KDE Commit-Digest for 4th March 2007

In this week's KDE Commit-Digest: KSplashX, a potential replacement for the KSplashML engine is imported into KDE SVN. Continued progress in the Solid and NetworkManager integration. More refinement, including better keyboard shortcuts, in Konsole. New keyboard layouts in KTouch. Icon and undo support in Step, the educational physics simulation package. KBounce becomes the latest game to move to a scalable interface and graphics. More work in KSquares, Konquest, KSpaceDuel and KReversi. KSudoku starts to be ported to KDE 4. Initial support for input fields and other form elements in okular. A co-ordinate grid and Wikipedia entries for cities comes to Marble. Further improvements, including the addition of Tree View functionality to the Dolphin file manager. New features in Mailody. Initial video support in Amarok, with heavy interface redevelopment underway for version 2.0. Last stages of an interface overhaul for the next version of KTorrent are completed. Proxy support added to the KDE Windows installation utility. Strigi is moved from playground to the kdesupport module.

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Comments

by MaX (not verified)

We need more Screenshots ;)

by Emil Sedgh (not verified)

yes, I Really agree on this!

by pascal (not verified)

No. This is work enough allready, besides this is not a "What's new in KDE 4" article. This is a service to the developers and the community at large that keeps everybody up to date with the broad look of development in the KDE world.
Surely this is already a lot of work for Danny.

Continue the fine job Danny.

by D Kite (not verified)

If you want screenshots, do them yourself and send them to Danny.

Derek

by Chani (not verified)
by hmmm (not verified)

I recently switched to Dolphin (for kde3) for my file-managing needs. And I noticed a few things :

- It is fast. starts faster than konq, and this is very pleasant, the views are fast, too, it feels a bit like the kfm of old.
- It is quite usable in general, the previews on the side are not distracting, for example.
- I regret that I cannot have the toolbar and address bar on a single line
- I re-added the "up" button to the toolbar, I find it extremely useful. But perhaps it is just me :)
- I have not found how to make "preview" the default view -- in fact, I find the existence of preview and icons to be slightly redundant, but I understand "preview" might cause problems on remote filesystems
- I found myself regretting I could not navigate the filesystem using only the breadcrumb widget (only a single level of subdirectories is shown)

All in all, I am quite happy that Dolphin goes in and I am sure any imperfections will have been ironed out before kde4. a huge THANK YOU to the devs.

by Lans (not verified)

Hope this doesn't start another Konqueror vs Dolphin flame war. Because we all know which one is the better. ;)

Joke beside, you can set the defaul view in the settings. I don't have Dolphin (nor KDE) available on this computer, but I think it should be in the "general" settings.
I didn't really get what you mean with "navigate the filesystem using only the breadcrumb widget", but please take a look here: http://static.kdenews.org/dannya/vol10_4x_dolphin_breadcrumb.png
(Please note that the screenshot shows a svn version)

by hmmm (not verified)

No, I don't want to start a flamewar... Really, I like both, and likely, I'll keep using both.

For the navigation, what I mean is that from the menu appearing on the screenshot, you cannot go to the sub-sub-directories (I might not be very clear, there...)

for the default view, you are right, I had missed it. Silly me :)

by Lans (not verified)

Sorry, it wasn't my intention to accuse you for being a flamewar starter; I just said that there was this possibility. If you got offended I apologize.

>> For the navigation, what I mean is that from the menu appearing on the screenshot, you cannot go to the sub-sub-directories

Hm, think I understand. The menu will show submenus on hover?
(For example, http://rafb.net/p/CYVOO687.html - well, shomething like this?)

by hmmm (not verified)

Yes, exactly. The problem of course is what to do when you have _lots_ of subdirs...

With this method, navigation becomes much faster.

I was looking for a bug tracker and a feature request system for dolphin, but I couldn't find anything on the dolphin website. The KDE bugtracker doesn't have an entry for dolphin. Does anybody know where to place bug reports/feature requests?

by Aaron Seigo (not verified)

there is a dolphin product on bugs.kde.org now. please try and submit bugs for kde4, though, as that's where development is focussed.

by Erik (not verified)

Where has the 90% rule been with this feature? Is it still asleep on this early monday morning?

lg
Erik

by Mark Kretschmann (not verified)

See AWN #7 for details. We're talking about *basic* video support for music videos and podcasts.

by Dan Leinir Turt... (not verified)

Essentially it is like what i've suggested before: When a video stream exists in whatever file you are playing, that video stream will replace the visualisation. Because, arguably, the video stream can be considered visualisation of the sounds coming out of your speakers/headphones :)

by Leo S (not verified)

At first, the statement that KSplashX doesn't even support text seems crazy, but if you think about it, Lubos is right. Those status messages, like "initializing peripherals" and such are completely useless. I've been reading them for so long that they somehow convinced me they are giving me important information. In fact, they don't mean anything, and as Lubos said, are not even accurate. All we need is support for a few steps so people can implement a progress bar. Honestly, I don't even need that, I just turn the splash screen off entirely anyway.

