Originally posted by eggbert
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The Big GNOME Shell Memory Leak Has Been Plugged, Might Be Backported To 3.28
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Originally posted by -MacNuke- View Post
i.e. take Debian, on the installer choose KDE as Desktop, enjoy a running MariaDB service.
EDIT: it's the MySQL backend of Akonadi. But why is it even installed if it's optional?
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Originally posted by angrypie View Post
Can you point me exactly which package depends on MariaDB? Because I couldn't find it here.
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Originally posted by -MacNuke- View PostLike I said. Install Debian, choose KDE, enjoy a running MariaDB service.
Originally posted by -MacNuke- View PostI think you are more qualified to answer the "why?" question.
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> the "why?" question.
Well, in https://userbase.kde.org/Akonadi/en it's written about applications that let you find your information even if it's normally used by another application, etc:
The Akonadi framework is responsible for providing applications with a centralized database to store, index and retrieve the user's personal information. This includes the user's emails, contacts, calendars, events, journals, alarms, notes, etc. In SC 4.4, KAddressBook became the first application to start using the Akonadi framework. In SC 4.7, KMail, KOrganizer, KJots, etc. were updated to use Akonadi as well. In addition, several Plasma widgets also use Akonadi to store and retrieve calendar events, notes, etc.
At the time of writing, the following applications are enabled to use the Akonadi framework to centrally store and access user data. Follow through to each application's page to learn more.
KMail
Mail Client
Uses Akonadi to store emails
KAddressBook
Contact Manager
Uses Akonadi to store contact information
KOrganizer
Personal Organizer
Uses Akonadi to store calendars, events, journals, etc.
KJots
Note Taking Application
Uses Akonadi to store notes
KAlarm
Personal alarm scheduler
Uses Akonadi to store alarms
[...]
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Originally posted by angrypie View PostWhy would I do that to myself? What are you implying?
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> the "why?" question.
Let's do an example, something really simple and basic. I'm an executive, and I get an email from a client I'm trying to entice into a juicy contract with my company. He wants to meet with me to discuss it next Monday at 10 o'clock. With the traditional method of separate email client and calendar application, I now have to open my calendar app, go to Monday and create an event. Not hard, but it takes a minute or two. Wouldn't it be better if I could just click a button and have an appointment created automatically? Wouldn't it be really great if the appointment in my calendar was also linked back to the email for reference? Even more, if it was somehow also linked to my contact information for that client, any notes I may have written concerning them, any emails, instant messages or social media exchanges we may have had before? Note that this is how the competition (Microsoft Exchange) works, and realize how hard it would be to entice businesses to take a step back in functionality and convenience.
[There is more information in http://web.archive.org/web/201306270...e-and-kde-pim]
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Originally posted by -MacNuke- View PostThat's probably how most people are using KDE. Default install on some random distribution. "Hand picking" stuff is not how most people use Linux. Otherwise is it like saying "I installed fluxbox, look how far the Linux desktop is behind every other OS".
"Default install" is relative. Neon is mostly bloat-free, and it doesn't include the backend you're screaming about. Neither does Fedora as far as I can remember (granted, Fedora KDE ships a lot more packages by default, but it's still mostly vanilla KDE). OpenSUSE, the KDE distro par excellence, is unlike both and heavily customize the default desktop experience (and, just checked, it installs MariaDB by default).
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