Kexi 0.1 Beta 3 Released

The Kexi Team announced the immediate availability of Kexi 0.1 beta 3, codenamed "United Europe", a new preview release of the integrated data management environment aimed at developers and experienced users. Please read the
announcement
and how you can compile Kexi.

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Comments

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

It is great that the development team of Kexi matches the new geography of the European Union. Kexi will certainly reach version 1.0 before Europe adopts a constitution... (but the challenge is a bit too easy).

Cheers,
Charles

by Evan "JabberWok... (not verified)

While I have no problem with either this codename or the about dialog box, why is the codename "United Europe" acceptable versus someone crediting the "United States military" as support? Both are credible institutions that do (or will do) both good and bad things. Both are political entities.

I thought that there was a consensus that politically divisive terms would be avoided in the future. If the author of a work can't credit who he likes, why can a group of authors?

Note that I still think that authoring the majority of a work gives you the ability to give credit to your parents, your god, your government or your pets (or anything else). The author's page in books has always been full of a wide variety of recognition of tangential or direct assistance.

And in case it's not clear, I like the codename (and the sentiment), just not on the heels of the whole "no political messages". I'm also taking "As Kexi is a real member of the KDE and KOffice projects" from http://www.kexi-project.org/about.html to mean that they are part of the KDE project and not a side project.

by ACrowd (not verified)

Uhm, the name has very obvious reasons:

1) All Kexi Core Developers but Jaroslaw were EU members, now he is too
2) The release date was the 1st of May, which is the day of the EU extension

So while this sure has also policial aspects, it's mostly about people that are happy to be "socially closer" now, and both sides appreciate it. I think this is clearly different to hyping an army (which hardly has anything positive with it).

Of course I see your point. Maybe it is debatable wether this is more a political message, but I don't think so and I think nobody has problems with this codename and I don't want to start a political discussion here.

I for one wish the Kexi team the very best. Keep on going!

by Craig B (not verified)

"clearly different to hyping an army (which hardly has anything positive with it). "
As a proud member of the US miltary and supporter of KDE i find that statement highly offensive and ignorant.

by Isaac C (not verified)

As a proud member of the EU I think offensive comparing the European Union with the US army ... (of course, I'm also a KDE supporter :P)

by Henri Girard (not verified)

Hi :)
I don't think the codename 'united europe" is an apropriate one !
Europe is a capitalist "entity" (that politicians call economical) and a propagandist insulte to human kind !
Capitalisme Crime Contre Chaque Créature (and unfortunatly in anglo saxon impossible to write the meaning ... In spanish ..ok...
The nations who are entering Europa nowadays will have all the burden of being exploited ! If you really look at the "leading" countries of europa they are on their fall ! killed by capitalism : France 1000 milliards euros (1000 billions) euros deficit !!! It's a scandal against mankind !!!!
And further more : They are going to vote laws against "open" softs...
I am not masochist neither want I finished my life starving because european policy can't control european capitalist mafia's...
Open source is not the privilege of a continent !!!
It's an universal aim !!!
After 45 y work (capitalist slavage) government after spoiling people pensions will carry on their terrorism on people ...
Think about your oldness... Not old passioned people aren't rich !!!
Kind regards : codename suggested "sun or venus " or oin's database !!!
HG

by Evan "JabberWok... (not verified)

: So while this sure has also policial aspects, it's mostly about people that are happy to be "socially closer" now, and both sides appreciate it. I think this is clearly different to hyping an army (which hardly has anything positive with it).

I would say that a political entity has political aspects. And yes, I agree that the message is upbeat. I'd also say that the military is pretty upbeat; ask any soldier how they feel. Most modern democracies can be pretty proud about their military, even if they get misused from time to time. Same goes for anything political. The military see themselves as the protectors of their people. Similar to police. Or do the police have "hardly anything positive"?

: I for one wish the Kexi team the very best. Keep on going!

Same here. It looks great, and I don't mean to obscure that with commentary on the codename. Being able to load up database schemas to show new developers is a damn handy thing. I'll have to play with it to see if you can print them out; I was asked for a printed schema last week by a VC guy who is funding a company we're doing work for.

by Carlo (not verified)

>Most modern democracies can be pretty proud about their military, even if they get misused from time to time.