There might be some negative feedback from all those people that want super flashy splash screens. I don't see the point of making startup slower by displaying fancy animated transitions, but some people like that. I think KSplashX should replace the old KSplashML, and if people want programmable splash screens that can be a separate tool.

by superstoned (not verified)

Well, this seems the outcome of the discussion on the mailinglist, as far as I can see, so... :D

by apokryphos (not verified)

openSUSE has had this for ages, and I'll bet good money that we've got far nicer splash screens than the vast majority of other ones out there. They're wonderful.

I completely agree with Lunak on this -- if a splash screen is slowing down the actual startup it is completely failing in its function.

by ac (not verified)

So. Not only does (much of) KDE already run on Windows, but there also is an installer? How come I didn't know? And how usabe is this?

by ac (not verified)

USEABLE, I meant USEABLE of course ;)

by Mark Kretschmann (not verified)

I think you may have meant usable.

by superstoned (not verified)

Anyway, he probably didn't know because he didn't look good enough ;-)

by mart (not verified)

But... where's that perl dependency coming from?

I'd assumed that was just for the Makefile.am.in->Makefile.am conversion, but I guess that might not apply in KDE4 :o)

by ralf (not verified)

No, kde4 uses the cmake build system, wich does not need perl anymore.
The perl dependencies come from several perl scripts located in kdelibs.

kdelibs/kate/data/generate-php.pl
kdelibs/kate/tests/highlight.pl
kdelibs/kdecore/kconfig_compiler/checkkcfg.pl
kdelibs/kdeprint/cups/cupsdconf2/cupsdcomment.pl
kdelibs/kio/proxytype.pl
kdelibs/kio/useragent.pl

by Carlo (not verified)

grep perl `kde-config --expandvars --install exe`/*

by Hobbes (not verified)

I am impressed and very excited about KDE applications running natively under Windows. The screenshots with kioslave, KWrite and even Konqueror make the port somehow real.

I hope many developers (and users) from the Windows world will help KDE! This should be mutually advantageous. I hope the KDE community is large and strong enough to handle that. As it is written: "Others are listening to the kde-windows mailing list and doing support for people trying to enter KDE development, which is very important." Sure, this is very important!

Thank you for all!

by abc (not verified)

In Windows essential KDE bugs as buggy keyboard behaviour won't make a good impression.
But I think they don't occur with Windows version of QT.

by David M. Besonen (not verified)

what buggy keyboard behavior are you referring to?

by richlv (not verified)

i don't know what the original poster meant, but first thing that came to my mind was http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=137288 ;)

by NabLa (not verified)

Am I the only one that thinks that some of the new icons are a step backwards?

Examples:
http://commit-digest.org/issues/2007-03-04/moreinfo/638984/#visual
http://commit-digest.org/issues/2007-03-04/moreinfo/638215/#visual

Am I the only thinking that the new ones are gross?

by Robert Knight (not verified)

> Am I the only thinking that the new ones are gross?

Please try to be constructive. What useful information can an Oxygen icon developer infer from your post? Could you be more specific about what it is that you do not like.

The term 'gross' is also disrespectful, the artwork is mostly ( or perhaps entirely, I am not certain ) put together by people volunteering work in their spare time. Nuno and David in particular have been very busy.

by NabLa (not verified)

I'm sorry if that sounded rude, Robert, it wasn't my intention and I apologise.

In a masterpiece of summarisation, what I actually wanted to say was:

* They look very old fashioned. Soo 90's. Gnome-like. That's why I said "gross".
* The older icons seem easier on my eyes. For example, the old "home" button is more schematic and less detailed. I'm no graphic artist, but it occurs to me that the old button would look better at smaller sizes.
* I thought the oxygen theme was going to be kinda blue-ish, aren't those icons breaking that look'n'feel?

by Estevam (not verified)

I agree. "Old" icons are more appetizing to eyes.

by Estevam (not verified)

One more thing: less blue pls! Blue icons/themes/etc. are so Windows-like...

by Sutoka (not verified)

You need to come up with a better reason to not use blue than 'Windows-like'. I personally like blue and don't care if it was Windows-like, OS X-like, or even Gnome-like.

by Chani (not verified)

