On 04/14/2011 08:59 AM, Anne Wilson wrote: > On Thursday 14 April 2011 13:23:33 Billie Walsh wrote: >> On 04/14/2011 01:45 AM, Clemens Eisserer wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> I use KDE since 1998/1999 with kde-1.1 beeing the first version I >>> remember having used. >>> I always found it to be simply the best Desktop Environment, >>> escpecially during KDE-2.x/3.x times. >>> Since KDE-4 I am not that happy anymore. Early releases were >>> horrible, ~4.3/4.4+ is ok, but still not as solid as one would expect. >>> >>> The problems I see are: >>> 1. Too few developers, too much code >>> 2. Too short release cycles& Quality testing >>> 3. Features count most mentality. >>> 4. Performance >>> >>> I normally wouldn't bother the list with my ideas, however I have been >>> encouraged to do so. >>> >>> Thanks, Clemens >> I suppose we all have our favorite parts of KDE. For me it's Quanta. For >> whatever reason the devs at wherever have pretty much decided it was not >> worth the effort to bring it along with KDE 4.x. There is one person >> trying to bring it along and I hope someday he manages to do it. >> >> Why they decided to kill off Quanta is beyond me, well maybe "kill off" >> is a bit of an over statement, but it is crippled very badly. > This thread is a perfect example of how basic facts about KDE are > misunderstood. It sounds, for instance, as though KDE consists of a body of > people who sit in a room and make decisions about what will or won't be > developed. That couldn't be further from the truth. > > There are thousands of developers, most of which code for fun after doing a > day-job. Once you understand this, it makes a lot more sense. I would like > Quanta to be ported to KDE4, too, but the truth is that it's a job that > doesn't appeal to anyone capable of doing it. enough to spend their evenings > on it. > > Then you have things like Telepathy, that are ambitious, and will eventually > be very useful, but again, the developers are going as fast as their time will > allow. The developers of Kopete lost interest in taking it further, and the > new team wanted to do more, so a new project was born. That's how it goes. > Developers come and go. Life happens to them. They leave college, get a job, > get a girlfriend, get married, have a family etc., etc., etc.. Their work > slows and sometimes has to stop altogether. They are simply human. > > And that's why in FOSS we will always have some beautiful fireworks and at the > same time some things that make us weep. > > Anne I realize how the "system" works. And I do applaud their efforts, they do a great job. And, Quanta probably fills a "niche market" so it's priority is low, except for those that "need" it. It's just a shame that such a great program is allowed to drift off into Never-Never Land. You can spend several hundred dollars and not find a better program. -- "A good moral character is the first essential in a man." George Washington _ _... ..._ _ _._ ._ ..... ._.. ... .._ ___________________________________________________ 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.