If a civil society as a whole is proud of their military forces, then something is definitely wrong. And no, military is not similar to police.

by ac (not verified)

I could be proud if the military forces were used defensively. Just because it hasn't happened in the past several decades doesn't mean it couldn't happen in the future ;)

by Evan "JabberWok... (not verified)

:: If a civil society as a whole is proud of their military forces, then something is definitely wrong. And no, military is not similar to police.

I would phrase that the exact opposite. If a civil society as a whole is *not* proud of their military forces, then something is definitely wrong.

by a.c. (not verified)

>I would phrase that the exact opposite. If a civil society as a whole is *not* proud of their military forces, then something is definitely wrong.

Good point. I would rather be proud of a properly acting military (and one that is acting to defend its' country), then to fear my own.

However, as to your original question, the US military (as well as other militaries) act to prop up or defend its' government. The "United Europe" is more akin to saying the "United States" than US Military. From most people's POV, it is a huge difference.

by Goring (not verified)

A army is nothing to be proud of, it's dirty business that has to be done by a few idiots that sell their freedom for money.

An army is an inefficient organisation where everything goes wrong. Nothing to be proud of.

Am I proud of the fire forces? The hospitals? The police? The air conditioners? The traffic system? The water supply?

No.

Eala Freya Fresena. There is a huge difference between a fighter and a soldier.

Prostitution is the sale of sexual services for money or other kind of return, generally indiscriminately with many persons. A person selling sexual favors is a prostitute, a type of sex worker. Most prostitutes are women offering their services to men."

Army service is the sale of ... Most soldiers are men offering their services to the Government."

by Carlo (not verified)

>I would phrase that the exact opposite. If a civil society as a whole is *not* proud of their military forces, then something is definitely wrong.

You can be proud of things you have done. If a soldier defends his country and never was involved in wartime atrocities, he may be proud of himself. But being proud to need military to defend yourself against other humans is just dumb.

by LWATCDR (not verified)

"Most modern democracies can be pretty proud about their military, even if they get misused from time to time. "
This is nothing but an opinon.

" If a civil society as a whole is proud of their military forces, then something is definitely wrong. And no, military is not similar to police."
This is also nothing but an opinon.

The problem with the extreme left and the extreme right is that they feel there oponon carries the weight of unquestionable truth.
If you are going to have a rule that no politcal statments should be made by authors of software in the kde collection you have to inforce it in all cases which is a form of censorship but it is least fair. Or you could say that no political statments the we do not like may be made, which also makes you a censor but not a fair one. Or you could say that people are free to put in what ever they want. Which is what I think should be done. Of course that is just my opinon.

Of course the amount of total stupidity being generated by this disscusion is huge.

by mbae (not verified)

>Or you could say that people are free to put in what ever they want

Thats the only choice you have unless you could properly define 'political statement'. Isn't it a political statement to say: 'Developing software in an open source process is more likely to succeed in the future.' or isn't it political to say: 'in the morning the sun shines into my room through the window and i want this to be so forever'.

Think twice: Everything is political so everything else than absolutly free speech includes believing to have the only right answer to every question.

by LWATCDR (not verified)

>>Thats the only choice you have unless you could properly define 'political statement'.
>>Isn't it a political statement to say: 'Developing software in an open source process is more likely to succeed in the future.'
I would not say that is correct. It is an opinon but does not carry a value judgement. The statment, "Developing closed source software is immoral." would be a political statment. To be a political statment I would have to say that it must contain a value judgement. You could go so far as to say that it must contain a judgement or statment about a ruling body or the laws/rules that they create and inforce.

So saying that my eyes are brown is not a political statment. Or that I do not like the taste of squash is not a political statment. Both are facts.

or isn't it political to say: 'in the morning the sun shines into my room through the window and i want this to be so forever'.
I would say that was a factual statment and does not contain any opinon. In the morning the sun would tend to shine through an window in a room. And unless that person was a lair I would take the statment that they want this to be so forever at face value. Now if live in the arctic circle then it not completely true :) Yes it was a nit picking joke.

I will even go so far as to say that hate speech has no place and would support KDE not allowing people to put things like "Death to Arabs", "Death to America", "Hitler was right", and many uglier things that people could come up with in about boxes. But things like "We love the US Army" should not be considered should be banned. If you try and take it in a positive light it means we love the people in the US Army. I would not be offended by someone putting "Allah protect the people of Iraq" in an about box. The issue is that KDE said not political statments, fine then no political statments. "United Europe" is without a doubt a political statment. I will allow that it may even be a positive statment, but I thought the rule was no political statments.

by Christian Loose (not verified)

> "United Europe" is without a doubt a political statment.

