KDE at 30

(kde.org)

86 points | by Kye 2 hours ago ago

14 comments

  • ACS_Solver 43 minutes ago

    One of the most impressive and useful free software projects. My first experience was being totally confused by KDE 1 during my first attempts to use Linux, and I'm writing this from my KDE desktop.

    Other than the really bad KDE 4 release, the project has consistently been great for me. I've submitted a few smaller patches over the years and that experience was also low friction for a project of this size. KDE is highly customizable, full of power user features but also really simple with its current defaults (looks pretty much like Windows) and generally robust.

    Shoutout to some KDE applications like Okular (great document viewer), Kate (solid tech editor), Krusader (double pane file manager) and KolourPaint (a simple image editor even I can use).

    • datakan 8 minutes ago

      I remember when it first came out. Very impressive at the time. I was never a fan though personally, I always hated the look of KDE. I used it recently on CachyOS for fun and it worked great, just not for me visually. I'm glad it exists, I just wish there was something visually appealing with less settings bloat. It feels like going to a diner with 300 items on the menu and they're all sorta half baked.

  • badsectoracula 19 minutes ago

    I don't really use Plasma itself (and soon i wont even be able to if the rumors of them dropping X11 support are to be believed) but i do use various KDE apps, like Krita (which i use for most painting stuff), Kate (my main programming editor, coupled with clangd for C/C++ programming), KolourPaint, Spectacle, Ghostwriter, etc and in general i find KDE/Qt apps to be more to my liking in their UX than anything based on Gtk (or at least Gtk3-or-later, Gtk2 stuff is for the most part fine).

    • datakan 5 minutes ago

      They aren't dropping X11, they are only dropping it in their new login manager. Change the login manager and it will continue to work fine for now.

  • pelagicAustral an hour ago

    I will donate my entire pension if they make it so I can have a Windows 2000 theme that actually works and doesnt require me to hack a dozen files each time they push and update.

    • Gualdrapo an hour ago

      I think you will be able to achieve that when Union is released. I hate SVG theming in Plasma so much that I root for Union to be successful

      • hparadiz 22 minutes ago

        Have an agent do it and have it write out what it did to an md file as guidance for each update. To be fair though if you configure things correctly it should never break. Mine hasn't been broken in years.

  • discreteevent 14 minutes ago

    Quick, clean and easy to use. I've only been using it for a year but I'm definitely not going back.

  • F3nd0 an hour ago

    It's impressive for the project to have come so far. Between the oversimplified, hyper-opinionated GNOME, the rock-solid but dull and minimal XFCE, the nostalgic MATE, and whatever Enlightenment is doing these days, it’s nice to have a continually polished, modern, well-integrated yet customisable experience like KDE, even today. And save for Akonadi (which just never seems to work reliably, rendering software like KMail useless), it’s been a pretty stable one for me, too. Here’s to another 30 years!

    • datakan 4 minutes ago

      My first love was WindowMaker :)

  • tycoon666 23 minutes ago

    KDE beta2 was my first.

  • ChrisArchitect 26 minutes ago

    Talk from Grazer Linuxtage conf earlier this year:

    KDE: 30 years of the Linux desktop

    https://media.ccc.de/v/glt26-691-kde-30-years-of-the-linux-d...

  • iLoveOncall an hour ago

    I feel quite repulsed by the fact that the first thing you see when opening the post is a huge donation card.

    • Kye 42 minutes ago

      I want to see KDE still improving and keeping up in another 30 years. To me it's no different from a telethon for PBS or a poster for Friends of the Library. Intrusive? From a certain point of view, but it pays the bills.