Goodday, This topic is somewhere between devel and users, but since I'm not a developer myself, and the users list is easier accessible, I'll just post it here. I have been looking into the possibilities to access remote filesystems, especcially (s)ftp and samba. I see two possibilities, either you want to access small files on the remote fs, or you want to access large ones. In the first case, there's really not a problem using kioslaves, but in the second one this is often no good, since the files are being transferred as a whole in the background. This means movie streaming is not possible, and the client should have plenty free space. The alternative to kioslaves is simple mounting by the kernel. In the case of smb, this would be done by smbmount, in the case of (s)ftp, we would probally want a solution in userspace, like fuse(.sourceforge.net). Being able to just pass it on to the kernel would also allow users to mount iso-images, which is just too much hassle to process with some app. When looking in some discussions about this, I actually saw smb used to be handled this way (KDE2)! but then it had some disadvantages, so it became just a normal kioslave. While browsing into the source of the kio_smb I saw there are still references to smbmount! It's just not being used it seems, even though as far as I can see it's still linked into the kio_smb.so. I realize this couldn't work the same on all platforms, it seems FreeBSD doesn't have the possibility to mount ftp shares for instance. However, on platforms where possibilities like these are available, it seems like a good idea. What do other users, and the developers think of this? do we want this in KDE4? greetings, Joost Baas ___________________________________________________ . Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.