How is "United Europe" a political statement?

It's like having a project code name "US Army" or "Germany". It's not a statement. It says neither anything positive nor negative about it. It could mean "United Europe rules" or "United Europe sucks". Those would actually be political statements and I'm sure they would be banned.

Christian

by Craig B (not verified)

This political statement could inhibit developers from getting involved because they might think that Kexi is only for EU facists or something ;)

by Evan "JabberWok... (not verified)

Eliminate the "fascist" comment, and yeah - it does perpetuate the stereotype that "KDE is by and for Europeans". Not to minimize the fact that a majority of active developers are, but it does seem to subtly discourage "outside" involvement.

I still think it's a good thing. Pride in one's home is a positive thing, and celebrating your home (at town/city, county/canton/parish, state/country, union or planet level) or any aspect of it in your work is healthy and happy. Same goes for work or hobbies. I happen to know of a good source of catnip through KDE because it's not just a monolithic entity obsessed with lowest common denominator and political correctness. The end product is polished and professional, but having some character in the developers is a good thing, imo.

by Craig B (not verified)

I really don't think EU types are fascists i was simply making a point to the euro's how it looks from the opposite point of view. What seems like a harmless statement on one side of the Atlantic raises emotions on the other. Mainland Europe isn't exactly at the top of americans popularity chart right now. The US Army is extremly popular here in the US.

by Martin Galpin (not verified)

It's the celebration of something great (the unification of Europe), not controversy (aka, Iraq/Military).

Also, Kexi isn't thanking the unification of Europe for Kexi as the previous author did with the military. The Kexi team are simply associating dates...

by General Zod (not verified)

> It's the celebration of something great (the unification of Europe), not controversy (aka, Iraq/Military).

I know several Englishmen who don't think of the unification of Europe as something great. And at least one of them maybe more doesn't think there's anything wrong with the actions in Iraq. Smells like hypocrisy to me.

> Also, Kexi isn't thanking the unification of Europe for Kexi as the previous author did with the military. The Kexi team are simply associating dates...

Now this seems more reasonable.

by Carlo (not verified)

>I know several Englishmen who don't think of the unification of Europe as something great.

Beside the fact that the UK had always a very different point of view, even compared to the polyphonic continental europe, their special "doggie ;)" relationship to the US and that they will have to decide in a not too distant future if they want to go with continental europe or not, I don't think that the unification is "great", too. In fact it will raise a bunch of problems, but it's just indispensable. A unstable - and it would be far more unstable as it is now, if they had not seen a EUropean future - poorhouse of ~75 million humans directly at eastern EU borders in conjunction with the uncertain future of a undemocratic russia could lead to more problems, Joe Englishmen may think of on his not so little isle.

by Tom Chance (not verified)

Actually, though my fellow Englishmen are (unfortunately) on the whole quite anti Europe, or at least not pro-Europe, few have grumbled about the expansion of member states.

What the anti-EU camp don't like is when they think the EU is taking power away from our national Parliament, which includes (according to them) the new constitution, and any further unification of powers in the EU itself. That's a different issue to expanding the size of the EU.

Completely off-topic, but I thought I should clarify :-)

by aile (not verified)

The britons respect that people are political unequal by birth. There is still a noble man chamber of british parliament and they want to educate the EU because of lack of democracy ... tsetse.

Btw: This is why Power to the EU-Parliament has to be given. And civil society representation has to be improved.

by c (not verified)

because not even anti-European Englishmen and women opposed the expansion of the EU. Everyone thinks a united Europe is a good thing, we just disagree over the way in which it should be united. ;-).

by Viktor Rasmussen (not verified)
by Allan S. (not verified)

How on earth do you see an expansion of EU as being more power to EU? If anything it becomes much harder for the EU to make any decisions now, with more people who have to agree.

The last part is the reason for the upcoming constitution, which is supposed to make EU capeble of taking decisions again (atleast mathematically).

by Hans (not verified)

I will give you an example. We need to get more power to the European Parliament in order to get rid of Software-Patents and the like. The problem is that in the EU the commission and the executive branch is too strong.

