King InuYasha wrote: > The only time KDE was a first class citizen on Red Hat/Fedora Linux was > RHL 8.0 to 9. Well, those were the days where RH tried to "unify" the desktop and to ship mixed GNOME and KDE applications, with the infamous Bluecurve theme. This was highly controversial: some people loved it, some liked parts of it, but many others hated it. I like the Bluecurve theme that came out of this initiative because of the consistency it brings among apps, and in fact I still use it, but many people hated it. But the drawback of that approach was that the KDE which was shipped wasn't a pure KDE, it used some GTK+/GNOME apps, nor was the GNOME which was shipped a pure GNOME (the idea was to make "best of breed" apps the default in both desktops, no matter what they used; of course, there was strong bias towards GNOME apps even back then, only a few KDE apps made the cut, like K3b) and the default look&feel was also a mix of both. This strategy has been abandoned since, and I think most people don't miss it. Also because both GNOME and KDE are more complete now, so shipping a mix of both to get the best apps isn't really necessary anymore, and integration between applications has improved, so you get more value out of the second best app if it's integrated into your desktop than out of the best app if it isn't. Now of course, specialized apps will often be available only in one version and you'll use them no matter what toolkit they use, but for the default apps, you really want apps written for your desktop in most cases. Kevin Kofler -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list