Tonight Live: The KDE Desktop on The Linux Show!!

NEWS ALERT: In tonight's edition of the The Linux Show our beloved KDE desktop
will be featured and KDE developers George Staikos and Aaron J. Seigo will join in. It all starts LIVE at 6pm PST / 7pm MST / 8pm CST / 9pm EST at
www.thelinuxshow.com.
Update: The archived version of the show is now available for download.

From the announcement:

A Look at KDE from the top

Tonight we are going to joined by George Staikos and Aaron J. Seigo, two
of the most currently active participants in the KDE project. KDE is a
network transparent contemporary desktop environment for UNIX/Linux
workstations. The KDE project is a large open group of developers
consisting of several hundred software engineers from all over the world
committed to free software development. The KDE project is a free
software project. Each and every line of KDE code is made available
under the LGPL/GPL licenses. This means that everyone is free to modify
and distribute KDE source code. This implies in particular that KDE is
available free of charge to anyone and will always be free of charge to
anyone.

Aaron has been a UNIX developer since the early 1990s and Linux user
since 1994. Today Aaron works almost exclusively with Free Software.
After the release of KDE2, Aaron began contributing to the KDE project
via the weekly Kernel Cousin KDE (now KDE Traffic) and source code
patches. Today he maintains several applications and classes in KDE, is
active in the KDE usability project and helps out with project PR from
his home in Calgary, Alberta.

George Staikos is a professional software developer and Linux hobbyist
from Toronto, Canada. (Two Canadians in one show, WOW!) He has been
using and developing for Linux since 1993, and has been a KDE developer
since 1999. He is presently a member of the core KDE development team
and the North American press contact for KDE. George is self employed,
developing Linux, KDE, and generally portable GUI and web software.

KOffice is a free, integrated office suite for the KDE desktop. The
application suite consists of a word-processor, spread-sheet,
presentation application, organizer and more. For more information about
KOffice visit http://www.koffice.org.

Dot Categories: 

Comments

by Max Howell (not verified)

For other clueless Europeans like myself, 2am GMT may help. Or not. Hopefully it does!

Currently I'm listening to a very quiet American guy talk about something, I think it's Linux but I can't concentrate on what he's saying..

I'll tune in tomorrow, I can't stay up tonight. Well maybe I could.. gaa! How come KDE always keeps me up all night?!

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

if you can't stay up, don't worry... they replay each week's show continuously until the next week's show, so you can grab it whenever (that quiet American guy you hear right now is quite likely Bruce Perens or ESR from last week's show). of course, by grabbing the repeat feed you can't join in on the IRC chat or experience the excitement of being part of a live experience. but sleep is usually far more interesting than either of those things, especially during the work week. ;-)

oh, and KDE keeps you up all night because it loves you. ;-)

by Tom (not verified)

I wasn't aware that KDE was all released under the GPL/LGPL; I thought there were lots of components under BSD and others. A bit of a slip there in the announcement!

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

yeah... we didn't write the announcement, the Linux Show guys did... there's a few phrases i kind of winced at when reading it... but it's generally cool... and it's a pretty good opportunity to address some of The People directly.

by vod (not verified)

Hey all the servers are sux0rd. Can someone mirror this on peercast p2p radio plz?

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)
by vod (not verified)

I caught you just in time!

by Leonscape (not verified)

I listed in, it was a good show.

Concise, accurate and clear. Well done guys!

by Brendan Orr (not verified)

Man... 9 EST is when the 2nd of SciFi's remake of Battlestar Galactica aired. Don't make geeks choose! :)

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

hehe.. no doubt.. priorities, gawd dammit! you can listen to it later, though... they play it on repeat loop all week...

screw andy warhol. gimme 10080 minutes of fame! ;-)

by Alex (not verified)

This interview was great, I learned a lot about KDE and it's always nice to see some insider information. I love reading what developers have to say, such as on their blogs and listening to them is even better!

