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Re: Layman's Explanation Of Plasma
by Lee on Tuesday 22/Apr/2008, @04:49
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Basically the idea is to unify the panel, kicker, and desktop into one seemless entity that widgets (aka "plasmoids") can be moved around on and change configuration as necessary depending on whether you put them into a panel, on the desktop. It's also trying to integrate ideas from superkaramba, Mac OS X's Dashboard, etc.
Now, that doesn't sound so great. And, in fact, it's not really. It's a little nicer, and more polished, I suppose. The thing I like best about all this is the scalability and standardisation of ways to add desktop widgets/panel applets to KDE.
That's especially true if plasma is going to fully support Kross (development in any language) anytime soon, but it sounds like it only supports things like Javascript, C, and python directly right now.
Anyway... the claim to revolutionise your desktop comes from the fact that these things are only *currently* setup to emulate a typical desktop with panels, etc. They're more flexible than that. The plasma panel is actually a specific kind of "containment". Containments are generic things which you can put plasmoids into.
Then there's the concept of "zooming" your desktop. This is still very up-in-the-air, as far as I can tell, in terms of how it'll actually work, what the benefits will be, etc. Aaron seems to have a firm idea of what he wants it to do, but I haven't yet seen a good explanation. This zooming will let you move out of normal desktop view, and see your applications or data in new ways, I guess.
I don't think any one thing in KDE 4 is hugely spectacular. Together though, they make a great platform for future apps. Things like arthur & svg; webkit; kross (only useful to me if it allows everything for rapid development of plugins AND **apps using plugins** that the C++ api allows); akonadi; phonon; kitchensync; and, last but certainly not least, Soprano/Nepomuk |
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