Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-11-07 Thread gnuisancev3
go away

On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 6:17 AM, RedShift redsh...@pandora.be wrote:
 Allan McRae wrote:

 RedShift wrote:

 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to
 post my
 story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not
 the
 technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.

 So you posted in both the forums and here...

 Seriously, get a blog.



 Yes I did, because I feel the more technical people roam the mailinglists
 and the more casual user the forums. I want to hear all the sides.


 Glenn



Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-27 Thread Norbert Zeh
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 10:31:06PM +, dennisjperk...@comcast.net wrote:
 
  Well, I guess they try to 'integrate' again, all config in one place, 
  but again only for their bubble. 
 
 Isn't there already an OS with such a terrible, bloated and cryptical 
 all config in one place database called registry? 
 
 And wasn't there a principle in Unix/Linux: Everything is a file.? 

Indeed, this is one of the many appeals of Linux.  What scares me about
Windows is that I cannot fix anything that Microsoft didn't expect to go
wrong - so pretty much everything ;) - because I need some program that
understands whatever proprietary format they use.  In addition, looking
for a messed-up entry in the registry is like looking for a needle in a
haystack because it's huge, not really documented, and the entry keys
are cryptic.

In old-fashioned Linux, you have a few well-defined text files that
control the behaviour of an application.  If they're messed up, I can go
at them with a text editor, and their entries are usually
well-documented in a man-page.  This is a level of maintainability that
is hard to beat.

I see why desktop people want to have a centralized place to configure
everything: the average user is probably not up to editing many text
files and probably doesn't understand half of what's written in the
man-pages explaining their contents.  But then I think the way to go is
to have a two-tier architecture with well-documented text files for the
individual applications underneath and a unified GUI on top that
manipulates (the most common options in) them.

Cheers,
Norbert


[arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread RedShift

This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to post my
story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the
technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very sluggish
and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that makes things
even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD Sempron 2 Ghz with
an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well. On top of
that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post for my top
annoyances. Yesterday I had to reboot to my Windows XP installation on this
computer and I was shocked when I arrived in XP's userland. Everything was
ridiculously fast. When returning to my linux desktop everything felt even more
sluggish. That's when I decided to go back to KDE 3.5. I restored my old KDE 3.5
profile, installed the necessary packages and logged back in. WOF,
everything is fast again. Opening new windows is instantaneous, hell even
bringing up context menus is faster. If Linux is that much better, why does the
current Linux desktop (KDE 4.3) still suck compared to an operating system
that's 8 years old?

Last week I also had the chance to check out Windows 7, and I was stumped. I was
genuinly impressed by Windows 7's GUI. It feels fast, works fluently, it has
nice effects which just work and work FAST. When browsing around it felt like a
very solid desktop environment. I am jealous. I really am. The thought of
using Windows 7 in favor of KDE 4.3 has occured to me much more than I like. And
it's little things like dragging the windows to the top of the screen makes them
maximized, dragging them to the left makes the take exactly 50% of the screen.
How many times have you been manually resizing windows to fit next to each
other? I have, too many times. These are things that really improve your
productivity.


So when should we have started working at a better desktop environment for
Linux?

When Mac OS X came out. When was that again? 2001. Yes, it really was that long
ago. It already had awesome desktop effects that just work on (compared to these
days) VERY modest hardware. And it worked fast as well. It was and still is a
solid desktop environment. From that point on the Linux community should have
recognized the threat Mac OS X was for the desktop environment. Unfortunately
nobody did and we went on creating a big mess, fighting over implementations and
technical details instead of attempting to create a solid desktop environment.

Yet we did have a second chance in 2007. Microsoft obviously screwed up with
Windows Vista, we had the chance to win back alot of terrain here until the
release of Windows 7. So what did we come up with? KDE 4. Yes, a big
dissapointment. We still don't have something that's comparable.


So basically, where are we at?
KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
??? is Windows 7


When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?

Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of Windows 7,
nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to the Linux desktop
environments. The numbers speak for themselves, Windows 7 has already sold more
copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month. And with
good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows Vista. Microsoft
recognized the problems with Windows Vista and dealt with them. And dealt with
them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.


Conclusion

We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize what the
user wants and delivered.

If we are comparing enterprise desktops, there's no going around Red Hat. The
current Red Hat desktop (5.4) ships with KDE 3.5, while its succesor RHEL 6 will
be, if looking what Fedora brings now, shipped with KDE 4.2 or 4.3. That means
KDE 4.2/4.3 will be the main desktop for enterprises for at least the next 3
years. A disgrace if you ask me. Users will be comparing desktop environments
and they will find Windows 7 or Mac OS X to be better. After the damage RHEL 6
will have done to the reputation of the Linux desktop, it will take again as
many years to rectify the damage done. Granted if we will have a solid desktop
environment comparable to Windows 7 by the time RHEL 7 gets released. Which I
can't help but doubt.



My top KDE 4.3 annoyances:
* Slo. Logging in takes a multifold of times it did under KDE 3.5,
repainting windows takes up a lot of time
* The battery status applet is buggy, it only shows the actual percentage after
you've hovered it with the mouse, even when you've set it to always display. The
scale it uses is also difficult to interpret. These bugs have been reported a
long time ago and are still not fixed.
* The run dialog is useless. The reason is the history function. It can't
display a full history when you start typing, you have to type alot more. Having
a pull down menu and using the 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Vesa Kaihlavirta
 So basically, where are we at?
 KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
 KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
 ??? is Windows 7

awesome is Windows 1

--vk


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Allan McRae

RedShift wrote:
This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided 
to post my
story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, 
not the

technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


So you posted in both the forums and here...

Seriously, get a blog.

Allan



Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread RedShift

Allan McRae wrote:

RedShift wrote:
This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided 
to post my
story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, 
not the

technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


So you posted in both the forums and here...

Seriously, get a blog.




Yes I did, because I feel the more technical people roam the mailinglists and 
the more casual user the forums. I want to hear all the sides.


Glenn


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Jozsef
On 26 Oct 2009 at 11:57, RedShift wrote:

 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to post 
 my
 story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the
 technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.
 
 
 I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very 
 sluggish
 and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that makes things
 even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD Sempron 2 Ghz 
 with
 an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well. On top of
 that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post for my top
 annoyances. Yesterday I had to reboot to my Windows XP installation on this
 computer and I was shocked when I arrived in XP's userland. Everything was
 ridiculously fast. When returning to my linux desktop everything felt even 
 more
 sluggish. That's when I decided to go back to KDE 3.5. I restored my old KDE 
 3.5
 profile, installed the necessary packages and logged back in. WOF,
 everything is fast again. Opening new windows is instantaneous, hell even
 bringing up context menus is faster. If Linux is that much better, why does 
 the
 current Linux desktop (KDE 4.3) still suck compared to an operating system
 that's 8 years old?
 
 Last week I also had the chance to check out Windows 7, and I was stumped. I 
 was
 genuinly impressed by Windows 7's GUI. It feels fast, works fluently, it has
 nice effects which just work and work FAST. When browsing around it felt like 
 a
 very solid desktop environment. I am jealous. I really am. The thought of
 using Windows 7 in favor of KDE 4.3 has occured to me much more than I like. 
 And
 it's little things like dragging the windows to the top of the screen makes 
 them
 maximized, dragging them to the left makes the take exactly 50% of the screen.
 How many times have you been manually resizing windows to fit next to each
 other? I have, too many times. These are things that really improve your
 productivity.
 
 
 So when should we have started working at a better desktop environment for
 Linux?
 
 When Mac OS X came out. When was that again? 2001. Yes, it really was that 
 long
 ago. It already had awesome desktop effects that just work on (compared to 
 these
 days) VERY modest hardware. And it worked fast as well. It was and still is a
 solid desktop environment. From that point on the Linux community should have
 recognized the threat Mac OS X was for the desktop environment. Unfortunately
 nobody did and we went on creating a big mess, fighting over implementations 
 and
 technical details instead of attempting to create a solid desktop environment.
 
 Yet we did have a second chance in 2007. Microsoft obviously screwed up with
 Windows Vista, we had the chance to win back alot of terrain here until the
 release of Windows 7. So what did we come up with? KDE 4. Yes, a big
 dissapointment. We still don't have something that's comparable.
 
 
 So basically, where are we at?
 KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
 KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
 ??? is Windows 7
 
 
 When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?
 
 Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of Windows 7,
 nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to the Linux desktop
 environments. The numbers speak for themselves, Windows 7 has already sold 
 more
 copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month. And with
 good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows Vista. Microsoft
 recognized the problems with Windows Vista and dealt with them. And dealt with
 them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.
 
 
 Conclusion
 
 We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize what 
 the
 user wants and delivered.
 
 If we are comparing enterprise desktops, there's no going around Red Hat. The
 current Red Hat desktop (5.4) ships with KDE 3.5, while its succesor RHEL 6 
 will
 be, if looking what Fedora brings now, shipped with KDE 4.2 or 4.3. That means
 KDE 4.2/4.3 will be the main desktop for enterprises for at least the next 3
 years. A disgrace if you ask me. Users will be comparing desktop environments
 and they will find Windows 7 or Mac OS X to be better. After the damage RHEL 6
 will have done to the reputation of the Linux desktop, it will take again as
 many years to rectify the damage done. Granted if we will have a solid desktop
 environment comparable to Windows 7 by the time RHEL 7 gets released. Which I
 can't help but doubt.
 
 
 
 My top KDE 4.3 annoyances:
 * Slo. Logging in takes a multifold of times it did under KDE 3.5,
 repainting windows takes up a lot of time
 * The battery status applet is buggy, it only shows the actual percentage 
 after
 you've hovered it with the mouse, even when you've set it to always display. 
 The
 scale it uses is also difficult to interpret. These bugs have been reported a
 long time ago and are still not fixed.
 * The run dialog is 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread RedShift

Jozsef wrote:
I guess you are right about everything. As a desktop Windows is 
better than KDE. If desktop is all that is matter for you then you 
should go for it :)


By the way Alt+F2 is something I like in KDE4.3.2 for example. What 
about you? Is there anything you like in KDE4.3? 