I think Aaron and George have done a great job, very detailed and helpful answers. Not superficial and brief like some other interviews I've seen. However, I was dissapointed that the hosts didn't seem to transmit any real energy, for any part of the show, not just KDE>

Also you can find the full show here: http://www.thelinuxshow.com/archives/2003/tls-12-09-2003.mp3

The entire thing is in the MP3 format, sorry redhat users =p, and the KDE segment starts about 55% through and takes up the rest of the show.

by Anonymous (not verified)

> the KDE segment starts about 55% through

With minute 54 to be more informative. :-)

by Navindra Umanee (not verified)

Dang. Transcripts, anyone? :)

by ac (not verified)

http://www.kdedevelopers.org/node/view/265 :

The Linux Show went rather well tonight. George was a great co-guest, and I think we handled the questions well in general. We maintained a positive and factual yet enthusiastic air throughout. Even the SUSE/Novell/Ximian and User Linux queries went well. They had a record number of people attending tonight; even the IRC channel had ~80 people in it (they usually only have ~50). So, they were happy with it too. Good fun and a great way to get KDE some positive exposure. I?m feeling rather spent now, though. Time to find some wine and a good book.

Yay! Nice jobbie!

by anon (not verified)

Both Aaron and George are really well-spoken! I am really enjoying this interview!

Anyone know what happened when Aaron was cut off? heheh.

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

i was abducted by aliens, obviously. ;-) honestly, i have no idea. ++weird.

btw, we just got an email from one of the show hosts and apparently the show has been a great success... 1000s have listened to the show since it aired some 21 hours ago, and their website visitation has spiked noticeably since the show as well... =)

by WSIS-koord (not verified)

At the UN world summit the free internet cafe is based on KDE/knoppix with Mozilla and Open Office.org

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

documentary photos would be cool =)

by Apollo Creed (not verified)

Now I know how kiosk is pronounced in English. Very different from the Swedish pronounciation (it's spelled the same way). ;)

by Gerry (not verified)

Give me a clue on Swedish "kiosk" remembering the English word "ghoti"

gh as in "enough"
o as in "women"
ti as in "station"

(George Bernard Shaw got there first)

by Apollo Creed (not verified)

Well, "kio" in Swedish sounds like "sho" in "shot", while "sk" is pronounced the same.

by Dominic Chambers (not verified)

I listened to the recording earlier today and was really very impressed with how both George Staikos, and particularly Aaron Seigo represented themselves and KDE. Really very professional, and exciting; what a shame the presenters aren't made of the same metal.

One thing I was really surprised about was Kiosk mode. I had heard the name but assumed it was something to do with running KDE inside little cabinets.

I really feel you have the wrong name here. Aaron mentioned that most people do not seem to be aware what a winner this technology is, and I think it's the name that's the problem. Sadly, kiosk != centralised enterprise desktop configuration. It's a silly thing really, but if one of your messages is simplified enterprise desktop management, you need to say that loud and clear.

Perhaps the name was chosen because it is almost relevant and has a K in it? How about something like KEnterprise Desktop Manager instead? There is no confusing that!

by Ian Reinhart Geiser (not verified)

not in name but in spirit it is... read what its about and stay tuned ;)

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

you are, IMHO, correct. i believe that with time the term "Kiosk" will likely recede from public view to remain primarily as a developer's detail. as Ian said: stay tuned.

as to where the name "Kiosk" comes from, the Kiosk framework started with work done in response to people's needs to run KDE in kiosk environments in public places. in such environments, you need to lock down the system and control it completely. thus was born Kiosk. it has come a long ways since.

i'm really happy that you, and many others, enjoyed the interview... hopefully we'll be able to make such events a more regular part of KDE's public persona.

by Alex (not verified)

Andreas, the maintainer of the website sounds off:

http://lists.kde.org/?l=kde-www&m=107099152930002&w=2

By the way, I don't think using the FM website is a good idea unless it won't use the same design. I want something that is only KDE/Qt and that is more feature rich than FM.net Possibly with some better organization and sorting (such as by downloads, popularity, activity, release date etc.) I also don't like the design, it is too impersonal and not enough eyecandy =p

by Anonymous (not verified)

