On 08/14/2018 03:01 PM, andre_debian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Somebody told me on tnis list, that TDE was based on Icewm. > (if I understood correctly). Chuckling.... (you didn't) That would be the same as saying KDE was based on IceWm. IceWm as well as Blackbox (and its forks, Fluxbox, Openbox, etc.. -- the boxtops) were original code. Neither were Qt3 based. TDE was a continuation of KDE3 based on Qt3. Information and history on all are available online (Wikipedia is a good start). While both IceWm and Blackbox (and its progeny) are very, very good window managers, they are not "Desktop Environments". That is a critical distinction. KDE and Gnome were considered desktop environments as they included a nice set of integrated desktop applications (terminals, editors, calculators, color choosers, file managers, etc..) with a common look and feel provided by the toolkits they use (Qt3 in the case of KDE3 and Gtk+2 in the case of Gnome2, etc..) TDE continued the mature KDE3 build on Qt3, that kde.org basically "left-for-dead" when it went chasing this pipe-dream of Qt4 widgets making the world a better place to live. (much as Gtk+3 did with Gtk+2/glade when it ran off with GtkBuildable and css styling of objects) TDE, in an inspired bit of forethought, was written with a somewhat toolkit agnostic tqtinterface layer to prevent being limited to Qt3 only. However, since KDE4 has become synonymous with "How to totally botch a desktop", the impetus on toolkit flexibility has lost a bit of necessity. Qt3 was a robust and well written toolkit and there nothing it lacks inherently and what security and maintenance is needed is provided in-house. So in short, TDE was a continuation of KDE 3.5.10 which was left for dead by kde.org and relegated to desktop history. Now kde.org has abandoned KDE4 and "left-it-for-dead" (though it that case, I doubt you will see anyone run in to try and save it....) Those intimately familiar with desktops, recognized what had been achieved with KDE3 was special, in terms of flexibility and efficiency and the human factors taken into the desktop design that minimize the keystrokes or mouse-clicks required to do a task, and how that philosophy shared by the team created not only the desktop interface itself, but was also evident in each of the applications developed as a part of the project. KDE3 was the result of that ground-up process, the desktop and all of the application that made up the environment benefiting from that process in terms of usability and efficiency. It is something that can never be captured in a "Let's move to a new toolkit and port all the applications over" effort. Every time that has been attempted, it invariably results is a "just get it ported and working... and let's get a release out" mentality that cannot, and will never, achieve the same efficiency or usability that a ground-up design did. Thus KDE4 couldn't and Plasma never will match the elegance, the integration or the usabilty of the KDE3 desktop environment. TDE continues the best of KDE3 -- that's why you are here. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list messages on the web archive: http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not to top-post: http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting