Linux
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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What a banger release! Last time they focused on bug hunting, this time its about features. This ping pong focused development is very nice.
- KRunner Fuzzy Search: Not earth shattering, but welcome. I hope there is a way to dynamically force to enable or disable it. Sometimes fuzzy search can be in the way (I know it from other fuzzy search tools). My recommendation is
~character to toggle the functionality:"~file"to enable fuzzy in example, if its disabled by default. I may even make a suggestion in the issue tracker, but I don't know what options they integrated into it yet.
It's the little things that matter.
Great, but when kbigscreen.
I need a decent Chromecast replacement
biKscreen
BigSkreen
Every time I try KDE I get burned by some bugs. How is stability?
Baloo for example was some source of pain for me. And if I look at the bug tracker I do not get confidant. https://bugs.kde.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=UNCONFIRMED&bug_status=CONFIRMED&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&field0-0-0=product&field0-0-1=component&field0-0-2=alias&field0-0-3=short_desc&field0-0-4=status_whiteboard&field0-0-5=content&order=changeddate+DESC%2Cbug_status%2Cpriority%2Cassigned_to%2Cbug_id&query_format=advanced&type0-0-0=substring&type0-0-1=substring&type0-0-2=substring&type0-0-3=substring&type0-0-4=substring&type0-0-5=matches&value0-0-0=baloo&value0-0-1=baloo&value0-0-2=baloo&value0-0-3=baloo&value0-0-4=baloo&value0-0-5=%22baloo%22
Works fine for me. ¯\_( ᵔ ~ ᵔ )_/¯
Same. I always try it out and run into some critical bug causing me to abandon it.
My Linux Mint install with Cinnamon "just works", so I've been sticking with that and hoping Wayland support goes stable soon, because I hate X Server.
the only issues I had with KDE when I was recently using it all revolved around the panel. Random crashes with "too much" interaction. Adding widgets for the panel or desktop is still to this day hit or miss. clicking the "get new widget" option is a roll of the dice if it will actually work or not or even find the thing you want. It's still horrible at loading stuff in there. and installing whatever, again, is a roll of the dice if it will actually do it or not.
I like KDE, it's a good and solid DE but man do they really need to focus on fixing the panels and the installation/discovery of widgets. The alternative is using the pling store and that's just a headache on it's own.
cool. ill update when i get the time.
My only beef with KDE is just that there's always been 'too much' of it. Like, every settings screen and right-click context menu just like, goes on for days.
There needs to be a prominent toggle switch between 'Turbo Nerd Mode' and 'Babby's First DE'.
there is depending on what distro you're on and the packages they provide for Plasma.
Like Arch for example you can get a barebones basic version of KDE Plasma. NixOS you can tell it to ignore certain parts of Plasma from the package when you're building it. I would assume other distros have something similar. This applies to the settings too. you can literally make your plasma include zero kwin stuff if you wanted.
Am I the only one who thinks it looks ugly? Don't get me wrong, they are improving it in many ways and it's going in the right direction, plus a ton of features and customizability, but when I look at Gnome I don't doubt for a second where I want to be.
They are two opposite styles of UI.
However, KDE has a fuckton of customization possibilities that I have always been dreaming of in GNOME.
And I'm saying this as a GNOME guy, absolutely zero fanboyism here.
I don't think anyone would think you were a fanboy, just beacuse KDE has ton of configuration and customization. That's the opposite of GNOME. I always think of GNOME like Apple, who decides what you can and cannot do, what you are allowed to. I used GNOME 2, then Unity, then GNOME 3 all the way from Ubuntu 2008 to what, 2020 (I forget when I switched to different distro for the first time).
Well, that's kind of the thing, except for a few things I don't want to customize it that much, when I've tried KDE in the past I just customized it a bit and it looked like shit because I didn't spend that much time into it. I know you can make it look pretty, but I'd rather waste that time learning how to use Hyperland to be honest since it's way more customizable and offers something else completely. Except for a better KDE Connect integration I don't think I'm missing anything I would need on Gnome.
I also think Gnome is much prettier than KDE but KDE is a fully working desktop environment that does not need extensions to get it to a working state so here I am.
(Although I would not call KDE ugly)
when I look at Gnome I don’t doubt for a second where I want to be
Yeah me neither, from the other side, lol
You are not the only one. Its a taste. I personally like the KDE look the most, its beautiful to me. No other desktop environment looks this good.
kde is pretty enough, it's not exactly trendy but I feel they're going the best they could do while keeping information density
A colleague always complains that KDE looks like Windows. She does also get jealous, though, when she sees me using poweruser features.
Yep. Ugly, disjointed in appearance, etc. I set up Debian KDE for a family member moving from windows so it fits. I was impressed that KDE came far from what it was but it very much is like a bucket of bolts to me.
Gnome in contrast is very put together. Yes, has some quirks but appearance wise is very curated IMO.
I'm fairly new and happened to choose KDE for my own taste, but I would argue GNOME is not "fully" polished as per this post. The nits there may be small or mindless to GNOME diehards, but from a design standpoint, they seem pretty... rough.
I guess KDE remembering your previous monitor layout after temporarily switching to built in only for laptops is still too big an ask. Related merge has work done but is indefinitely closed and shelves. What a shame.
End of 2025 and still missing a replacement for Khotkeys. Plasma is still great all in all, but after almost two decades on KDE I feel like I've outgrown it and tried to switch away a couple times now. Time to stop procrastinating and getting on with writing my own wlroots compositor.
Why don't you make a replacement for Khotkeys instead?
Ultimately, as I said, I want to move away from KDE/Plasma. If I were to build a replacement for Khotkeys and go through the whole contribution process, possibly including some maintenance commitment and years of bikeshedding, I'd be more invested into KDE, not less.
I never used khotkeys, but would input-remapper do what you want? You can remap keys or execute macros on key presses. It supports X11 and Wayland.
Sadly no. I know this one and there is a couple of similar applications out there that all work pretty much the same, using a virtual uinput device to do low-level remapping of key to key. You can do macros or chords with these, but that's not what I'm after, and in any case, I prefer to do remaps and macros like that first on my QMK keyboard directly if possible, then XKb second.
Khotkey on the other hand could (among other things) remap keys per window. For example you could say that for key presses sent to Firefox (which has no built-in way to redefine hotkeys), make Ctrl-W not close the window but do this thing instead, or use these keys to move between Ctrl-f search results. These remaps would then affect Firefox and only Firefox, while with apps like the one you linked, remaps would always affect the entire system.
Another feature was freely configurable mouse gestures that can work in any application and do different things in each application.
The reason we don't have anything on wayland is that there is no generalized way for third party apps to intercept, modify, redirect or inject key events. Even global-hotkeys are still lacking in support and lackluster and complex in implementation. This is by design and there are good reasons for this, but it leaves the job of implementing this functionality (as so much on wayland) with the compositor, i.e. here Plasma, Kwin or some other module that's tightly integrated with them.
Ahhh I see. Well damn because that functionality does sound pretty useful, sad that its currently broken with Wayland.
Came to say what most have already: It works already as well / better than Gnome, doesn't require superduper hardware, stable, why the feck did I wait until 2025 to try it? Not looking back.
honestly I would say it hasn't really gotten into it's groove/good until like a few months into this year. It's gotten A LOT better than what it was. So waiting until now to try it was a good call actually.