I think it's always good to see things you like and to try to be 
positive even if KDE4.3 sucks.




Of course there are things I like about KDE 4.3. A few examples:

* The desktop effects are integrated into the window manager. No more messing 
around with compiz
* When those effects are enabled, you do have cool things like a window preview 
when hovering the taskbar. This is what I miss most
* You can fetch external themes, backgrounds, color schemes, etc... directly 
from within the applets that are responsible for those settings. No more 
searching around the web for nice themes, no more installing in obscure 
locations, it's now all done for you
* I really like the concept plasma brings to the desktop
* The KDE team has provided measures to turn back the clock (classic start 
menu, classic desktop)
* Lots of KDE software runs under windows. This brings kate, my favorite 
editor, to the windows desktop
* KDE still has better abstraction of file locations than windows or gnome



However, for me, the negatives unfortunatly outweigh the positives. For the 
most part, because they don't really enhance my productivity.


Glenn


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Phillip Smith
2009/10/26 RedShift redsh...@pandora.be

 Allan McRae wrote:

 So you posted in both the forums and here...

 Seriously, get a blog.


 Yes I did, because I feel the more technical people roam the mailinglists
 and the more casual user the forums. I want to hear all the sides.


I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the technical
details behind it. Keep that in mind.

If you're not talking technical details, why post to the list to get the
thoughts of the technical people? I agree with Allan, this is definitely
more suitable for a blog.


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Stefan Erik Wilkens
2009/10/26 RedShift redsh...@pandora.be:
 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to post
 my
 story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the
 technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


 I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very
 sluggish
 and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that makes things
 even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD Sempron 2 Ghz
 with
 an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well. On top
 of
 that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post for my
 top
 annoyances. Yesterday I had to reboot to my Windows XP installation on this
 computer and I was shocked when I arrived in XP's userland. Everything was
 ridiculously fast. When returning to my linux desktop everything felt even
 more
 sluggish. That's when I decided to go back to KDE 3.5. I restored my old KDE
 3.5
 profile, installed the necessary packages and logged back in. WOF,
 everything is fast again. Opening new windows is instantaneous, hell even
 bringing up context menus is faster. If Linux is that much better, why does
 the
 current Linux desktop (KDE 4.3) still suck compared to an operating system
 that's 8 years old?

 Last week I also had the chance to check out Windows 7, and I was stumped. I
 was
 genuinly impressed by Windows 7's GUI. It feels fast, works fluently, it has
 nice effects which just work and work FAST. When browsing around it felt
 like a
 very solid desktop environment. I am jealous. I really am. The thought of
 using Windows 7 in favor of KDE 4.3 has occured to me much more than I like.
 And
 it's little things like dragging the windows to the top of the screen makes
 them
 maximized, dragging them to the left makes the take exactly 50% of the
 screen.
 How many times have you been manually resizing windows to fit next to each
 other? I have, too many times. These are things that really improve your
 productivity.


 So when should we have started working at a better desktop environment for
 Linux?

 When Mac OS X came out. When was that again? 2001. Yes, it really was that
 long
 ago. It already had awesome desktop effects that just work on (compared to
 these
 days) VERY modest hardware. And it worked fast as well. It was and still is
 a
 solid desktop environment. From that point on the Linux community should
 have
 recognized the threat Mac OS X was for the desktop environment.
 Unfortunately
 nobody did and we went on creating a big mess, fighting over implementations
 and
 technical details instead of attempting to create a solid desktop
 environment.

 Yet we did have a second chance in 2007. Microsoft obviously screwed up with
 Windows Vista, we had the chance to win back alot of terrain here until the
 release of Windows 7. So what did we come up with? KDE 4. Yes, a big
 dissapointment. We still don't have something that's comparable.


 So basically, where are we at?
 KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
 KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
 ??? is Windows 7


 When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?

 Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of Windows 7,
 nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to the Linux desktop
 environments. The numbers speak for themselves, Windows 7 has already sold
 more
 copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month. And with
 good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows Vista. Microsoft
 recognized the problems with Windows Vista and dealt with them. And dealt
 with
 them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.


 Conclusion

 We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize what
 the
 user wants and delivered.

 If we are comparing enterprise desktops, there's no going around Red Hat.
 The
 current Red Hat desktop (5.4) ships with KDE 3.5, while its succesor RHEL 6
 will
 be, if looking what Fedora brings now, shipped with KDE 4.2 or 4.3. That
 means
 KDE 4.2/4.3 will be the main desktop for enterprises for at least the next 3
 years. A disgrace if you ask me. Users will be comparing desktop
 environments
 and they will find Windows 7 or Mac OS X to be better. After the damage RHEL
 6
 will have done to the reputation of the Linux desktop, it will take again as
 many years to rectify the damage done. Granted if we will have a solid
 desktop
 environment comparable to Windows 7 by the time RHEL 7 gets released. Which
 I
 can't help but doubt.



 My top KDE 4.3 annoyances:
 * Slo. Logging in takes a multifold of times it did under KDE 3.5,
 repainting windows takes up a lot of time
 * The battery status applet is buggy, it only shows the actual percentage
 after
 you've hovered it with the mouse, even when you've set it to always display.
 The
 scale it uses is also difficult to interpret. These bugs have been reported
 a
 long time ago and are still not fixed.
 * The run dialog is useless. The reason is 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Alessandro Doro
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 03:19:06PM +0400, Jozsef wrote:
 By the way Alt+F2 is something I like in KDE4.3.2 for example.

I read Ctrl+Alt+F2 for a moment. Sorry.


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Rafa Griman
Hi :)


On Monday 26 October 2009 11:57:59 RedShift wrote:
 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to
  post my story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in
  general, not the technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


No intention to make this a real flame war, just got some 
questions/advice/info 0:)


 I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very
  sluggish and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that
  makes things even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD
  Sempron 2 Ghz with an nVidia FX5500.


I've got a Dell Latitude D610 with an Intel VGA:

$ lspci | grep -i vga
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Mobile 915GM/GMS/910GML 
Express Graphics Controller (rev 03)

1 GB RAM

$ cat /proc/cpuinfo
processor   : 0
vendor_id   : GenuineIntel
cpu family  : 6
model   : 13
model name  : Intel(R) Pentium(R) M processor 1.86GHz
stepping: 8
cpu MHz : 1867.000
cache size  : 2048 KB
fdiv_bug: no
hlt_bug : no
f00f_bug: no
coma_bug: no
fpu : yes
fpu_exception   : yes
cpuid level : 2
wp  : yes
flags   : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca 
cmov clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss tm pbe nx up bts est tm2
bogomips: 3726.83
clflush size: 64
power management:


Relevant software:
kernel26 2.6.31.5-1
xorg-server 1.6.3.901-1
intel-dri 7.5.1-2
xf86-video-intel 2.8.1-1
KDE* 4.3.2-4

Using KMS for my Intel VGA.

I've got to say I've got a very snappy KDE running. Doesn't feel slow, 
response is immediate, ...


¿Could you be having some hardware issues? Maybe not because KDE 3.5 and XP 
seem to run fine on your system.

BTW, not running ANY effects because they get on my nerves. Don't find them 
productive (I don't see how a snowing background or blowing up windows can 
make you more productive).


BTW, I've also got an MSI Wind with 2 GB RAM, Intel VGA and Atom (dual core) 
and same version software with the same results: sanppy, fast response, ...

Can't really compare to MS-Windows since I don't use it/them. But I can 
compare to KDE 3.5 (since I used it before on the same hw) and 4.3 is not 
slower than 3.5 IMHO on the same hardware.

@ home I've got a dual-core AMD + 8 GB RAM + ATI with 512 MB dedicated RAM. In 
this case I'm _NOT_ using ATI's drivers, I'm using the radeonhd drivers and 
everything seems to work fine: fast response, ... Not slow at all. On this 
system I've got a 2nd partition with openSUSE + ATI drivers + KDE 3.5 and TBH, 
I see no better performance with KDE 3.5.

My guess is that there's something wrongly configured or installed in your KDE 
4 installation. Check this:
- deactivate nepomuk and Akonadi
- delete /tmp/k* /var/tmp/k*
- delete your .kde4 and .kde and .local dirs (you can also choose
  creating a new account and see if it's faster)

[...]


 So when should we have started working at a better desktop environment for
 Linux?


I think the KDE team already is, but of course, that's MHO ;)

[...]


 So basically, where are we at?
 KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
 KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
 ??? is Windows 7
 
 
 When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?


KDE 4.5? ;)


 Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of Windows 7,
 nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to the Linux desktop
 environments. The numbers speak for themselves, Windows 7 has already sold
  more copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month.
  And with good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows Vista.
  Microsoft recognized the problems with Windows Vista and dealt with them.
  And dealt with them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.


MS _DOES_ have some help from IHVs ;) Those IHVs preinstall Windows on their 
laptops, netbooks, ... + MS also has some very deep pockets (filled with $) to 
convince those IHVs to preinstall MS-Windows. Not only that, their deep 
pockets help them talk with polititians (at least here in Spain that helps a 
lot ;)

If we (KDE Community) had those deep pockets filled to the brim with $ just as 
MS does:
- we could pay more full time developers
- we could pay more full time developers to solely profile
  and debug KDE
- convince IHVs to preinstall KDE
- we could speak with polititians (at least here in Spain)
- ...

I'm not saying money = hapiness, but it does help a bit sometimes ;)

Resources on one side and the other are not the same. MS has way more full 
time developers than KDE has.

 Conclusion
 
 We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize what
  the user wants and delivered.


This reminds me of a time (long ago) when MS prooved that Win2k was faster 
serving files that Linux+Samba. While the 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread RedShift

Stefan Erik Wilkens wrote:

A general rule in life is that nothing is ever free. Perhaps a bold
remark to use in an open-source mailing list, but cost doesn't have to
be defined by money.

