In this week's KDE Commit-Digest: Old-school desktop patterns return as a Plasma wallpaper, along with an interactive Marble-based wallpaper display. A simple video player Plasmoid based on Phonon. Continued optimisations in Plasma and KDevelop. Various new colour schemes for KDE 4 added to KDE SVN. KSysGuard processes can now be "dragged into a text editor, word processor or spreadsheet program". More progress in the functional refactoring of the Kigo game. Support for compiling sources at runtime with the C# language bindings for KDE. Backup functionality added to KJots. Last.fm service converted to use the KDE system-wide proxy settings, and basic filtering capability added to the service browser in Amarok 2.0. Further work on the new DeviceSync application. KConfigEditor begins to be ported to KDE 4. KitchenSync and the Akonadi OpenSync plugin are disabled for the KDE-PIM 4.2 release. kdekiosk becomes officially unmaintained due to a lack of developer interest. Final preparations for release and the tagging of Amarok 2.0 Final.Read the rest of the Digest here.
Comments
http://www.kdedevelopers.org/node/3814
Danny
I can't believe people have suggested you step down from your AWARD WINNING post.
Thank you so much for the digest danny.
your work is much appreciated.
Happy new year
Is there some article about the specific work behind the digests? I ever wondered about this, because most of them looks like things a script does?
Danny should probably blog about it. There is some scripting there, but a human (danny, though I sometimes wonder how human he really is) has to go through all the commits by hand and categorize them. Which means going through hundreds, thousands of commits, reading them and deciding if they are feature, bugfix, optimization or shouldn't be put in the digest.
And please, don't give up. There's a lot of people not usually posting (like me) who appreciatte a lot your effort.
Best regards from Spain.
Juan Manuel (Poldark)
Very true, I never do post here but I do want to express my appreciation of your work, and my admiration of your continuous patience with some of the comments here.
Thanks Danny for your untidily work by the Digest. I read it constantly and I hope you continue with it. Wish you good luck and a happy new year 2009.
Greets Ari
Danny, thanks very much for your efforts in the digest.
I am only a KDE user, not a developer or contributor, but the digest makes me wait eagerly for the next distro-release! And it also makes me aware of all the good features that KDE has and that I would not know of without the digest.
As Chaoswind suggests, perhaps it would be nice to explain to the community how you generate the digest.
Indeed, the digest is much richer with introductory comments written by developers on their work, but still very useful without them.
Keep on the good work, Danny, and just publish the digest on a regular basis without external contributions, should none arrive in your mailbox.
regards, sulla
Indeed, thanks for your work Danny. I, for that matters, prefer to have a Digest with minimal introduction than without Digest. So the current solution is perfectly OK for me.
About Phonon, I'd be interested by some feedback by other users here : when I compare the visual quality of Dragon Player using Phonon's xine backend, it's obviously lower than the xine output on the same system. It seems deinterlacing is not working. I would have though that Phonon would use the default xine.cfg for settings but it appear not to.
Does anyone have the same experience and a potential fix?
Bug reports are usually a much better way to report this than completely offtopic discussions here.
In this spirit, Thanks Danny,
and HAPPY NEW YEAR to you all :)