On Tuesday 23 December 2008 03:00:53 Sebastian Kügler wrote:
I agree on pretty much all of your points. We've discussed the KRunner
interface some time ago, and I think one of the conclusion was indeed that
we need more space for text (the 10 characters is indeed not enough), and
that we can
Huhu,
On Tuesday 23 December 2008, Aaron J. Seigo wrote:
On Tuesday 23 December 2008, Dominik Haumann wrote:
into my mind are System Status, System Load Watcher, System Load
Viewer, TimeMon, System Essentials, System Usage, ...
System Load Viewer is quite straight forward and says it all
On Friday 26 December 2008, Dominik Haumann wrote:
Huhu,
On Tuesday 23 December 2008, Aaron J. Seigo wrote:
On Tuesday 23 December 2008, Dominik Haumann wrote:
into my mind are System Status, System Load Watcher, System Load
Viewer, TimeMon, System Essentials, System Usage, ...
On Friday 26 December 2008, Aaron J. Seigo wrote:
On Friday 26 December 2008, Dominik Haumann wrote:
Huhu,
On Tuesday 23 December 2008, Aaron J. Seigo wrote:
On Tuesday 23 December 2008, Dominik Haumann wrote:
into my mind are System Status, System Load Watcher, System Load
On Friday 26 December 2008, Dominik Haumann wrote:
So simply using used, cached and buffers should do the trick. I think this
solution is good enough, agreed?
sounds sane to me, yes =)
btw, looks like you might have your first patch coming in soon:
http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=172784
The term Desktop Settings is used in a dialog in the Desktop Theme Details
kcm. I'd like to correct it to say Appearance Settings but wanted to check
if there would be a problem with this since it is after the string freeze.
Thanks for your help,
Andrew (jamboarder) Lake
On Friday 26 December 2008, Jamboarder wrote:
The term Desktop Settings is used in a dialog in the Desktop Theme
Details kcm. I'd like to correct it to say Appearance Settings but
wanted to check if there would be a problem with this since it is after the
string freeze.
if the string doesn't
hi all. I'm set to get the panel spacer to its previous behaviour
when set to auto stretch, that is, to use as much space as possible.
now, the code is simple: it takes the size of the container (if it's
an horizontal panel, it takes the width), then loops through all the
On Friday 26 December 2008, Marcos Dione wrote:
hi all. I'm set to get the panel spacer to its previous behaviour
when set to auto stretch, that is, to use as much space as possible.
this applet is the right code in the wrong place. the panel ought to have an
expander in its layout by