We simply pay for using Linux by coping with slightly lower
performance in some (certainly not all) areas of the desktop
experience, furthermore by dealing with a lack of certain features and
compatabillity with the rest of the world (office and other indistry
standard applications not being available to us, the open source
counterparts not being up to par with the standard due to
closed-source or licencing).



I haven't thought about the money aspect and yes this world does revolve around you 
get what you pay for. Though I see this in a different light, just because we chose 
to be Free, we have to settle for less?


Though we try to stay on par, I think determining that we have lost
implies that we must outperform other operating systems in every way
to be considered a real alternative.



This point has come up in the forums as well. Don't we want linux/Free software 
to succeed in all facets of computing? Certainly because the desktop is a big 
chunk.


KDE 4.x is in active developement, GNOME is renewing the desktop
experience (albeit slowly). Things are moving along in the open source
desktop world. Thankfully, linux != just desktop



Yes and KDE 4 has made huge improvements over the releases. But my peers do 
feel similar and the most common response is, how can the community be so 
unresponsible for doing flawed releases?



However, for me, the negatives unfortunatly outweigh the positives. For the 
most part, because they don't really enhance my productivity


Behind != different?




I don't consider being behind as being different


Glenn


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Raven_Oscar UnKnown
I have to admit that I am partly agree with you. MS screwed up with Vista
and all its competitors had a chance to gain part of its market. I speak
about both Linux and MacOS. But none of them used it. So basically situation
is the same as it was before Vista. In fact we are not loosing ground
because we never had it. Slightly over 1% of desktop market makes me think
that Linux is still OS for the geeks.
I also have to admit that there are no tech innovations in windows 7 which
could encourage me to go back to MS technology. At the same time I really
see a lot of them in linux.


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread RedShift

Rafa Griman wrote:

(note, lots of things cut)




I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very
 sluggish and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that
 makes things even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD
 Sempron 2 Ghz with an nVidia FX5500.



I've got a Dell Latitude D610 with an Intel VGA:

$ lspci | grep -i vga
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Mobile 915GM/GMS/910GML 
Express Graphics Controller (rev 03)


1 GB RAM

$ cat /proc/cpuinfo
model name  : Intel(R) Pentium(R) M processor 1.86GHz
Using KMS for my Intel VGA.

I've got to say I've got a very snappy KDE running. Doesn't feel slow, 
response is immediate, ...




I have about the same setup running here (Intel 915 VGA and a Pentium M 
processor), yet it distinctively feels slow compared to for example Windows XP 
or KDE 3.5.

My guess is that there's something wrongly configured or installed in your KDE 
4 installation. Check this:

- deactivate nepomuk and Akonadi
- delete /tmp/k* /var/tmp/k*
- delete your .kde4 and .kde and .local dirs (you can also choose
  creating a new account and see if it's faster)



Already did those. Doesn't help.




So basically, where are we at?
KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
??? is Windows 7


When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?



KDE 4.5? ;)



I hope so. Maybe I should have waited with my response and give KDE 4 project 
more time to mature, but there's also chance I would be writing this same 
e-mail two years in the future.




Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of Windows 7,
nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to the Linux desktop
environments. The numbers speak for themselves, Windows 7 has already sold
 more copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month.
 And with good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows Vista.
 Microsoft recognized the problems with Windows Vista and dealt with them.
 And dealt with them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.



MS _DOES_ have some help from IHVs ;) Those IHVs preinstall Windows on their 
laptops, netbooks, ... + MS also has some very deep pockets (filled with $) to 
convince those IHVs to preinstall MS-Windows. Not only that, their deep 
pockets help them talk with polititians (at least here in Spain that helps a 
lot ;)




That is true, but even that's not unlimited. Look at windows vista. Most OEMs 
still ship XP upgrades with business desktops. Though that'll rapidly diminish 
now that 7 is out.



Conclusion

We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize what
 the user wants and delivered.



This reminds me of a time (long ago) when MS prooved that Win2k was faster 
serving files that Linux+Samba. While the FLOSS Community was shouting and 
arguing whether the benchmark was well done, Mr. Torvalds said that was good 
news since now we would know where we have to apply fixes and what fixes would 
have to be applied. I think this situation is similar.




Than it is a good thing that I spoke up. I am worried about the future of Linux.





* Double clicking the system icon in the titlebar doesn't always work to
 close an application (the system icon is the left-most icon in the
 titlebar). This bug has also been reported a long time ago and still not
 fixed.



Never tried that, TBH, always use the X on the far right.



Partially agreed, however, my reasoning here is don't provide features that don't 
work.




* I get a full 10 minutes of extra runtime on my laptop when I switched
 back to 3.5



Not here.



On the forums the response was, well duh. That being due to the fact that KDE 
4 makes more intensive use of the graphics card, which I can understand. But I would have 
expected by optimizing hardware usage, the system would be faster as well, which is not 
the case.


Glenn


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Jozsef
On 26 Oct 2009 at 12:46, Rafa Griman wrote:


 My guess is that there's something wrongly configured or installed in your 
 KDE 
 4 installation. Check this:
   - deactivate nepomuk and Akonadi
   - delete /tmp/k* /var/tmp/k*
   - delete your .kde4 and .kde and .local dirs (you can also choose
 creating a new account and see if it's faster)


What's the way of deactivating nepomuk and Akonadi?


--
O ascii ribbon campaign - stop html mail - www.asciiribbon.org



Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Raven_Oscar UnKnown
What's the way of deactivating nepomuk and Akonadi?

It can be done via system settings  advanced tab.





Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Arvid Picciani

RedShift wrote:


Conclusion

We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize 
what the

user wants and delivered.


I can't remember fighting for that ground, and I'd be totally happy if 
the people who do would just go away.



--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread b4283
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Hash: SHA1

were we *EVER* in a war ?
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Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/

iEYEARECAAYFAkrlnhgACgkQEX4dV4KnKneMeQCg8RxNQYR1LW8Pp56vyRVjnVFv
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Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Heiko Baums
Am Mon, 26 Oct 2009 11:57:59 +0100
schrieb RedShift redsh...@pandora.be:

 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided
 to post my story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in
 general, not the technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.
 
 ...
 
 So when should we have started working at a better desktop
 environment for Linux?
 
 ...
 
 So basically, where are we at?
 KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
 KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
 ??? is Windows 7
 
 
 When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?
 
 ...

Why do you stick with KDE? Why don't you try Xfce or LXDE?

KDE 1 was quite nice but pretty slow and buggy. Until KDE 3.5 it was
made much more stable and faster so that KDE 3.5 was really usable.
With KDE 4 they went back to KDE 1 regarding stability and speed but
with far too much eyecandy.

KDE 4 was the reason for me for switching to Xfce. It runs smoothly and
in my opinion fast and has only a few minor issues in my experience.
LXDE seems to be fast and stable, too. For me there's only one applet
missing, don't know which one. I can't decide which one I like
more. Currently I stick with Xfce.

But KDE isn't an option for me anymore.

Since I already used GTK/Gnome apps in KDE, I'm now using Qt/KDE apps in
Xfce.

Heiko


Re: [arch-general] [*] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread ppk
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 11:57:59AM +0100, RedShift wrote:

 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided
 to post my story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience
 in general, not the technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.



 I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels
 very sluggish and incomplete.

[snip]

 back in. WOF, everything is fast again. Opening new windows is
 instantaneous, hell even bringing up context menus is faster. If
 Linux is that much better, why does the current Linux desktop (KDE
 4.3) still suck compared to an operating system that's 8 years old?

Here are my two paises (Indian cents). You bring out a point that I
regularly see:

* Oh my graphics card does not work. Conclusion Linux is not for
desktops.  This was say in 1997 when I started on linux. Surely this
was a problem. But even then things were not bad compared to windows.

* Oh my printer does not work with GNU/Linux. Conclusion Linux is not
for office use.  Yes it is true that some esoteric printers do not
work but then a careful netsearch will give you what to buy. If you
dont want to search a product then your vendor will sell you snakeoil
any way. I bought a Samsung printer (ML something) for my office and
it works like charm.

* Oh my foo bar effect on KDE 4.x/GNOME x.x does not work. Conclusion
Linux is not for desktop usage. What you say might be true. I dont
know because I use xmonad and that beats all other WM in my
opinion. But to conclude we have lost the ``war'' (which war I dont
know) of desktops might be premature.

Really many of us do not care. GNU/Linux and *BSDs give us excellent
servers, desktops, development environments, document creation tools
(TeX/LaTeX) which together is hard to beat. Plus it is hackable and I
have choice of what to use (xmonad for desktop for eg). So as far as I
am concerned the war is over. Opensource won.

Just to illustrate, for a talk I carried my presentation as a pdf file
created using latex beamer on an Arch linux and some one from
Microsoft research carried a ppt (for ``security'' reasons we were not
supposed to connect our laptops on to their projectors vga port). Both
of us were given a windows machine to project the presentations and
yes you guessed it right the ppt fonts were all garbled where as my
pdf file was just fine. In fact the only other presentation that
worked without any problem was also created via beamer on GNU/Linux.


KDE/GNOME/XFCE or whichever is your favorite WM will continue to
produce high quality software and you may also contribute. My
suggestion is forget about the war and have fun. Let the people in
Redmond suffer hypertension by attempting world domination. Meanwhile
try out xmonad even if you do not want to use it.


Regards

ppk


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Xavier
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 11:57 AM, RedShift redsh...@pandora.be wrote:
 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to post
 my
 story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the
 technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


Nice job, you turned a kde 4 sucks into a linux vs windows desktop
flamewar. :)

What about getting productive, and reporting nicely your bug report
and feature request to the kde developer ?

 And
 it's little things like dragging the windows to the top of the screen makes
 them
 maximized, dragging them to the left makes the take exactly 50% of the
 screen.
 How many times have you been manually resizing windows to fit next to each
 other? I have, too many times. These are things that really improve your
 productivity.


