>> The Good > Modularity, flexibility, Do you mean plasmoids? Other than that I do not see KDE as very modular, though you are right about the flexibility as the Netbook release shows. > web integration on the desktop, kio (eg.: you can > access an FTP server to store images from almost any KDE app). > Right! Thanks! > Nokia support: qt, Maemo, KOffice for their mobile phones. > That would be flexibility, no? >> The Bad > We haven't been able to attract more developers/companies :( > > Companies don't support KDE as much as GNOME. At least, from a marketing point > of view is what it looks like (Red Hat, Canonical, Novell, ...). > > Koffice has very interesting innovations ... but OOo attracts more > attention/developers/customers (even though OOo has a small community of > developers). > That might be bad for KDE, but I mean to ask what would be bad for a potential user. >> The Broken > Since KDE SC 4.3 I've had very few issues on Arch Linux. KDE SC 4.2 was > lacking some features, but I didn't have issues either. And yes, I use KDE > _ALL_ the time @work and @home ;) Main issues are with Konqueror web browsing: > Flash :( > Thanks, I will test Flash on my Kubuntu install. I'm on KDE 4.4.2 but I still have some "broken" issues. -- Dotan Cohen http://bido.com http://what-is-what.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.