Europe is not "the EU". You don't have to agree with the EU.

by c (not verified)

It's not necessarily more power to the EU though - it may well be a drain on the EU for a long long time. And! since it wasn't even a EU themed name I think you should just back the hell off.

by Claus Rasmussen (not verified)

It's the celebration of something great (the unification of Europe), not controversy (aka, Iraq/Military)

I don't like the European Union at all, and I don't see the extension of EU as something to celebrate. On the other hand It is my belief that I owe my freedom to the the US Army. So if you cannot thank the US Army in a release statement, then you can't celebrate the EU. Same rule for all, or no rule at all.

by Isaac C (not verified)

> On the other hand It is my belief that I owe my freedom to the the US Army

Impressive ...

by CE (not verified)

I can celebrate united Europe or atl east a less separated one because I has a reason for it.
I cannot thank the US army because I doubt that its current missions really help us.
OK, this isn't the fault of the US army (people who torture excepted), perhaps you could thank the soldiers for positive intentions and risking their lives.

by LWATCDR (not verified)

I think that if you read much of the thread that this statement has created that will see that it is just an opinon that the unification of Europe is great. You will also see that the the statment that is not a controversy is a false statment. The UK bashing is at best distasteful.

"It's the celebration of something great (the unification of Europe), not controversy (aka, Iraq/Military)."

Yea right.
Get over it folks I swear people spend so much complaining about the state of this or that I wonder how much time they spend actually doing instead of talking. I have code to write. To all of those that where civil thank you to thoses of you that where not.... Good day.

by David (not verified)

Well, the name may be a bit ill-advised in many ways, but each to his own.

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

KDE is a democratic body with developers with different (and sometimes conflicting) political opinions. Codenames are transient and a mark of the individuality of the hackers. My opinion is that if you are not insulting somebody or being rude or extremist, you can express what you want, even a political opinion.
So you can codename the version 1.x of KJabberWokky "I love the American Army" but not "Fuck the American Army".

The case, you are mentioning relates to a pro-Bush ex-developer wanting to have in "the about box" a political message that could look like it was the opinion of the whole KDE project. It had also the danger of spreading the idea that about boxes were the place to make political statements.

by André Somers (not verified)

I'm sorry, but... In what way does the expression "I love the American Army" differ from "Fuck the American Army" in it's political content, rudeness or extremist-ness*? In my opinion, declaring your love for that institution is the same as declaring your aversion against it. Both have a political meaning, both can offend other people.

In the Kexi case, I don't think there is a problem though. As stated before, it's just an issue of date and the fact that all the developers now live in the EU. That's not political as such, but merely factual.

*) not sure if this is the correct expression... English is not my native language.

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

No... saying "I don't like the French army" and "Fuck the French army" is not the same. With the second formulation, you express an opinion and insult a group of people.

by LWATCDR (not verified)

So if a developer released a program on July Fourth would you have a problem with them calling it God Bless America? I mean if they where from the US of course? Since there is nothing rude about God Bless America?

by CE (not verified)

Perhaps it should be formulated different ... something without "God bless".

by lwatcdr (not verified)

Why should it be? Just becuse you or others do not belive in God?
In the United States the freedom of religion is very important. Who should have the right to infringe on that right? Frankly this whole converstation has soured me on developing useing KDE/QT I have never liked the fact that I can not use QT in GPL software that runs under windows. ANd now I find that there are a bunch of thought nazis that want to tell a developer what they can or can not put in there abouts. I have no problem with terms like God Bless, Or someone saying they love the US Army "most of the people in the us army are worthy of respect", or Budda bless, or God Bless the queen, or my the EU bless you. I will put what I bloody well please in my about box of what ever program I release. I find it disgusting that most people here would defend to the death the right of someone to wear a shirt that has source to DeCSS but support censorship of what someone wants to put in the about box of there program.

by CE (not verified)

It's not that I don't believe in God (I do not in the way the Catholic church it has to be), but I think you have to separate between state and religion, especially if you say "the freedom of religion is very important".
People who believe in several gods won't like "God bless [s.o.]".
And moreover it would be improper in that context.

The problem you don't see is that everybody can do that (as long as it doesn't hurt the liberties of other people), but not as part of the KDE project.
KDE shouldn't have tastes of a special religion, political direction, etc.
I think they can release a personal version with such things, but not in the official sources.
Nobody's freedom is hurt.
This persons have to learn getting along with other people.

