desktop.

-- 
imalone
http://ibmalone.blogspot.co.uk
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