They all sounded like they were about to fall asleep! They were speaking so slooowwwlyyyy... Maybe they're all just wrecked for some reason or other.

by anon (not verified)

with Aaron's articulation. The KDE league needs to sponsor this man to go and talk about KDE everywhere. I bet we could even sell KDE to Microsoft if Aaron was the pitchman :-)

The interviewers need to study how Aaron talks. :-) Please take this as constructive criticism but if they are reading this the interviewers need to :

- stop coughing in the mic and trying to muffle it up.. just say "excuse me" instead. aaron did this once and he said "pardon me."
- be a bit more quick witted. notice how aaron had always something to say? dead silences aren't good.
- respond a bit better to what the interviewiees are saying. follow up on stuff that people say rather than relying on a list.
- stutttttering is bad in talk shows :)

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

> The KDE league needs to sponsor this man to go and talk about KDE
> everywhere.

thanks for the vote of confidence =) however, shipping me all over hell's half acre to yak about KDE is probably not a realistic option right now, baring someome who steps forward with funding and some speaking opportunities. but i'm more than happy to do interviews/roundtables via phone or other teleconferencing means. if you line up a speaking engagement and you give me ample time to schedule around it, i'll do it.

of course, i still won't turn down in-person speaking engagements if the travel & loding is paid for ;-)

> I bet we could even sell KDE to Microsoft

hrm... is that harder or easier than selling ice to Eskimos? ;-)

by Leonscape (not verified)

> hrm... is that harder or easier than selling ice to Eskimos? ;-)

Easier..

Eskimos have ice, MS doesn't have a decent desktop ;)

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

lol... POINT!

by Eric Laffoon (not verified)

> with Aaron's articulation. The KDE league needs to sponsor this man to go and talk about KDE everywhere. I bet we could even sell KDE to Microsoft if Aaron was the pitchman :-)

I've always been impressed with Aaron. He has an incredibly solid grasp of the technical aspects and very good insticts. He's also usually excellent with his diplomacy, though like me, he's occasionally too hot blooded for casual conversation. I would personally love to be partnered with Aaron (or George for that matter) in some sort of KDE presentation. While George presents himself well Aaron is overtaken by his enthusiasm, something I enjoy as others have noted the same about me, often in entertaining ways.

I do have to note that in KDE circles I'm probably the guy with the most sales experience, though George and Aaron have more specific to KDE. Still, I thrive on the ultimate pitch... but due to my attitude I'd probably just make the MS guys feel really inadequate with the "take it away" tactic and then say "what the heck" and make them beg. ;-)

by Eike Hein (not verified)

You do like talking about yourself a lot, however ;-). Admit it! :-D

by AC (not verified)

And if we can get you to quit talking about Quanta so much, maybe we would put you in that position.

Yours Truly,

Anonymous Coward

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

hehe... actually, we need to find an Eric Laffoon for every important KDE application. it's notable how the involvement of someone like Eric, when coupled with excellent and dillagent developers, can really elevate a project to the next level.

by Eike Hein (not verified)

I mean, don't get me wrong, Eric rocks - I love Quanta, I enjoy how he drives both the developers as well as the user community. I'm getting wonderful software for free, and I'm grateful. Rock on, Eric!

However, I some criticism applies IMHO. You've typed "one of the most important apps in open source [...]" and "Thinking about how I work on Quanta, the best thing since sliced bread [...]" a little bit *too* often - it's beginning to sound like a broken record. You really don't have to do that in the first place! Quanta speaks for itself.

Well. To make things easier, we should probably all donate more so the Quanta team doesn't have to worry about funding as much.

by Eike Hein (not verified)

Agreed - Aaron was great. You got the feeling he knows what he's talking about, he spoke very clearly, seemed honest and fully prepared. Good job!