If you were not so single minded with KDE, you might realize there are
many wm which address this problem much more nicely than windows, at
least in my opinion.
Of course you can disagree and not like the alternatives, but you
still have to take that into account if you want to do a serious
comparison.


Re: [arch-general] [*] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Otávio Módolo
if the problem is only the grafical interface, gnome can be changed to the
limit. you can make him far better than any win using compiz, some apps for
cairo and others.

2009/10/26 ppk p...@matrix.iitk.ac.in

 On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 11:57:59AM +0100, RedShift wrote:

  This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided
  to post my story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience
  in general, not the technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.



  I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels
  very sluggish and incomplete.

 [snip]

  back in. WOF, everything is fast again. Opening new windows is
  instantaneous, hell even bringing up context menus is faster. If
  Linux is that much better, why does the current Linux desktop (KDE
  4.3) still suck compared to an operating system that's 8 years old?


windows can open software faster because all programs uses the same group os
basics libraries and all that is already on ram. Linux do not have that. But
everyone here already know that


 Here are my two paises (Indian cents). You bring out a point that I
 regularly see:

 * Oh my graphics card does not work. Conclusion Linux is not for
 desktops.  This was say in 1997 when I started on linux. Surely this
 was a problem. But even then things were not bad compared to windows.

 * Oh my printer does not work with GNU/Linux. Conclusion Linux is not
 for office use.  Yes it is true that some esoteric printers do not
 work but then a careful netsearch will give you what to buy. If you
 dont want to search a product then your vendor will sell you snakeoil
 any way. I bought a Samsung printer (ML something) for my office and
 it works like charm.

 * Oh my foo bar effect on KDE 4.x/GNOME x.x does not work. Conclusion
 Linux is not for desktop usage. What you say might be true. I dont
 know because I use xmonad and that beats all other WM in my
 opinion. But to conclude we have lost the ``war'' (which war I dont
 know) of desktops might be premature.

 Really many of us do not care. GNU/Linux and *BSDs give us excellent
 servers, desktops, development environments, document creation tools
 (TeX/LaTeX) which together is hard to beat. Plus it is hackable and I
 have choice of what to use (xmonad for desktop for eg). So as far as I
 am concerned the war is over. Opensource won.

 Just to illustrate, for a talk I carried my presentation as a pdf file
 created using latex beamer on an Arch linux and some one from
 Microsoft research carried a ppt (for ``security'' reasons we were not
 supposed to connect our laptops on to their projectors vga port). Both
 of us were given a windows machine to project the presentations and
 yes you guessed it right the ppt fonts were all garbled where as my
 pdf file was just fine. In fact the only other presentation that
 worked without any problem was also created via beamer on GNU/Linux.


 KDE/GNOME/XFCE or whichever is your favorite WM will continue to
 produce high quality software and you may also contribute. My
 suggestion is forget about the war and have fun. Let the people in
 Redmond suffer hypertension by attempting world domination. Meanwhile
 try out xmonad even if you do not want to use it.

 agreed!! hahaha just have fun!!


 Regards

 ppk




-- 
http://id.liquuid.net


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Lars Tennstedt

RedShift wrote:
This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to 
post my

story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the
technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very 
sluggish
and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that makes 
things
even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD Sempron 2 
Ghz with
an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well. On 
top of
that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post for 
my top

annoyances. Yesterday I had to reboot to my Windows XP installation on this
computer and I was shocked when I arrived in XP's userland. Everything was
ridiculously fast. When returning to my linux desktop everything felt 
even more
sluggish. That's when I decided to go back to KDE 3.5. I restored my old 
KDE 3.5

profile, installed the necessary packages and logged back in. WOF,
everything is fast again. Opening new windows is instantaneous, hell even
bringing up context menus is faster. If Linux is that much better, why 
does the

current Linux desktop (KDE 4.3) still suck compared to an operating system
that's 8 years old?

Last week I also had the chance to check out Windows 7, and I was 
stumped. I was
genuinly impressed by Windows 7's GUI. It feels fast, works fluently, it 
has
nice effects which just work and work FAST. When browsing around it felt 
like a

very solid desktop environment. I am jealous. I really am. The thought of
using Windows 7 in favor of KDE 4.3 has occured to me much more than I 
like. And
it's little things like dragging the windows to the top of the screen 
makes them
maximized, dragging them to the left makes the take exactly 50% of the 
screen.

How many times have you been manually resizing windows to fit next to each
other? I have, too many times. These are things that really improve your
productivity.


So when should we have started working at a better desktop environment for
Linux?

When Mac OS X came out. When was that again? 2001. Yes, it really was 
that long
ago. It already had awesome desktop effects that just work on (compared 
to these
days) VERY modest hardware. And it worked fast as well. It was and still 
is a
solid desktop environment. From that point on the Linux community should 
have
recognized the threat Mac OS X was for the desktop environment. 
Unfortunately
nobody did and we went on creating a big mess, fighting over 
implementations and
technical details instead of attempting to create a solid desktop 
environment.


Yet we did have a second chance in 2007. Microsoft obviously screwed up 
with

Windows Vista, we had the chance to win back alot of terrain here until the
release of Windows 7. So what did we come up with? KDE 4. Yes, a big
dissapointment. We still don't have something that's comparable.


So basically, where are we at?
KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
??? is Windows 7


When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?

Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of Windows 7,
nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to the Linux desktop
environments. The numbers speak for themselves, Windows 7 has already 
sold more
copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month. And 
with

good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows Vista. Microsoft
recognized the problems with Windows Vista and dealt with them. And 
dealt with

them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.


Conclusion

We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize 
what the

user wants and delivered.

If we are comparing enterprise desktops, there's no going around Red 
Hat. The
current Red Hat desktop (5.4) ships with KDE 3.5, while its succesor 
RHEL 6 will
be, if looking what Fedora brings now, shipped with KDE 4.2 or 4.3. That 
means
KDE 4.2/4.3 will be the main desktop for enterprises for at least the 
next 3
years. A disgrace if you ask me. Users will be comparing desktop 
environments
and they will find Windows 7 or Mac OS X to be better. After the damage 
RHEL 6
will have done to the reputation of the Linux desktop, it will take 
again as
many years to rectify the damage done. Granted if we will have a solid 
desktop
environment comparable to Windows 7 by the time RHEL 7 gets released. 
Which I

can't help but doubt.



My top KDE 4.3 annoyances:
* Slo. Logging in takes a multifold of times it did under KDE 3.5,
repainting windows takes up a lot of time
* The battery status applet is buggy, it only shows the actual 
percentage after
you've hovered it with the mouse, even when you've set it to always 
display. The
scale it uses is also difficult to interpret. These bugs have been 
reported a

long time ago and are still not fixed.
* The run dialog is useless. The reason is the history function. It can't
display a full history when you start typing, 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread hollunder
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:41:01 +0100
Stefan Erik Wilkens stefanwilk...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/10/26 RedShift redsh...@pandora.be:
  This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I
  decided to post my
  story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general,
  not the technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.
 
 
  I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels
  very sluggish
  and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that
  makes things even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup,
  an AMD Sempron 2 Ghz with
  an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well.
  On top of
  that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post
  for my top
  annoyances. Yesterday I had to reboot to my Windows XP installation
  on this computer and I was shocked when I arrived in XP's userland.
  Everything was ridiculously fast. When returning to my linux
  desktop everything felt even more
  sluggish. That's when I decided to go back to KDE 3.5. I restored
  my old KDE 3.5
  profile, installed the necessary packages and logged back in.
  WOF, everything is fast again. Opening new windows is
  instantaneous, hell even bringing up context menus is faster. If
  Linux is that much better, why does the
  current Linux desktop (KDE 4.3) still suck compared to an operating
  system that's 8 years old?
 
  Last week I also had the chance to check out Windows 7, and I was
  stumped. I was
  genuinly impressed by Windows 7's GUI. It feels fast, works
  fluently, it has nice effects which just work and work FAST. When
  browsing around it felt like a
  very solid desktop environment. I am jealous. I really am. The
  thought of using Windows 7 in favor of KDE 4.3 has occured to me
  much more than I like. And
  it's little things like dragging the windows to the top of the
  screen makes them
  maximized, dragging them to the left makes the take exactly 50% of
  the screen.
  How many times have you been manually resizing windows to fit next
  to each other? I have, too many times. These are things that really
  improve your productivity.
 
 
  So when should we have started working at a better desktop
  environment for Linux?
 
  When Mac OS X came out. When was that again? 2001. Yes, it really
  was that long
  ago. It already had awesome desktop effects that just work on
  (compared to these
  days) VERY modest hardware. And it worked fast as well. It was and
  still is a
  solid desktop environment. From that point on the Linux community
  should have
  recognized the threat Mac OS X was for the desktop environment.
  Unfortunately
  nobody did and we went on creating a big mess, fighting over
  implementations and
  technical details instead of attempting to create a solid desktop
  environment.
 
  Yet we did have a second chance in 2007. Microsoft obviously
  screwed up with Windows Vista, we had the chance to win back alot
  of terrain here until the release of Windows 7. So what did we come
  up with? KDE 4. Yes, a big dissapointment. We still don't have
  something that's comparable.
 
 
  So basically, where are we at?
  KDE 3.5 is Windows XP
  KDE 4.3 is Windows Vista
  ??? is Windows 7
 
 
  When are we getting to the Windows 7 stage?
 
  Microsoft didn't do a big advertising campaign for the launch of
  Windows 7, nevertheless they delivered a big slap in the face to
  the Linux desktop environments. The numbers speak for themselves,
  Windows 7 has already sold more
  copies in its first week than Windows Vista did in its first month.
  And with good riddance, Windows 7 really is better than Windows
  Vista. Microsoft recognized the problems with Windows Vista and
  dealt with them. And dealt with
  them swiftly if you ask me, doing it in less then 3 years.
 
 
  Conclusion
 
  We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors
  recognize what the
  user wants and delivered.
 
