With the moving of the workforce from geographical places to online, this should boost all coding work, planet-wise. More ZOOM, SKYPE conferencing, etc. Lower costs in time, travel, time zones, etc.
The other major issue that KDE needs to solve, quickly. There is so much power and flexibility in KDE, that most users can shoot and annihilate their work. KDE desperately needs multiple UNDO, and RESTORE_DEFAULT.
Early users of the old versions of KDE can now rest, knowing that the previous incompatibilities are gone. However the rude & crude display architecture is not human-friendly. No soft fuzzy curves & subtleties.
KDE unlike other environments, is trying to be able to be lightweight, middleweight and heavyweight, using the same bare architecture. IMHO it succeeds this well. However the environments that are specialised to their weight classes are usually better than this over-flexible multi-tool. The specialised alternatives to GNOME-2 suit myself better: MATE & Cinnamon. GNOME-3, Bodhi, etc are too rapidly changing & unpredictable. XFCE is lightweight, usable & reliable.
Some environments (KDE, GNOME, ... ) try to incorporate add-ons and extensions. I prefer specialised third party applications, such as GKREL, Docky, Plank, Cairo Dock, Onboard, etc.
KDE, GNOME etc try to outdo existing Linux applications. Luckily KPART no longer is so loyally bundled, instead of the much better GPARTED. Many other KDE specialised applications should also no longer be developed IMHO.
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Originally posted by WebMac View Post
I don't think they're ugly. I like them very much.
What exactly do you think is ugly?
Also many other bad, bad features of KDE, but will mention this in a different comment.
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Originally posted by paupav View Post
It feels janky. My biggest problem with design is that button size is either too big or too small, spacing, margins are never correct. There is always either too much or too little spacing. Consider following example (default flatpak instalation on my system):
[snip]
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Originally posted by vladimir86 View PostI actually like KDE, but stopped using it because rogue processes and the bloody Baloo file extractor using 100% of my cpu. The baloo problem was as easy as not starting it up (why it auto starts anyway? It never finishes "indexing"),Code:balooctl monitor
It's frustrating when something that's supposed to unobtrusively make your experience better causes problems, but building an index is hard; Windows indexing has given me equal problems over the last decade. If Baloo doesn't work either disable it and move on or dig in and help the developers with a great bug report.
but the kdei.so.5 process...
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Originally posted by paupav View Post
It feels janky. My biggest problem with design is that button size is either too big or too small, spacing, margins are never correct. There is always either too much or too little spacing. Consider following example (default flatpak instalation on my system):
So i just installed it on my system to check it out.
1. They changed it, the vertical spacing is correct now.
2. Agreed, at least it is configurable
4. Transitions also look different here, not perfect but better than in your screenshot
5. Cursor changes here
All of the points: I agree, there is too much space wasted in this one....
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Originally posted by vladimir86 View PostI actually like KDE, but stopped using it because rogue processes and the bloody Baloo file extractor using 100% of my cpu. The baloo problem was as easy as not starting it up (why it auto starts anyway? It never finishes "indexing"), but the kdei.so.5 process if I remember well the name was a recurring bug that goes back to 2012. Forced me to check top every time my laptop would overheat and kill the process. It will resuscitate after a few minutes of use tho.
Funny enough it happens in most distros but Slackware -current, so maybe there is some sort of bugged library that the maintainer of current is aware off, but I never managed to solve the issue, nor find a proper solution googling it. Maybe I am unlucky and not many people experiences this?
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I actually like KDE, but stopped using it because rogue processes and the bloody Baloo file extractor using 100% of my cpu. The baloo problem was as easy as not starting it up (why it auto starts anyway? It never finishes "indexing"), but the kdei.so.5 process if I remember well the name was a recurring bug that goes back to 2012. Forced me to check top every time my laptop would overheat and kill the process. It will resuscitate after a few minutes of use tho.
Funny enough it happens in most distros but Slackware -current, so maybe there is some sort of bugged library that the maintainer of current is aware off, but I never managed to solve the issue, nor find a proper solution googling it. Maybe I am unlucky and not many people experiences this?
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Originally posted by paupav View Post
It feels janky. My biggest problem with design is that button size is either too big or too small, spacing, margins are never correct. There is always either too much or too little spacing. Consider following example (default flatpak instalation on my system):
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Originally posted by WebMac View Post
I don't think they're ugly. I like them very much.
What exactly do you think is ugly?
KOLOURPAINT:
1. look at the tools. left row is much wider than the right one. Also there is too much horizontal spacing between tools (are those icons part of OS's/Flatpaks icon set? if yes why?)
2. why does toolbar with New, Open, Save options exist.
Those options are already present in "File" tab in menu bar, there should be options that are used while editing image.
Most of the users already know where Save button is or know shortcut for saving file.
3. look how much vertical space is wasted at the bottom
4. look at that transition between menubar and toolbar; it looks very ugly here and so does on kde's default theme where bunch of space is wasted. Header bar looks great when you consider how much headerbar and toolbar are wasting horizontal space here and not adding any value for new nor for the users that are have been using that program for a while.
5. kolourpaint doesn't change your cursor to anything so it is janky to use. It is actually really hard to know where is tip of a cursor
DRAWING:
1. all the tools are there for maximum productivity.
2. looks nice, all the space is used for something.
3. it takes 1 more click to get to colour palette
4. doesn't have spray paint tool
5. has bugs
look how much drawing space we get at the end with same height.
I'm sleepy sorry for bad english here.
Originally posted by Awesomeness View PostPatches welcome.
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