"Boyd Stephen Smith Jr." <bss@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> dixit: > On Tuesday 08 December 2009 04:44:31 spir wrote: > > Dotan Cohen <dotancohen@xxxxxxxxx> dixit: > > > >> That was the whole "KDE thing": customization and > > > >> usability. KDE 4 breaks with that tradition. I know the reasons why. I > > > >> even agree with most of them. > > > > > > > > Could you, or someone else, point to docs on the topic? > > > > For information, I'm a kind of "design guy" and as such *very* and *really* > > interested in any kind of doc exposing reasons behind design choices. For > > instance, I would enjoy to read _why_ kde guys used to think that > > über-customization is a Good Thing -- while indeed other designers think > > the opposite. And I would enjoy to read why, if only, or how much, they > > changed their mind on this topic. > > I don't think older versions on KDE reflected some attitude that uber- > customization is a Good Thing. Rather, it was more like unchecked feature > creep. If someone wanted a configuration option for <whatever> and there > wasn't a technical reason to avoid it, it was added. My question seems difficult to understand. I'm not arguing on one side or the other. I know tons of individual positions on the topic -- and yours are indeed worth beeing taken into account, but there are better places. But that's not what I ask for: I ask for (a) pointer(s) to kde designers' previous and present POVs -- that's all. See Dotan's statement quoted above. I would like to be in a position to say like him "I agree/disagree with <this>."; for this, I need source information about <this>. Denis ________________________________ la vita e estrany http://spir.wikidot.com/ ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.