  If we are comparing enterprise desktops, there's no going around
  Red Hat. The
  current Red Hat desktop (5.4) ships with KDE 3.5, while its
  succesor RHEL 6 will
  be, if looking what Fedora brings now, shipped with KDE 4.2 or 4.3.
  That means
  KDE 4.2/4.3 will be the main desktop for enterprises for at least
  the next 3 years. A disgrace if you ask me. Users will be comparing
  desktop environments
  and they will find Windows 7 or Mac OS X to be better. After the
  damage RHEL 6
  will have done to the reputation of the Linux desktop, it will take
  again as many years to rectify the damage done. Granted if we will
  have a solid desktop
  environment comparable to Windows 7 by the time RHEL 7 gets
  released. Which I
  can't help but doubt.
 
 
 
  My top KDE 4.3 annoyances:
  * Slo. Logging in takes a multifold of times it did under
  KDE 3.5, repainting windows takes up a lot of time
  * The battery status applet is buggy, it only shows the actual
  percentage after
  you've hovered it with the mouse, 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Jozsef
On 26 Oct 2009 at 14:55, Lars Tennstedt wrote:


 
 Hi,
 
 I suggest the opposite in the facts of speed. My work's computer runs 
 with Windows XP and the hardware is faster than mine at home. But 
 Windows XP often stands still without a reason and takes ages to do 
 something. KDE 4.3 on my Arch Linux installation runs very well and 
 fast. I guess that it depends on the hardware you use.

Not to mention viruses and other shit...


--
O ascii ribbon campaign - stop html mail - www.asciiribbon.org



Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Shridhar Daithankar
On Monday 26 October 2009 19:25:09 Lars Tennstedt wrote: 
 I suggest the opposite in the facts of speed. My work's computer runs
 with Windows XP and the hardware is faster than mine at home. But
 Windows XP often stands still without a reason and takes ages to do
 something. KDE 4.3 on my Arch Linux installation runs very well and
 fast. I guess that it depends on the hardware you use.
 
 But I would say that the enterprise linux distributions should use KDE
 3.5 and GNOME 2.28 in the nearly future. In such an area with
 installations on many machines things just have to work and Plasma and
 GNOME Shell are too new.
 If KDE is too slow for you, use Xfce or LXDE. I do not miss anything
 under Xfce. And if you want to use Windows 7, use it. At the moment
 linux has little percentage on the desktop market.

I am writing this for sole reason that silence of a satisfied linux user 
should not be taken as absence of one.

I am a happy arch and KDE user and use windows XP only as much forced by the 
work. I don't know about vista. Rarely seen it in action. These are my 
opinions and not conclusions. Just adding a data point here.

- KDE is hugely productive. Multiple desktop(it already had for ages but 
mentioned for comparison with XP), plethora of applets(plasma widgets lately), 
kopete, kmail, akregator, knews, kate, konsole, k3b  and konqueror. It is so 
much ahead of windows that its not even the same race. Not to mention, each of 
these apps have innovation on its own that are hard to rival.

- I was happy with KDE 3.5.x(on slack and arch) and upgraded to KDE4 just 
along the way. KDE4.1/4.2 were not upto the par but KDE4.3 is on par with 
KDE3.5.x for me.

- I don't need any eye-candy on KDE and I have turned it off. Even though I 
have functioning nvidia drivers, I want my desktop fast, not animating and I 
am happy with that speed. Frankly I have not found any plasma widget worth 
keeping on desktop(I don't get to see the desktop anyways. Its always covered 
with some app). But I am a konsole geek. I could go alone with kate/konsole 
except email/IM/webbrowsing needs.

- I couldn't change to GNOME. I hate it. File open dialog is lame compared to 
KDE. I don't know what virtues peole see in it. That is only one reason 
another is button order(third is GTK. C for desktop? Not for me and no mono 
please.). I could stand a half working KDE but not GNOME.

- To people advocating lightweight options, Don't you lose what *KDE* offers? 
Instead of putting together a solution yourself, isn't it much better to use a 
solution that is put together already? Use xfce, throw in firefox and 
openoffice and its hardly any different from KDE+openoffice. Throw in 
thunderbird and pidgin and one begins to wonder whats the point? Is the 
dekstop really that lean now? Besides, throw in one KDE app. because its 
irresistible(kmail, kopete, k3b?) and again, one might as well run KDE.

- Huge win for KDE is consistency. Whatever speed KDE desktop loads today, it 
will load with same speed 3 months down the line and 3 years down the line(I 
can attest that. My home directory has remains of mandrake 7 till date. 
Upgraded and moved from machine to machine). Windows will not.

- I don't like nepomuk/strigi/akonadi and its off on my desktop. Thats more to 
do with hatred of mysql than these technologies itself. I won't let my desktop 
depend on mysql. Period. Come postgresql support and I will give it a go. 
Besides I don't have time to tag 10s of thousand of photos that I already have 
and every download from digital camera is at least 150 photos. 

- on point of desktop war, KDE is not fighting with windows but windows 
ecosystem. What does vanilla windows offer compared to KDE anyways? freecell 
and solitaire? Where is google messenger? where is an up to date browser? 
where is yahoo messenger? where is a good console? where are tons of 
utilities? Again, KDE is not fighting with windows. Its fighting with an echo-
system.

- for browser, I dabbled with lot of them and here is simple conclusion. The 
web is too fluid. There is no single app that can render it well, now and in 
future. And the whole web2.0 is a  non-sense, at least functionally. So I have 
konqueror for regular browsing(no serious site breaks in it for me.) and 
firefox for occasions when its needed. Usually if it does not render well in 
konqueror, I bypass the site and not the browser.

- use windows and you have to format/reinstall to upgrade. You realize how 
much productivity hit that is? It is impossible to get back all the small 
tweaks that one has accumulated over the period of time. Besides isn't that 
like last century? With arch we upgrade every month, if not more and don't 
have any problems.

I am happy with linux desktop for long time, since 2001 and haven't had 
windows since then. The war is over. Neo won :)

-- 
 Shridhar


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Arvid Picciani

hollun...@gmx.at wrote:


The problem is that the Desktop Environments, GNOME and KDE, in their
quest for integrated desktop experience push more and more stuff
that's really only useful to those DEs deeper and deeper into the
system.
If you as a user need or want it or not, you get it.


I warned about that 2 years ago, and no one would listen. Thankfully we 
are at a point were it gets so undenyable that the anger about the 
problem is gaining momentum.
I'm lurking in my corner waiting for the day that the crowd is big 
enough to form a community (maybe even a distro)


Until then, here are some steps to punch some sanity into your 
(arch)linux destop:


1) http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/ABS_-_The_Arch_Build_System

2) IgnorePkg  = dbus dbus-core gconf hal

3) foreach  in {xorg,emacs,qt,webkit,..}

  3.1) find and remove --enable-dbus,  --enable-gconf ,
   --enable-hal, --with-hal,  --other-shite

  3.2) makepgk  sudo pacman -U

4) foreach in {iron,chromium,cups,...}

4.1)  take a random library, rename it to
  libdbus, libgconf, libwhatever, and LD_PRELOAD it.

4.2) notice that that the software will gracefully
 handle the missing symbols, despite it needs them

5) foreach in $unfixable_software

5.1) pacman -R $unfixable_software


6) pacman -R dbus-core dbus gconf

7) remove shit from  /etc/cron.d/

8) Happy face


--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Dieter Plaetinck
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 15:33:12 +0100
Arvid Picciani a...@exys.org wrote:

 hollun...@gmx.at wrote:
 
  The problem is that the Desktop Environments, GNOME and KDE, in
  their quest for integrated desktop experience push more and more
  stuff that's really only useful to those DEs deeper and deeper into
  the system.
  If you as a user need or want it or not, you get it.
 
 I warned about that 2 years ago, and no one would listen. Thankfully
 we are at a point were it gets so undenyable that the anger about the 
 problem is gaining momentum.
 I'm lurking in my corner waiting for the day that the crowd is big 
 enough to form a community (maybe even a distro)
 
 Until then, here are some steps to punch some sanity into your 
 (arch)linux destop:
 
 1) http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/ABS_-_The_Arch_Build_System
 
 2) IgnorePkg  = dbus dbus-core gconf hal
 
 3) foreach  in {xorg,emacs,qt,webkit,..}
 
3.1) find and remove --enable-dbus,  --enable-gconf ,
 --enable-hal, --with-hal,  --other-shite
 
3.2) makepgk  sudo pacman -U
 
 4) foreach in {iron,chromium,cups,...}
 
  4.1)  take a random library, rename it to
libdbus, libgconf, libwhatever, and LD_PRELOAD it.
 
  4.2) notice that that the software will gracefully
   handle the missing symbols, despite it needs them
 
 5) foreach in $unfixable_software
 
  5.1) pacman -R $unfixable_software
 
 
 6) pacman -R dbus-core dbus gconf
 
 7) remove shit from  /etc/cron.d/
 
 8) Happy face
 
 

great mail.
I don't see what's so bad with dbus though.

Dieter


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Thomas Bächler

RedShift schrieb:
This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to 
post my

story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in general, not the
technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.


I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very 
sluggish
and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that makes 
things
even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD Sempron 2 
Ghz with
an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well. On 
top of
that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post for 
my top

annoyances.


I stopped reading here, as everything after that is probably shit anyway.

Suffice it to say: Blame nvidia - KDE4/QT4 is (despite it being 
supposedly fixed) still amazingly slow on nvidia, my desktop with a 
8500GT feels sluggish too. On a bunch of SuSE machines at work (all with 
nvidia), it is just as slow.


On my laptop with intel 2.9, everything is as fast as you can get.



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Lars Tennstedt



Shridhar Daithankar wrote:
On Monday 26 October 2009 19:25:09 Lars Tennstedt wrote: 

I suggest the opposite in the facts of speed. My work's computer runs
with Windows XP and the hardware is faster than mine at home. But
Windows XP often stands still without a reason and takes ages to do
something. KDE 4.3 on my Arch Linux installation runs very well and
fast. I guess that it depends on the hardware you use.

