KDE Presence at Berlinux 2004

KDE will be present at Berlinux 2004 which takes place on 22nd and 23rd October in Berlin's technical university. Among the talks will be also one about KDE as enterprise desktop (in German). At the booth we will demonstrate KDE 3.3.1 and thanks to SUSE the upcoming SUSE 9.2 KDE desktop which includes among other things OpenOffice.org 1.1.3 with KDE file dialog integration. Of course we will also demonstrate Kiosktool, kNX, Scribus and hopefully Mozilla/Qt and the Gecko kpart.

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Comments

by ac (not verified)

Is KDE the default in SUSE 9.2? It was the default and only in SUSE 9.1 Personal, so it will be interesting to see what influence Novell has had.

by Daniel Molkentin (not verified)

"It was the default and only in SUSE 9.1 Personal"

I am not sure what you want to say with this but it sounds wrong to me.

KDE is default for both SUSE LINUX Pro and Personal since a long time.
However, the SUSE LINUX Personal line carried less software, e.g. no development tools and KDE was the only desktop shipped with it. However, for a reason unknown to me, the Personal edition was dropped on 9.2.

Now there is only the Professional edition left, which comes with KDE as default, but also ships with a customized version of GNOME 2.6.

Cheers,
Daniel

by charles (not verified)

...after having installed SuSE Linux 9.1, I was not amused by the fonts. Heck, much as a product could be technically superior [and SuSE surely is], it must be attractive too. All the fonts look blurry! Even after running the `webfonts.sh' script, I could not easily locate the fonts that I had downloaded! Even when I finally did, they looked blurry too. Not using anti-aliasing made them worse! On the other hand, fonts on Windows look OK and crisp. But I commend SuSE for having automagically idenitified ALL my hardware correctly. All versions of Windows including the very latest, had to be assisted in all cases. My suggestion to the developers is to put more effort on
the first impression as well.

by HelloWorld82 (not verified)

yes ... of course. I also nether understood this problem. I'm using mandrake, and I have the same problen. Why do the fonts I use _allways_ looks so bad under linux then they are _not_ antialiased ? In windows they looks much better ! I don't like antialiasing - It's in fact only an artifact to make bad looking fonts looking better. And they really slow down your whole system. Compile mozilla with anti-aliasing and then without. And start it. You will see what I mean !

HelloWorld

by HelloWorld83 (not verified)

Thats because the hinting bytecode interpreter in the Freetype2 library is disabled by default, due to a possible patent issue. Of course, a mean spirited user could rebuild Freetype2 from source and enable that thing...

by gnumdk (not verified)

Or use plf freetype packages for mandrake users.

by thatguiser (not verified)

or does da DCMA forbid that?