I have four or five different program icons on my toolbar (set to "small" size iirc). they all look like strange little blue blobs to me. let's see... they're actually konq, konversation, kontact, knetworkmanager, gvim, and the k menu. most of them are quite pretty, but at that size I can barely tell them apart and can only identify them from memory. at least knetworkmanager is dark blue, so it stands out a bit...
these days I don't even click them - I just hit alt-space and start typing the name of what I want.

and I have a vague memory of seeing a possible new kopete icon that was also a small blue blob. please, make program icons that don't all turn into little blue blobs at small sizes! :)

by functionalist (not verified)

Yes, icons should be in particular a functional piece of graphic design rather than beautiful small pictures!! Icons should be simple, clear minimal symbols, in they graphics principles similar to logos, they should be recognized instantly, the eye should resolve them without any pursuit. That tiny stupid details destruct the power of clear significance. Really, read some graphic design textbooks or ask a professional designers (but please, not again some self acclaimed jerks) this is very important thing, not a playground for personal "creativity".

by Daniel (not verified)

"Please try to be constructive. What useful information can an Oxygen icon developer infer from your post? Could you be more specific about what it is that you do not like. "

Don't worry. Oxygen is a group of people, who for reasons of copyright control and artistic egoism innately hate almost any suggestion that goes their way. So, mudslinging or constructive criticism - makes no difference whatsoever.

by pinheiro (not verified)

You are joking right? can only be, cmon.

by Sutoka (not verified)

I've been hearing what Daniel claimed everynow and then for a while now, though I haven't heard any reasoning to back it up (I think the closest I heard was someone saying that their changes was rejected).

Daniel, if what you say _IS_ based in reality, could you back it up with any evidence to point out that Oxygen is 'closed' (to outsiders) as you state it is?

by Anon (not verified)

I'm no artist (at all!) but here's my stab at it:

A while back, there was a revision of the buttons (which I can no longer find) where the icon in the centre was more grey than white, making the buttons look fairly metallic in a "gun-metal"-ly sort of way. There was something incredibly pleasant about clicking them - they looked like solid, metal studs and when you clicked on them you half-expected a satisfying "clunk!" sound to result from it! This was my favourite iteration, by far. The next had a much lighter centre icon which looks odd to me - it's "too bright", somehow.

The current ones, though, I do not really like - the arrows are very plain, and their blandness makes them look out of place amongst the other, more vivid and beautiful ones (check e.g. kfind's icon for a truly gorgeous one). Also, I consider the Back, Forward, Refresh, Home, Up etc buttons to be part of a group - the "navigate" group - and so expect them all to be similar to each other, which is certainly not the case here - the Home house does not fit in with the arrows at all.

Anyway, just my 0.2 pennies ;)

by Lans (not verified)

Yes! They removed the round borders.

Remember, when you want to take a leap forward, sometimes you have to take some steps backwards. OK, that was only something I made up, my point is:
Oxygen has still months to mature; I think it's good that they experiment with things (for example the dot in the icons you linked to), and even if it sometimes turns out to be a "failure", it could still be successful.

I think that the icons will be polished as times goes by.

by me (not verified)

I also think these icons are a big step backwards. I thought the same when our two icon gods replaced some older icons and announced it in the blogs ("we have a fight"). I liked the older versions a lot more.

by Ian Monroe (not verified)

In my experience judging icons based on their 128x128 size is just foolish. This isn't how they are going to appear and size really does matter.

So I'll just limit myself and say... whats wrong with a happy blue color?

by Louis (not verified)

I like the icons without the circular borders. Putting the symbols into a visual "button" is redundant and takes up extra space. Simple images are more easily recognizeable.

by Bastanteroma (not verified)

I prefer the freestanding black arrows to the ones inside the blue circle. They're effectively bigger, and seem sharp.

by litb (not verified)

i also think that those new icons he linked to doesn't look better. if they want to remove the circular icon look, (and i also don'T like round icons that much) they can draw other icons, but with smooth corners and not that many colours in it.
and choose colours which are heavy and clean to the eye and not so low and less-contrasting. for example, choose some plastic look, they look very good.

sorry, for my bad english, i hope you can understand me ;)

by Michael (not verified)

I agree. Don't like the new home icon either. What I would _really_ like to see (perhaps for KDE-5) is a voting icon theme called "Democracy" ;-)
That means:
1) Upload the CrystalSVG or even Oxygen icon theme to a server.
2) Anyone can now submit new proposals for specific icons and people vote on their preference.
3) Anyone can change their votes anytime just like in the bug system
4) Of course, some groups should be created i.e. left/right/up/down so they can only be voted and changed as a whole
5) A download function lets you download the current theme with all icons with the most votes at the moment.

I wonder what that would yield...

by pinheiro (not verified)

:)

by Darkelve (not verified)

Actually I like them both.