But I would say that the enterprise linux distributions should use KDE
3.5 and GNOME 2.28 in the nearly future. In such an area with
installations on many machines things just have to work and Plasma and
GNOME Shell are too new.
If KDE is too slow for you, use Xfce or LXDE. I do not miss anything
under Xfce. And if you want to use Windows 7, use it. At the moment
linux has little percentage on the desktop market.


I am writing this for sole reason that silence of a satisfied linux user 
should not be taken as absence of one.


I am a happy arch and KDE user and use windows XP only as much forced by the 
work. I don't know about vista. Rarely seen it in action. These are my 
opinions and not conclusions. Just adding a data point here.


- KDE is hugely productive. Multiple desktop(it already had for ages but 
mentioned for comparison with XP), plethora of applets(plasma widgets lately), 
kopete, kmail, akregator, knews, kate, konsole, k3b  and konqueror. It is so 
much ahead of windows that its not even the same race. Not to mention, each of 
these apps have innovation on its own that are hard to rival.


- I was happy with KDE 3.5.x(on slack and arch) and upgraded to KDE4 just 
along the way. KDE4.1/4.2 were not upto the par but KDE4.3 is on par with 
KDE3.5.x for me.


- I don't need any eye-candy on KDE and I have turned it off. Even though I 
have functioning nvidia drivers, I want my desktop fast, not animating and I 
am happy with that speed. Frankly I have not found any plasma widget worth 
keeping on desktop(I don't get to see the desktop anyways. Its always covered 
with some app). But I am a konsole geek. I could go alone with kate/konsole 
except email/IM/webbrowsing needs.


- I couldn't change to GNOME. I hate it. File open dialog is lame compared to 
KDE. I don't know what virtues peole see in it. That is only one reason 
another is button order(third is GTK. C for desktop? Not for me and no mono 
please.). I could stand a half working KDE but not GNOME.


- To people advocating lightweight options, Don't you lose what *KDE* offers? 
Instead of putting together a solution yourself, isn't it much better to use a 
solution that is put together already? Use xfce, throw in firefox and 
openoffice and its hardly any different from KDE+openoffice. Throw in 
thunderbird and pidgin and one begins to wonder whats the point? Is the 
dekstop really that lean now? Besides, throw in one KDE app. because its 
irresistible(kmail, kopete, k3b?) and again, one might as well run KDE.


- Huge win for KDE is consistency. Whatever speed KDE desktop loads today, it 
will load with same speed 3 months down the line and 3 years down the line(I 
can attest that. My home directory has remains of mandrake 7 till date. 
Upgraded and moved from machine to machine). Windows will not.


- I don't like nepomuk/strigi/akonadi and its off on my desktop. Thats more to 
do with hatred of mysql than these technologies itself. I won't let my desktop 
depend on mysql. Period. Come postgresql support and I will give it a go. 
Besides I don't have time to tag 10s of thousand of photos that I already have 
and every download from digital camera is at least 150 photos. 

- on point of desktop war, KDE is not fighting with windows but windows 
ecosystem. What does vanilla windows offer compared to KDE anyways? freecell 
and solitaire? Where is google messenger? where is an up to date browser? 
where is yahoo messenger? where is a good console? where are tons of 
utilities? Again, KDE is not fighting with windows. Its fighting with an echo-

system.

- for browser, I dabbled with lot of them and here is simple conclusion. The 
web is too fluid. There is no single app that can render it well, now and in 
future. And the whole web2.0 is a  non-sense, at least functionally. So I have 
konqueror for regular browsing(no serious site breaks in it for me.) and 
firefox for occasions when its needed. Usually if it does not render well in 
konqueror, I bypass the site and not the browser.


- use windows and you have to format/reinstall to upgrade. You realize how 
much productivity hit that is? It is impossible to get back all the small 
tweaks that one has accumulated over the period of time. Besides isn't that 
like last century? With arch we upgrade every month, if not more and don't 
have any problems.


I am happy with linux desktop for long time, since 2001 and haven't had 
windows since then. The war is over. Neo won :)




I have to agree. The time using Debian and Arch was and is a pleasure 
for me. At this point huge thanks 

Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Aaron Griffin
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 9:01 AM,  hollun...@gmx.at wrote:
 Conclusion:
 Yeah, great, install xorg for a minimal graphical desktop, what you get
 is console-kit, for a minor feature in a monster DE.
 When will Desktop people start to see that they are being intrusive?
 They live in their own small bubble called GNOME or KDE and can't ever
 imagine anyone not wanting to use this.
 Sorry for this slightly off topic rant, but it annoys me on a regular
 basis when I see applications depend on gnome or kde, mostly for some
 stupid reason called 'integration' which really isn't of much use in
 the specific DE they integrate with and a hindrance to everyone who's
 not running exactly that DE.

 So please, next time you call something integration, think beyond the
 bubble. In our little Linux world with limited developer time we need
 real integration, real solutions and still
 freedom of choice.

You read my mind. I was debating adding a little rant here about the
necessity of hal, consolekit, policykit, devicekit,
whatever-the-hellkit to do the stupidest things. It's real
counter-intuitive. And don't even get me started about linux audio -
apparently the core market for linux audio developers are people doing
live, realtime, studio recordings with a line-in jack on a laptop[1] -
not the people who just want their machine to beep at them.

I absolutely positively hate that all this shit is getting integrated
into the lower level portions of the operating environment. The
xorg/hal coupling is gross and disgusting if you don't want or need
hal. Soon enough, I'll bet udev and devicekit are going to require
each other. When this starts to happen, it's time to stop using this
crap

1: Paraphrasing cactus here


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread David Rosenstrauch

On 10/26/2009 06:57 AM, RedShift wrote:
I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very 
sluggish
and incomplete. I can't enable the desktop effects because that makes 
things
even slower. I'm doing this on a fairly decent setup, an AMD Sempron 2 
Ghz with
an nVidia FX5500. My laptop suffers from this sluggishness as well. On 
top of
that, lots of things annoy me in KDE 4.3, see the end of this post for 
my top

annoyances. Yesterday I had to reboot to my Windows XP installation on this
computer and I was shocked when I arrived in XP's userland. Everything was
ridiculously fast. When returning to my linux desktop everything felt 
even more
sluggish. That's when I decided to go back to KDE 3.5. I restored my old 
KDE 3.5

profile, installed the necessary packages and logged back in. WOF,
everything is fast again. Opening new windows is instantaneous, hell even
bringing up context menus is faster.


I'm with you about hating KDE4.  I was dragged kicking and screaming 
into using KDE4, since no one supports KDE3 anymore.  (Even the kdemod3 
packages are in limbo - although you can install the last built 
packages, the packages can no longer be built without error.)


After finally, grudgingly upgrading to KDE4(.3) and kicking it around 
for about a month I came to the conclusion that I was extremely 
disappointed:


* Performance, as you noted, sucks.
* Loads of cool little features that I either relied upon heavily or 
liked a lot are gone.  And although I've filed bug reports asking to 
bring them back, no KDE dev has even responded to them.
* And of all the cool new features they've added, I don't use a single 
one of them.


Finally this past Friday I gave up.  After an intense 5 year love affair 
with KDE, I switched over my desktop to XFCE.  It's lightweight, it's 
fast, it looks slick, things work, and all the little nice features I 
loved in KDE3 are there.


As I said in an earlier email, I've come to the conclusion that KDE has 
jumped the shark.


Maybe try giving XFCE a go?

HTH,

DR


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread hollunder
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 10:49:01 -0500
Aaron Griffin aaronmgrif...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 9:01 AM,  hollun...@gmx.at wrote:
  Am I happy to hear that.
  I say this because I'm under the impression that people see only two
  kinds of linux uses:
  1) The traditional server
  2) The Desktop
 
  You can, at this time, still do both, but everything in between is
  getting more and more difficult.
 
  The problem is that the Desktop Environments, GNOME and KDE, in
  their quest for integrated desktop experience push more and more
  stuff that's really only useful to those DEs deeper and deeper into
  the system.
  If you as a user need or want it or not, you get it.
 
 
  I'd like to provide an example.
  I'm using an oldish PC and like to pick the apps I use myself,
  therefor the DE's so-called 'integration' is just unnecessary and
  rather hindering in the background. I also like configuration. Those
  are the main reasons I don't use DEs.
 
  Recently I tried to figure out what console-kit is actually good
  for. Here's an excerpt of the manual that I especially like:
  Defining the Problem
  To be written.
  http://www.freedesktop.org/software/ConsoleKit/doc/ConsoleKit.html#id312255
 
  I figured out that it's only useful for something called 'fast user
  switching', something I definitely don't need.
  When trying to remove it I figured that HAL requires it.
  HAL also requires something called policy-kit, yet another thing I
  don't know what it does.
  I recompiled HAL without either, and the system still works as
  before.
 
  Somewhere during the research I figured that HAL is supposed to be
  replaced by something called device-kit. HAL isn't really needed
  says the author in an email, pretty much all the work is done by
  udev etc.. So I figured, hey, why not just remove HAL, this way the
  kits won't come back with the next update, and all I use HAL for is
  mounting usb drives, something that can be done with udev rules as
  well.
 
  Well, trying to do this I found five apps requiring it, the most
  surprising: xorg-server
 
  Conclusion:
  Yeah, great, install xorg for a minimal graphical desktop, what you
  get is console-kit, for a minor feature in a monster DE.
  When will Desktop people start to see that they are being
  intrusive? They live in their own small bubble called GNOME or KDE
  and can't ever imagine anyone not wanting to use this.
  Sorry for this slightly off topic rant, but it annoys me on a
  regular basis when I see applications depend on gnome or kde,
  mostly for some stupid reason called 'integration' which really
  isn't of much use in the specific DE they integrate with and a
  hindrance to everyone who's not running exactly that DE.
 
  So please, next time you call something integration, think beyond
  the bubble. In our little Linux world with limited developer time
  we need real integration, real solutions and still
  freedom of choice.
 
