Dotan Cohen posted on Thu, 24 Dec 2009 00:23:52 +0200 as excerpted: > Is there any way to run KDE3 applets as well? Specifically missing in > KDE4 are KCharSelect, Keyboard Status, and System Monitor. Thanks! kde 4.3.4 definitely has kcharselect, as I have it installed. There's a plasmoid for it as well. Keyboard status... isn't that part of the i18n/ l10n stuff? I don't have that installed as I don't need it (English- only, unfortunately, at least to the level I'd type with it or try to read it), but I think I recall playing with it in kde3. system monitor is unfortunately a hopeless generic mess now, since there's probably dozens of "system monitor"s, either included in kde as it ships or on kdelook. If you're talking about "the application formerly known as kcontrol" and its kde3/kicker applet, the application still exists (as generic system monitor) but is, or was last I checked, incredibly buggy in terms of routine use (it saves its settings, then restores them, but promptly overwrites that saved config with its own as it apparently thinks it knows better), and there's no plasmoid for it. As I've said elsewhere, grab yasp-scripted from kde-look, and reconfigure the scripts for your own use as necessary. /That/ actually works, tho you'll likely need to be a bit sparing in what you monitor, as tens of bash scripts running once a second (or even every two or five seconds) isn't exactly the most efficient way to monitor system resources. But it works reasonably well on this dual-dual-core with a whole bunch of stuff graphed, once I reduced most of it to every two seconds, at least, and a rather more modest set of graphs would work well enough on a dual-core or even single-core, if modest enough, without taking /too/ much CPU time. (I guess I'll have a chance to test that out, shortly, as I just finished the image for my netbook. All I have to do now is the work on the machine itself -- I built the image in a chroot on my big dual-dual-core amd64 machine. For sure tho I don't have the screen real estate there to graph what I do on the big machine, even if I wanted to and the CPU would handle it, so it /has/ to be a more modest setup, there.) Alternatively, do the superkaramba thing. yasp-scripted is basically a simpler version of it, and was easier to wrap my head around while I was still trying to cope with all the other issues related to upgrading from kde3. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ 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.