Like half a dozen of you took the bait. Come on that one was obvious
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KDE Plasma 6.0.1 Released With First Batch Of Bug Fixes
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I have KDE Neon here running, and have to say, it is amazing with Plasma 6.
Very smooth display on an old i7 8550U integrated GPU. When going from plasma 5.x to 6.x, it felt like having built in a new GPU.
I really like it. No major issues noticed so far.Linuxer since the early beginnings...
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I too use KDE Neon on at least one device. ( Dell Precision 3540 - i7-8665U - Radeon PRO WX 3100 ) and I agree with the great launch. Upgraded at the earliest convenience and apart from the "Power off/Restart" bug which has since been fixed I have not much to complain about.
The calculator button on my keyboard doesn't work any more to give you an indication of how picky I need to get to find any fault.
Great job, ngraham and team !
The only thing I am unsure about (more my lack of knowledge than anything else) is whether KDE / Wayland is utilizing the iGPU or the dGPU…
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Originally posted by sophisticles View PostAs i said in the other thread, I have no plans to try this release, at least for a while.
This DE was just released and they already found bugs significant enough to warrant a updated version.
This is what i keep talking about with open source software, why do these projects not completely test their software and eliminate all the bugs before they release it.
It would look much more professional if they waited a week and released their "KDE MegaRelease 6" with no bugs to fix.
As it stands now, I fully expect to see another such article in a week or so about bug fixes.
These open source projects really need to get their QA in order.
Also, I'm not sure if you're trolling or not but, as per KDE's officially announced schedule, there will indeed be another such article in exactly one week from now, when 6.0.2 is released.
Originally posted by intelfx View Post
Now you just need to define what the "API" of KDE Plasma is.
Semantic versioning is for libraries, not end-user applications.
Also, up until a few years ago semantic versioning used to be the norm for practically everything, not only for libraries. But in any case, it should be obvious to anyone that the KDE team are using semantic versioning for their Plasma & Frameworks releases (while they've dropped it for their "Gear" releases).
EDIT:
Originally posted by Terr-E View Post
The only thing I am unsure about (more my lack of knowledge than anything else) is whether KDE / Wayland is utilizing the iGPU or the dGPU…
Last edited by Nocifer; 06 March 2024, 06:18 AM.
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Originally posted by Nocifer View Postunlike big corporations with big money, they do not have huge QA teams who get paid during the development cycle to do the testing for them (and usually fail miserably at their jobs, but that's another story);
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Originally posted by Nocifer View PostI don't have an iGPU+dGPU system, but you could probably go to System Settings -> About this System -> More Information -> (in the new window that pops up) Graphics -> Window manager, and check what GPU is reported as being used for the compositing renderer, or -> Wayland and check what GPU is reported as being the target device for "wl_output" and the like.
Window Manager:
Code:Compositing =========== Compositing is active Compositing Type: OpenGL OpenGL vendor string: Intel OpenGL renderer string: Mesa Intel(R) UHD Graphics 620 (WHL GT2)
The Wayland section only seems to mention screens not display adapters.
At least that answers the question. Now to figure out how to use the Radeon. (And preferably Vulkan)
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Originally posted by sophisticles View PostAs i said in the other thread, I have no plans to try this release, at least for a while.
This DE was just released and they already found bugs significant enough to warrant a updated version.
This is what i keep talking about with open source software, why do these projects not completely test their software and eliminate all the bugs before they release it.
It would look much more professional if they waited a week and released their "KDE MegaRelease 6" with no bugs to fix.
As it stands now, I fully expect to see another such article in a week or so about bug fixes.
These open source projects really need to get their QA in order.
Comment
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Originally posted by sophisticles View PostAs i said in the other thread, I have no plans to try this release, at least for a while.
This DE was just released and they already found bugs significant enough to warrant a updated version.
This is what i keep talking about with open source software, why do these projects not completely test their software and eliminate all the bugs before they release it.
It would look much more professional if they waited a week and released their "KDE MegaRelease 6" with no bugs to fix.
As it stands now, I fully expect to see another such article in a week or so about bug fixes.
These open source projects really need to get their QA in order.
Nowadays you must be happy to get a beta quality release, and e.g. triple A games are often released as late alphas: horribly optimized, full of bugs and issues.
But it's all agile!
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