 Just a personal reply to say that I loved this email. I've been so
 enraged with this recently. I actually get _angry_ about the xorg hal
 integration (I have never used hal) - as it means that BY DEFAULT
 starting xorg fails because it has no keyboard or mouse; you can,
 thankfully, shut off the hal integration with a Option
 AutoAddDevices False in the ServerFlags section of xorg.conf. But
 still, what the fuck? For all the history of xorg, it has correctly
 done the basics of detection a ordinary mouse and keyboard. But not
 any longer. For what reason? I HAVE NO FUCKING IDEA!
 
 Thanks for the email. It makes me feel like I'm not alone in my
 absolute hatred for the direction these things are going.

Thanks for your reply Arvid and Aaron.
I'm sure there are a lot more people who feel this way,
your replies make me a bit more confident that this situation can be
changed.

Maybe something can be done on Arch to work against this development?
The closer to the core a package is the more careful we have to be with
dependencies, I think. It's easy to replace a text editor, impossible
to replace xorg, etc..

The other thing I can think of is talking to upstream. Maybe they're
not that aware of this issue and think along the lines of: Everyone
has HAL installed anyway, it's no problem if we
use it to do xyz.

Philipp


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Piyush P Kurur
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 10:40:44AM -0500, Aaron Griffin wrote:
 On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 9:01 AM,  hollun...@gmx.at wrote:

[snip]

 
  So please, next time you call something integration, think beyond the
  bubble. In our little Linux world with limited developer time we need
  real integration, real solutions and still
  freedom of choice.
 
 You read my mind.

Mine too. I got burnt when after one of the xorg updates few months
ago, the mouse and keyboard stopped working. The culprit, xorg
unloading the mouse and keyboard drivers and waiting for hal to send
some signals to load the appropriate drivers. This I think was
ridiculous. Many a time I use X without any windomanager whatsoever
mainly for display boards and such stuff. I dont need any PnP here.



Regards

ppk




Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Sven-Hendrik Haase
On 26.10.2009 18:07, Piyush P Kurur wrote:
 On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 10:40:44AM -0500, Aaron Griffin wrote:
   
 On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 9:01 AM,  hollun...@gmx.at wrote:
 

 [snip]

   
 So please, next time you call something integration, think beyond the
 bubble. In our little Linux world with limited developer time we need
 real integration, real solutions and still
 freedom of choice.
   
 You read my mind.
 

 Mine too. I got burnt when after one of the xorg updates few months
 ago, the mouse and keyboard stopped working. The culprit, xorg
 unloading the mouse and keyboard drivers and waiting for hal to send
 some signals to load the appropriate drivers. This I think was
 ridiculous. Many a time I use X without any windomanager whatsoever
 mainly for display boards and such stuff. I dont need any PnP here.



 Regards

 ppk



   

In this particular case though, you can just disable hotplugging (see
http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xorg_input_hotplugging). Please
realize that PnP can be a very nice feature for many users. HAL is
getting deprecated as has already been stated in this thread. Udev is
slowly taking over more and more tasks from HAL and at some point, HAL
will only be a wrapper for Udev calls for applications that still use
the old HAL calls. At least so I hope.

-- Sven-Hendrik


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread David C. Rankin
On Monday 26 October 2009 05:57:59 am RedShift wrote:
 This thread will probably erupt in a massive flamewar, yet I decided to
  post my story anyway. I am talking about the desktop experience in
  general, not the technical details behind it. Keep that in mind.
 

Done, the thread is fair topic for discourse among intelligent minds.

 
 I've been working these past few months with KDE 4.3 and it feels very
  sluggish and incomplete.

There is no question about it. KDE4 is just slow compared kde3, or the ms 
desktops. My vista installs are more responsive. However, I don't think kde4 
will remain like this. I think the response problem is due to remaining bugs 
in the API that should go away as kde4 matures. I think the biggest problem 
that kde4 will have to overcome is the stain on kde's reputation caused when a 
few major distros pushed kde4 out the door as a New Desktop when it was 
barely beta (kde 4.04 was released by SuSE as the desktop for 11.0 in June 
2008) kde4.04 as a desktop -- gimme a break!

But at 4.3.2, kde4 is getting there and I use it every day. The only time I 
boot another desktop is to work in a lightweight desktop (openbox, lxde, 
icewm, enlightenment) All provide a great desktop experience, but none compare 
to the completeness of tools provided natively in kde4. The only time I boot 
vista is to let updates run once monthly :)

I didn't do windows 7 beta, so I can't comment there, but I have used every 
windows since windows 286 (what '88? when I moved from DOS 4.04) and all were 
usable.

I agree with much you have to say, but I have watched kde4 get better and 
better so I'm optimistic at this point that it will fulfill its promise, but I 
agree, it's not close to doing so yet.

As for my list of kde4 annoyances (bugs) see:

http://www.3111skyline.com/download/bugs/kde4/rankin-bug-list-20091026.pdf

that's all 154 of them. (Note there are about 10 kde3 bugs in there, but I 
wasn't going to take the time to parse them out...)

-- 
David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
Rankin Law Firm, PLLC
510 Ochiltree Street
Nacogdoches, Texas 75961
Telephone: (936) 715-9333
Facsimile: (936) 715-9339
www.rankinlawfirm.com


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Norbert Zeh
I just had a look at the Windows 7 features and didn't see anything that
suggests the Linux world has lost the UI war.  It is probably true that
the eye candy looks more polished on OS X/Vista/7 than on anything the
Linux world has to offer.  (In fact, this is what lured me into the Mac
world for a while.)  That also shouldn't be surprising because this is
how commercial OS producers lure the gullible to buy their product.  For
example, it seems cool that I can wiggle a window in Windows 7 to hide
all the others or that I can drag a window to the edge to make it use up
half the screen.  But the reality of efficient computer use looks
different.  I can't see a good use for the first feature in every-day
use, and if I want windows side by side, chances are I don't want an
even split and I want more than two windows tiled on my screen.  What
I'm looking for in my desktop environment isn't eye candy but
efficiency.  Above all, this means that I want to be able to customize
my desktop for a workflow that suits me.  In more concrete terms, the
three major things I appreciate in my linux desktop and which Windows
cannot give me are:

* Tiling window management and customized keyboard shortcuts for pretty
  much everything I can dream of.  I don't want to touch the mouse
  unless I deal with a graphics program.

* Command line for almost everything.  Nobody can convince me that cp
  fileA dirB/dirC/dirD is less efficient than opening dirB/dirC/dirD in
  an explorer window and dragging fileA there.

* Scripting for all the recurring tasks.  This is extremely easy using
  shell scripts/perl/ruby/python/...  I could try that under Windows,
  too, but the DOS command prompt simply feels like something that was
  never really meant to be used.

I realize that this will not convince the computer-illiterate average
user to prefer linux over windows, but I sure am glad that Linux gives
me the choice to use an eye-candy-free desktop that works the way I
think a computer should work, on modest hardware.

I know that this is easy to be interpreted as another windows-vs-linux
flame, and I admit that I am certainly very biased on this subject.
However, it simply irks me that almost every time Apple/Microsoft come
out with the newest eye candy, we weep that we don't have it instead of
focusing on the advantages our linux boxes give us.

Cheers,
Norbert


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Piyush P Kurur
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 06:09:49PM +0100, Sven-Hendrik Haase wrote:
 On 26.10.2009 18:07, Piyush P Kurur wrote:
  On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 10:40:44AM -0500, Aaron Griffin wrote:

 
 In this particular case though, you can just disable hotplugging (see
 http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xorg_input_hotplugging). Please
 realize that PnP can be a very nice feature for many users.


I have read the wiki and actually changed the xorg.conf to have the
AutoAddDevice off.  I am not against PnP, it helps. But I think this
is not the business of xorg. It should be the business of KDE/GNOME or
what not (although I am not sure whether the window manager has
control over such issues). 

One of the (if not the) reason I like Arch and BSDs over say Debian is
the simplicity. The Arch developers have really done a great job
here. I dont want a X server that is overly complicated and kills the
joy of Arch.

Regards

ppk


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Arvid Picciani

Aaron Griffin wrote:

 You read my mind. I was debating adding a little rant here about the
 necessity of hal, consolekit, policykit, devicekit,
 whatever-the-hellkit to do the stupidest things. It's real
 counter-intuitive. And don't even get me started about linux audio -
 apparently the core market for linux audio developers are people doing
 live, realtime, studio recordings with a line-in jack on a laptop[1] -
 not the people who just want their machine to beep at them.



I absolutely positively hate that all this shit is getting integrated
into the lower level portions of the operating environment. The
xorg/hal coupling is gross and disgusting if you don't want or need
hal. Soon enough, I'll bet udev and devicekit are going to require
each other. When this starts to happen, it's time to stop using this
crap




cat  /var/abs/extra/xorg-server/PKGBUILD
8--
  --enable-config-hal \
  --enable-config-dbus \
--8


cat /var/abs/extra/qt/PKGBUILD
8--
patch -p1 -i $srcdir/kde-qt-${_kdeqtver}.patch || return 1
--8


cat /var/abs/extra/cups/PKGBUILD
8--
 --enable-dbus
--8



It's not like anyone but you is forcing those upon us, Aaron.






--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread David Rosenstrauch

On 10/26/2009 01:30 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:
I think the biggest problem 
that kde4 will have to overcome is the stain on kde's reputation caused when a 
few major distros pushed kde4 out the door as a New Desktop when it was 
barely beta (kde 4.04 was released by SuSE as the desktop for 11.0 in June 
2008) kde4.04 as a desktop -- gimme a break!


... which was caused by the KDE devs' bad decision to release it as 4.0, 
which set everyone's expectations that it was production-ready software. 
 Had they labeled the whole 4.0 series (and possibly even the 4.1's) as 
beta software, that wouldn't have happened.


DR


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread JM
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 3:01 PM,  hollun...@gmx.at wrote:
[snip]
 When will Desktop people start to see that they are being intrusive?
 They live in their own small bubble called GNOME or KDE and can't ever
 imagine anyone not wanting to use this.
 Sorry for this slightly off topic rant, but it annoys me on a regular
 basis when I see applications depend on gnome or kde, mostly for some
 stupid reason called 'integration' which really isn't of much use in
 the specific DE they integrate with and a hindrance to everyone who's
 not running exactly that DE.

