Quickies: Award Voting, New Releases, Live CD, FOSDEM Talks

LinuxQuestions.org launched their Members Choice Awards Polls. Plenty of KDE applications and KDE itself up for your votes. *** Krusader released 1.70.0 of their file manager. "Bringing a feature rich filemanager with new technologies and standards to the Linux desktop." *** Premiere IRC client Konversation released 0.19 with an impressively long changelog. *** Kubuntu released a live CD with the latest KDE, KOffice and Amarok. *** The schedule for the KDE Developers room at FOSDEM is up with talks on Kubuntu, Free Software marketing, KOffice and Krita. See you at the weekend.

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Comments

by LMCBoy (not verified)

I wonder why the poll for "Best File manager" has both "Konqueror" and "KFM" entries...maybe for people using KDE-1.x?

by James Richard Tyrer (not verified)

Because Konqueror is a browser and KFM is a file manager which runs in Konqueror.

by Henrique Marks (not verified)

I had left some comments in the site about poor choices. Konqueror and KFM, for instance. K3b and amarok. Xine in the multimedia but not kaffeine, etc. Unfortunately, this award is, despite being well conducted, is not very fair with the participants.

by James Richard Tyrer (not verified)

I hope that it wasn't just an accident that LinuxQuestions said: "Browser" and not "Web Browser" since (with the possible exception of deliberately crippled software from MS) there is no such thing as a Web Browser. All Browsers will browse your local files as well a network or the Web.

So, my favorite Browser is Konqueror -- I have Firefox installed but only use it when KHTML won't display a web page.

Then we have the question of what is a "File Manager"? Some people have answered "Konqueror" but Konqueror is NOT a "File Manager" it is a shell that runs the various plugins which are necessary to browse.

From a programing view point, KDE has a file manager (K File Manager [KFM]) which can only run in Konqueror. This tends to confuse the issue since it (KFM) is also used for browsing functions since Konqueror does not have a way to display lists of files for protocols other than HTTP.

So, for File Manager, should we vote for KFM since Konqueror isn't really a File Manager?

by blacksheep (not verified)

Yeah, and FireFox isn't really browser, Gecko is.

by James Richard Tyrer (not verified)

Perhaps you didn't read what I wrote.

Firefox IS a browser.

Gecko is an HTML rendering engine.

> So, for File Manager, should we vote for KFM since Konqueror isn't really a File Manager?

No we, should vote for Konqueror, since that's how the file manager identifies itself to the user. Otherwise we'll just split up votes. Only vote 'KFM' if you're still using KDE 1.

by James Richard Tyrer (not verified)

IIRC, the term KFM was still in use after KDE-1, but that isn't relevant because there is a file manager (in function if not in name). The name appears to have been changed to "kfmclient" But, that command can also start the Konqueror as web browser (an artificial distinction).

The file manager seems to have been divided up into several parts. There are the two front ends: "iconview" & "listview" and various "kio" stuff including "job" which does much of the actual management of the files.

"This tends to confuse the issue since it (KFM) is also used for browsing functions since Konqueror does not have a way to display lists of files for protocols other than HTTP."

I'm sorry but this sentence only shows that you don't really know what you are talking about. Konqueror loads kparts depending on the mimetype of the url that is being loaded. The url can be *ANY* url/protocol the KURL will parse and that there is a kioslave to access. If konqueror has a kpart for that mimetype(and depending on mimetype settings), konqueror will load the kpart to show the url, otherwise it will load the url externally, or ask the user.

Kparts happen to have extensions, such as the browser extension so that konqueror can control them in specific ways that aren't available in the kpart api.

Kfm, if it still exists since 1.x, is simply a name for konqueror with one of the directory browsing kparts loaded, but i don't think very many people refer to it as such.

So, to recap, the poll is either mistaken(kfm==konqueror) or unclear(kfm 1.x vs konqueror).

I think we need a quality control team to control the quality of your comments :)

Matt

by James Richard Tyrer (not verified)

> I think we need a quality control team to control the quality of your
> comments :-)

Yes, my proof reader really screwed up on that sentence. But, it isn't quite as fractured if you take it in the context of contrasting Konqueror with other browsers.

Yes, I know that Konqueror loads a K-Part for everything it does but that doesn't mean that we can't speak of them together.

When you run the FTP protocol in Firefox, you get a file list. Konqueror doesn't have a K-Part specifically to do this, it just uses the KFM part to do it. OTOH, when you are using KHTML, that K-Part does display a file list just like Firefox does. So, Konqueror is using the file manager K-Part when it is doing what most people regard as web browsing. And, that further confuses the issue.

by Nicolas Goutte (not verified)

I am an expert of neither HTTP nor FTP, but, as far as I know, HTTP does not support any file listing like FTP does. So what you get by HTTP is an HTML page instead. Therefore it is displayed in KHTML.

As for FTP (without proxy), you indeed get back a text listing. (The ftp KIO supports getting listings similar to the output of ls(1) and has known problems with other listing formats.)

Have a nice day!

by Nicolas Goutte (not verified)

To be exact: the FTP KIO slave expect to get an output like the one of ls -l

I'm afraid I don't understand your point.

Finder and Nautilus are file managers that can also be refered to as file browsers, but they're not generic browsers.

Safari and Epiphany are web browsers, not generic browsers.

by James Richard Tyrer (not verified)

And Konqueror is a generic browser which works equally well browsing anywhere.

Great design, but then to try to conform, they screwed it up.

"From a programing view point, KDE has a file manager (K File Manager [KFM]) which can only run in Konqueror. This tends to confuse the issue since it (KFM) is also used for browsing functions since Konqueror does not have a way to display lists of files for protocols other than HTTP."

You have just shown that you don't have the slightest clue what you are talking about. Matt, just above, is correct.

by ac (not verified)

Is it really hard to format an article for KDE.news?

Hey, look!

It isn't!