On Monday, March 07, 2011 11:30:55 PM Duncan did opine: > gene heskett posted on Sun, 06 Mar 2011 17:13:52 -0500 as excerpted: > > Greetings; > > > > pclos called it awesome when it was finished installing 224 packages > > worth of it early this morning. > > > > Uncle, uncle! Uncle!!! I.O.W., I give up. > > > > Where can I find a tut that tells me how to setup a task manager that > > sticks to all of the 10 workspaces I have? Workspaces 2-10 seem to be > > ok, and are all clones. but workspace one has a mind of its own. If I > > add a task manager on workspace 1, then its incomplete, and sitting on > > top of the task manager on all other workspaces. > > Workspace? Do you mean virtual desktop (in the normal X sense, as used > in kde3), or kde4/plasma activity, or...? Maybe you mean both, which > would mean activities in this case, since it's possible (tho not > recommended, the feature was added by popular demand but doesn't really > fit the vision of the plasma devs) to link them, such that every > virtual desktop has its own activity. (The checkbox for that option is > in kcontrol, called system- settings even tho it's mostly user-specific > kde-only settings that have little to do with system global settings, > workspace appearance and behavior, workspace behavior, virtual desktops > applet, desktops tab, different widgets for each desktop checkbox.) > > FWIW, plasma is pretty nice and very fancy, with lots of widgets both > included and on kdelook, to be added if desired. However, it has also > been one of the biggest source of complaints with kde4, for a number of > reasons, including the fact that unlike many other kde components which > were pretty much ported from kde3/qt3, plasma was built from scratch, > and was rather more immature than the rest of kde4 in the early days. > To this day it has a lot of flash and glitz, but at least thru 4.5 (and > apparently with 4.6 for you at least), continued to suffer from major > bugs and instabilities that given its place as the kde4 desktop, have > continued to be a drag on "it-just-works" style usability. > > To get your head around the general ideas, you'll probably want to spend > some time reading userbase (on the kde site) and ASegio's back-blog. > (ASegio is the plasma lead developer.) > > Meanwhile, plasmoids are the individual widgets, each menu, clock, > system tray, task manager, etc. Activities control the desktop but not > the panels, which appear on all desktops. Plasmoids, including the > task manager plasmoid you're apparently having problems with, can be > placed on either the desktop (in a particular activity), or on a panel. > > Based on your description and how plasma is /supposed/ to work, I'm > guessing that you have it set to link virtual desktops with activities > (different widgets for each is checked), and the task managers on the > desktops (thus, in activities), but activity/desktop one doesn't have > one. You then add one there, but to a panel, which because panels > aren't activity controlled but global, now appears in that panel, which > is positioned on top of the task manager plasmoid in the activity (on > the desktop) in all the other workspaces. > > Now, I don't personally use a task manager plasmoid here, preferring to > use the grid effect (desktop effects kcontrol applet, middle tab), > alt-tab (which I have set to the flip effect), or the cube effect, for > switching desktops (I have only a single activity setup... so it > appears on all desktops) or windows, depending on my mood (tho I > usually use alt-tab). As a result, I don't have a lot of specific > experience with the task manager plasmoid, since I removed it pretty > fast. However, some plasmoids behave differently on the desktop (in an > activity) then they do in a panel, so that might be what you're > referring to as "incomplete". Also, from what I've read, there's quite > some configuration possible with the task manager plasmoid, and it's > possible the one you're adding is setup differently by default, only > showing what's on that virtual desktop, for instance, or grouping > windows, so it appears incomplete, but it's only because it's not > configured the same as the other, or as I said, possibly because you're > comparing the task managers on the desktop to one in a panel. > > > And 2, I have no volume control (its wide, ear blasting, open) > > regardless of what I assign the master volume to in kmix? The audio > > system (no pulse in pclos) also complains about missing audio devices > > as if something else has grabbed the important ones. I does this as > > soon as I'm logged in, and long before it has applied whatever screen > > settings it may, or may not have remembered. I've set video stuff > > up 3 times so far, but all it seems to remember is some defaults that > > are far from complete. > > FWIW, kde4 uses phonon as its audio system. phonon in turn uses one of > several possible backends. The original backend was the xine backend, > phonon-xine, and it remains the default in many distributions, despite > the fact that the phonon devs ran into technical issues with it and now > consider it deprecated. > > The one that seems to be getting the most work and is recommended going > forward is the vlc backend, phonon-vlc. There's also the gstreamer > backend, phonon-gstreamer, which may well work best with distributions > that default to gnome, since that's a gnome-related technology. > > FWIW, based both on my experience and that of someone else who posted > here with similar "disappearing device" issues, I recommend that you > try phonon-vlc. If you have vlc already installed, the phonon-vlc > backend shouldn't even pull a lot of additional dependencies, tho it > might if you don't have vlc installed yet. But for both me and the > other guy who I recommended try it, the vlc backend cured the problems. > It would seem that the "disappearing device" issue is a common one on > phonon-xine, but I've never seen a report of it on phonon-vlc. YMMV of > course, but that's what worked for both me and the other person that > posted with the problem. > > > Obviously I am not doing something right, so where is the tutorial, > > one that assumes you are starting from a blank screen except for the > > cashew in the upper right corner. Or even without that if possible. > > I don't believe there's any that start that bare, in part because > plasma- desktop itself doesn't start that bare by default. I seem to have managed to at least get a start on it, and found why it wasn't restoring on a reboot, it was set to go back to the defaults. So I now have a background image, most of which are duplicates, and a cashew on all screens now. It was a matter of unchecking, applying, and rechecking and re-applying in several places. > FWIW, it's possible that's why you didn't get any replies before this... > what you were asking just seemed overwhelming. Sorry, there was so much mucked up, I was overwhelmed myself. If there is only one thing wrong, its a lot easier to try & fix that than when there are 4 or 5 things wrong, and a reboot throws 3 hours work looking for and trying to set stuff, away. Frustrated would be an understatement. > I know that's why I > didn't answer it the first time around. PCLinuxOS is considered a > reasonably good KDE distribution and I expected that you'd probably ask > on their user help forums/groups/lists/channels/whatever, eventually. > (FWIW, I'm a Gentooer, here.) But after work tonite I took a second > look and decided I might be able to help, after all, if I ignored the > request for a tutorial that isn't likely to exist and broke down the > rest of it into smaller, easier to reply to, pieces. The pclos folks are as bumfuzzled as I was, the upgrade worked for probably 75% of those who've posted, the rest of us got caught out, badly. I have now installed the other two phonon backends as xine was apparently the default. That also pulled in about 20 more bits and pieces of kde, and while I did have the sound effects from kmail, and thats all I had, nothing now, there is enough new kde stuff just went in that I'll reboot before pursuing the dead audio further. Hopefully that won't throw away the video stuff I just spent another hour on. BTW, there apparently is only one gene heskett, that was me all the time, and I have been a linux/kde user since about RedHat 5.0, circa early 1998 or late 1997. I was present on a couple of the old kde mailing lists, but they kept moving, and I occasionally jumped ISP's which doesn't help continuity either. I guess that qualifies me as an old fart, which I am, on my 77th trip around this star now. And I'll freely admit, short term memory isn't what it was 50 years ago. Thanks Duncan , I'm off to reboot before amanda starts her nightly backup. -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) <http://tinyurl.com/ddg5bz> Sorry. I forget what I was going to say. ___________________________________________________ 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.