No need to not give in! You can run both versions of KDE on a single machine
by using the very accessible Konstruct application. You can even set it up to
use a different .kde directory as well. To uninstall, all you have to do is
delete the package directory and the source directory.
Message-
From: Antiphon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 03, 2003 4:02 PM
To: debian-kde@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Thinking of trying out the KDE 3.2 CVS packages.
No need to not give in! You can run both versions of KDE on a single machine
by using the very accessible Konstruct
Message-
From: Antiphon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 03, 2003 4:02 PM
To: debian-kde@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Thinking of trying out the KDE 3.2 CVS packages.
No need to not give in! You can run both versions of KDE on a single
machine
by using the very accessible
On Sun 02 Nov 2003 7:07 pm, Antiphon wrote:
Most things are relatively stable though Konqueror will crash occasionally,
esp. on sites with Flash or Java so turn those off if you want stability.
Even though things in general run faster, Orth's debs do not have the
debugging options turned off
After my battle with Aegypten and KMail for getting OpenPGP to just work, I
noticed the KDE 3.2 CVS repository on apt-get.org. KDE 3.2 sounds like it
has lots of nifty new features. The question is whether it's worth the
trouble to try the new packages.
Are they good enough to use for
Most things are relatively stable though Konqueror will crash occasionally,
esp. on sites with Flash or Java so turn those off if you want stability.
Even though things in general run faster, Orth's debs do not have the
debugging options turned off so there will be some slowdown there.
The new
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