You call people who don't want to have (tendentially) right wing slogans in KDE thought nazis? (If you don't think that, read their website ...)
You sholud call them thought commies. ;-)

by LWATCDR (not verified)

If you believe that KDE should not have tastes of a special religion, political direction, etc then you should be the europen union name to be out side the limits of KDE.

As to calling KDE thought nazis instead thought commies only because comunists are not as describe by Marx totaly evil. It was at least an interesting idea that had at it's root the goal of imporving the standard of living for the masses. It has never really been tried and I feel would fail totaly. Nazis are just plain evil.

As far as people learning to get along you are right. As to infringeing on religion you are wrong. The idea of freedom of religion is not freedom from religion.
I would not be offended if someone would say "may Budda grant you enlightenment", "God Bless you", "may Allah watch over you", or "good health to you". My statments or the statments of other do not have any effect on anyone elses liberties. There has yet to be any country that has given the right to not be offened. Such a law would require each person to be forbiden to speak to any other person. I feel if you have a problem with the term "God/Budda/Allah/The Great Pumpkin" bless you then the problem is yours. As I said even though I would probably never put a message like "God Bless America" in one of my programs the lack of freedom that I see just sours me on KDE the KDE development community. As far as church and state.... Last time I looked KDE was not a Church or a state.

by Tom Chance (not verified)

KDE isn't democratic, by the way ;) It's more of a meritocracy, with the best coders deciding what happens.

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

KDE (like other Open Source projects) is democratic in the sense that it needs to grow a certain set of democratic rules like a democratic legal system that will protect our GPL licences and that the project promotes by its actions certain democratic values (freedom of association, freedom of diffusion of knowledge, freedom of opinion). I guess that we would be a good example of a working Popperian 'Open Society'.

by Tom Chance (not verified)

Hmm, *needing* to grow democratic rules, and *promoting* certain values in common with democracy doesn't make KDE democratic, unless you claim that it makes unequal representation of unequal participants, in the sense that users and experienced developers should have a different status ;)

Until KDE develops some rules, be they cultural or codified into some kind of written constitution or contract, it's a meritocracy, albeit a rather nice one.

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

You equate democracy with election which is not always the case. British judges are not elected like American attorneys. That does not make them less democratic. A democratic system can choose that certain actions or tasks does not reflect the will of the majority of the citizens if it is proved that it makes the system work better. The representation mecanism is a good application of this idea. Today, the French prime minister and parliament are hugely unpopular but until the next election they are still making the decisions and voting the law.

Technical decisions are better made by people with a thorough knowledge of the complexity of the system. For non technical questions, there is generally a rough poll on kde-core-devel and kde-policies to see where is the consensus or how to find one.

by Tom Chance (not verified)

Yes, you're right that you don't need elections, nor even representation, nor many of the features we commonly associate with "democracy".

However, I think the only sense in which KDE is democratic, and in which it makes decisions based on the will of all of its users rather than the will of the developers, is that developers have no incentive to make changes that most users will dislike, and so to stay competitive KDE must evolve in a way that its users want. But only to that extent, and I'd hardly call that democratic ;-)

by Jupp (not verified)

Europe is a vision of people, you don't have to like the European Union in particular. United Europe is far more than a institutional body. A European vision is no party specific message.

The US military is an object (a tool) of US government policy. I don't understand why one should sent a "political message" to a specific military body and its members.

I never understood this "Support our troops" issue. A soldier is an instrument that sells his freedom to the Government. And that's the reason why professional armys usually attract the scum of society. Sure, they have to be told that they are great guys. Everybody knows that it's a lie except them.

When you "support the US troops" today you support the US governments illegal occupation of Iraq. I guess Iraqi users of KDE will not be pleased by that. I am more on the side of the US and hope they will manage the mess, but it is very legitimate to support both sides.

When you call a release "United Europe" it does not sent a message against anyone who is not European.

by Thomas (not verified)

> When you call a release "United Europe" it does not sent a message against anyone who is not European.

Well, I think you just hit the mark of the essence of this whole topic. It's undertitled "United Europe" - and that's exactly reflecting, what some states of this old land called "Europe" did on that day. They united. The countries where most of kexis developers live in, united. And to second the previous poster: I think, the worst reaction that the words "United Europe" may provoke would be indifference/complete lack of interest.