Being a Xfce user I wholeheartedly agree. I left Xubuntu for Arch a
few years ago looking for minimal dependencies on applications and a
way to recompile offending applications if needed. I have found what I
needed.

Unfortunately, fewer and fewer applications are desktop-agnostic
these days. To install a gtk2 application I am usually asked to
download half of GNOME or at least libgnomeui and gconf. Gconf is my
personal favourite. Xfce already uses xfconf (btw I love its
description in the repository:xfconf.. thingie -- looks like not
only I am confused), why am I supposed to use two different
configuration databases? Why can't people agree on one? Why not just
save configuration in plain files, it has worked before...

I have been filing feature requests on bugtrackers for alternative
configuration systems, maintaining biased AUR packages and  bugging
Arch devs about sudden additions of dependencies. But I feel I am
losing. We are destined to live in a convoluted mass of redundant
dependencies.

Regards,
JM


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Felipe Tanus
I also had a crysis some time ago about how windows can match linux.
But it's just use windows for 3 months or so, and suddenly I change my
opinion once again :)


2009/10/26 David Rosenstrauch dar...@darose.net:
 On 10/26/2009 01:30 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:

 I think the biggest problem that kde4 will have to overcome is the stain
 on kde's reputation caused when a few major distros pushed kde4 out the door
 as a New Desktop when it was barely beta (kde 4.04 was released by SuSE as
 the desktop for 11.0 in June 2008) kde4.04 as a desktop -- gimme a break!

 ... which was caused by the KDE devs' bad decision to release it as 4.0,
 which set everyone's expectations that it was production-ready software.
  Had they labeled the whole 4.0 series (and possibly even the 4.1's) as beta
 software, that wouldn't have happened.

 DR




-- 
Felipe de Oliveira Tanus
E-mail: fota...@gmail.com
Blog: http://www.itlife.com.br
Site: http://www.inf.ufrgs.br/~fotanus/
-
All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us. - Gandalf


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Dario
Hi!

In data lunedì 26 ottobre 2009 18:30:25, David C. Rankin ha scritto:
 I didn't do windows 7 beta, so I can't comment there, but I have used every
 windows since windows 286 (what '88? when I moved from DOS 4.04) and all
  were usable.

Well, when I stepped from dos 6.22 to Windows 95 on my 486, the latter was 
really slow and bloated... This was the same reason that prevented me from 
switching windows 98 with XP, some years later, and made me jump the 
barricade. Surely I never had an up-to-date machine, nor I have now, still KDE 
runs fine even if not excellent. But I get a good feel of speed with kde apps 
and fluxbox.

ciao!

Dario
Chiacchiera con i tuoi amici in tempo reale!
 http://it.yahoo.com/mail_it/foot/*http://it.messenger.yahoo.com


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread Heiko Baums
Am Mon, 26 Oct 2009 19:58:49 +0100
schrieb hollun...@gmx.at:

  Unfortunately, fewer and fewer applications are desktop-agnostic
  these days. To install a gtk2 application I am usually asked to
  download half of GNOME or at least libgnomeui and gconf. Gconf is my
  personal favourite. Xfce already uses xfconf (btw I love its
  description in the repository:xfconf.. thingie -- looks like not
  only I am confused), why am I supposed to use two different
  configuration databases? Why can't people agree on one? Why not just
  save configuration in plain files, it has worked before...

 Well, I guess they try to 'integrate' again, all config in one place,
 but again only for their bubble.

Isn't there already an OS with such a terrible, bloated and cryptical
all config in one place database called registry?

And wasn't there a principle in Unix/Linux: Everything is a file.?

Both were two of many reasons why I completely switched from Windows to
Linux years ago.

I really don't understand why now also on Linux configs have to be
saved in such gconf (still text files) or even worse sqlite databases,
which make those software nearly unmaintainable and slow. Why not just
stay with the good old text files which can simply be edited with a
console text editor?

I, too, don't like those dbus, hal, console-kit stuff. I even don't
like udev with its many, quite complicated udev rules. In the past I
could simply create a device node for a device and it worked and I and
the system knew how to access a specific hardware. I of course see that
udev has some advantages but the way it is designed makes the system
(the device naming) pretty inconsistent. I don't see the advantages of
hal and console-kit - I even don't know what they are for. Usually
hardware can easily accessed by the device files in /dev, infos about
the hardware can be obtained by lspci and lsusb, through /proc etc..
What is console-kit for? I usually have a console and can login without
such an additional daemon which in my opinion only takes system
ressources. Not so good on slow computers and also not the best on fast
computers.

But regarding the KDE/Gnome dependencies there are some applications
which don't use these libraries and which are built against pure Qt or
GTK. See e.g. the Xfce and LXDE applications. They are unfortunately
not yet perfect but I have the impression that there will be more and
more such software like Xfburn, Thunar, Mousepad etc. and that those
developers are open-minded for feature requests. So I guess there's a
little hope.

Heiko


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread hollunder
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 22:39:54 +0100
Heiko Baums li...@baums-on-web.de wrote:

 Am Mon, 26 Oct 2009 19:58:49 +0100
 schrieb hollun...@gmx.at:
 
   Unfortunately, fewer and fewer applications are desktop-agnostic
   these days. To install a gtk2 application I am usually asked to
   download half of GNOME or at least libgnomeui and gconf. Gconf is
   my personal favourite. Xfce already uses xfconf (btw I love its
   description in the repository:xfconf.. thingie -- looks like not
   only I am confused), why am I supposed to use two different
   configuration databases? Why can't people agree on one? Why not
   just save configuration in plain files, it has worked before...
 
  Well, I guess they try to 'integrate' again, all config in one
  place, but again only for their bubble.
 
 Isn't there already an OS with such a terrible, bloated and cryptical
 all config in one place database called registry?
 
 And wasn't there a principle in Unix/Linux: Everything is a file.?
 
 Both were two of many reasons why I completely switched from Windows
 to Linux years ago.
 
 I really don't understand why now also on Linux configs have to be
 saved in such gconf (still text files) or even worse sqlite databases,
 which make those software nearly unmaintainable and slow. Why not just
 stay with the good old text files which can simply be edited with a
 console text editor?

I think those centralised systems have some benefits over configuration
files spread over the whole system, but the way it is now it is neither.
You still have lots of programs that use config textfiles somewhere and
in addition multiple centralised configs for only a bunch of
applications.


 I, too, don't like those dbus, hal, console-kit stuff. I even don't
 like udev with its many, quite complicated udev rules. In the past I
 could simply create a device node for a device and it worked and I and
 the system knew how to access a specific hardware. I of course see
 that udev has some advantages but the way it is designed makes the
 system (the device naming) pretty inconsistent. I don't see the
 advantages of hal and console-kit - I even don't know what they are
 for. Usually hardware can easily accessed by the device files
 in /dev, infos about the hardware can be obtained by lspci and lsusb,
 through /proc etc.. What is console-kit for? I usually have a console
 and can login without such an additional daemon which in my opinion
 only takes system ressources. Not so good on slow computers and also
 not the best on fast computers.
 
 But regarding the KDE/Gnome dependencies there are some applications
 which don't use these libraries and which are built against pure Qt or
 GTK. See e.g. the Xfce and LXDE applications. They are unfortunately
 not yet perfect but I have the impression that there will be more and
 more such software like Xfburn, Thunar, Mousepad etc. and that those
 developers are open-minded for feature requests. So I guess there's a
 little hope.
 
 Heiko

I do use some xfce applications, namely thunar and terminal. And guess
what, thunar depends on hal, as well as exo (a library used in many
xfce applications) :(
Well, I'd survive it if I had to switch to something else, but this
would only win the battle, not the war.


Re: [arch-general] We have lost the desktop war. The reason? Windows 7.

2009-10-26 Thread dennisjperkins

 Well, I guess they try to 'integrate' again, all config in one place, 
 but again only for their bubble. 

Isn't there already an OS with such a terrible, bloated and cryptical 
all config in one place database called registry? 

And wasn't there a principle in Unix/Linux: Everything is a file.? 

Both were two of many reasons why I completely switched from Windows to 
Linux years ago. 

I really don't understand why now also on Linux configs have to be 
saved in such gconf (still text files) or even worse sqlite databases, 
which make those software nearly unmaintainable and slow. Why not just 
stay with the good old text files which can simply be edited with a 
console text editor? 


GConf still uses text files. Unfortunately, they are in XML. On the other hand, 
you can use gconf-editor to change settings via scripts without doing checks to 
make sure you are changing the right thing. Too bad GNOME programs don't access 
GConf to give you access to all of the settings, so you don't need to use GConf 
directly. Hmm. The glass is half full or half empty. 


I, too, don't like those dbus, hal, console-kit stuff. I even don't 
like udev with its many, quite complicated udev rules. In the past I 
could simply create a device node for a device and it worked and I and 
the system knew how to access a specific hardware. I of course see that 
udev has some advantages but the way it is designed makes the system 
(the device naming) pretty inconsistent. I don't see the advantages of 
hal and console-kit - I even don't know what they are for. Usually 
hardware can easily accessed by the device files in /dev, infos about 
the hardware can be obtained by lspci and lsusb, through /proc etc.. 
What is console-kit for? I usually have a console and can login without 
such an additional daemon which in my opinion only takes system 
ressources. Not so good on slow computers and also not the best on fast 
computers. 


I like HAL and Dbus, although I heard that HAL will disappear. I like having my 
thumb drive automatically mounted when I stick it in or my camera being 
recognized. Or X.org configuring itself automatically without my intervention 
(at least when it works). On the other hand, I would prefer that Dbus not have 
any DE dependencies like GNOME. It should be treated like a low-level interface 
only. I can live with glib dependencies because it is basically a set of useful 
tools like lists, strings, etc., for C.