People Behind KDE: Boudewijn Rempt

Tonight's People Behind KDE interview is with the author of the most active program in KDE, Krita. Not only has he made the premier free software painting application he has also added the vital vertical-maximise feature to KWin. Find out what the most inspirational thing is for a hacker fixing his bugs in our interview with Boudewijn Rempt.

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Comments

by Martin (not verified)

Krita Rocks: http://www.koffice.org/krita/krita-fosdem2006.pdf

...but
where ist the Klik:// -able Krita SVN nightly version?

by pipitas (not verified)

"where ist the Klik:// -able Krita SVN nightly version?"
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Good question indeed ;-)

Martin, as soon as you can point me to someone who builds (nightly, or weekly, or monthly...) installable .deb binaries (or RPMs, .tgzs, .bz2s, .packages....) I will create a klik recipe that gives you the klik-able thingie.

The next update to klik://krita-1.5-beta is due in a few days. It will give you the Beta2 snapshot (the current ones are at Beta1 still). Maybe we can convince the packager of the Beta .debs to build updates every week until the final release. Let's see..

Cheers,
Kurt

by annma (not verified)

yes, indeed Krita rocks! Incredible to see how much development has been put in KOffice overall and in Krita in particular.
Thanks Boud for sharing a bit of your life with us, it's always nice to get to know people better. Congratulations on your lovely family!

by jos (not verified)

Absolutely true! I don't know of any other window manager with the cool middle-click-is-vertical-maximise feature.
Boudewijn, bedankt!

by Bram Schoenmakers (not verified)

I didn't know the feature existed until I read the interview yesterday.

by Morty (not verified)

Thats one of the great features that make the day easier, I use it all the time. It's brother, the left-click-is-horizontal-maximise feature, is not that usefull to me at least.

by Another happy {... (not verified)

Oh, horizontal-maximize is useful for Konsole etc., where long lines (think of compile logs) will then not result in line breaks :)

Thanks Boudewijn!

by Francis (not verified)

Amazing application, and one of the cases where the hacker (Rempt) seems like a truly genuine and very nice guy. :)

Reading the interview was refreshing; thank you for your hacking on KDE!

by foo (not verified)

Never heard of ALT+F2 being called the minicli before. Thought it was just a plain old run location dialog. This is one of the things I like about KDE, finding little bits and pieces of useful functionality now and then.

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

I'm wondering how and why Boudewijn became an Orthodox ? Being an Orthodox seems to me so opposite to the Dutch mind, especially in Deventer, the hometown of Gert Groote.

Being a Dutch Orthodox is a living paradox. Descendant of people who loved to smash statues of the Virgin Mary in churches, now believing there is something essentially holy in an icon.

Maybe we should start a theological debate between Olaf Schmidt, Boudewijn and Jonathan Ridell on 'Trinity, Transsubstantation and Free Software'

by Roberto Alsina (not verified)

Sure. And I can "moderate", since I think they are all wrong in the same measure ;-)

by Boudewijn Rempt (not verified)

Personally, I prefer to think "right in the same measure" -- but then, I'm a cup-half-full kind of person :-).

by Boudewijn Rempt (not verified)

I'm not particularly Dutch, my ancestry being compounded of equal parts of German, Danish, Swedish, Belgian, Swiss and some other nations, and Deventer is only my home town because I couldn't afford a house in Haarlem. But I've got nothing but the greatest respect for Geert Groote. And I always wanted my parents to detour through Chartres on the way home from our holidays in France.

But I've grown up in a family of church-avoiders (although the church they avoided going to was strictly the Nederlands Hervormde Kerk, others were out of the question). So when I started studying I started looking around. I studied Chinese, Pali, Tibetan and Sanskrit, but also visited the church of my forefathers -- the Nederlands Hervormde Kerk. In the end, Buddhism didn't agree with me, and I was not intellectually strong enough to feel at home in a protestant church, with all the through-the-mind only that I experienced there.

Orthodoxy was exactly right for me: welcoming, easy to get into (in a pleasingly antiquarian way), and still held out the promise of intellectual rigors to come (Greek! Russian! Old Church Slavonic!). Of course, I couldn't have predicted at the time that the intellectual rigors would keep me from attending the Libre Graphics meeting... I have to be in Brussels for a theology course the same weekend the LGM is being held:-).

by Charles de Miramon (not verified)

Thanks for this glimpse of the Itinerarium mentis Balduini in Deum. After you master Slavonic, I'll send you a Coptic grammar :-)

Pity Deventer, once the Mecca of the Netherlands and now a place where you end if you cannot afford Haarlem (which is the place where you end if you cannot afford Amsterdam) ;-)

We are all waiting for your blog about Brussels theology.

by Boudewijn Rempt (not verified)

Amsterdam is nice to visit and to buy books; but I have never entertained any desire to actually live there. Anyway, Coptic... Coptic has been on my list for some time.

by Janne (not verified)

I used Krita few days ago for the first time (made some quick and dirty mockups). And I can safely say that it absolutely kicks ass! Thank you Boudewijn for your hard work on Krita!

by Raphael (not verified)

The interview was very impressive and enjoyable to read, you are a fascinating human being. Thank you so much for being around.

by Ian Monroe (not verified)

I love the vertical maximize feature!

by marc (not verified)

While comparing boudewijns desk to mine it's hard to recognize that both serves for the same thing. But boudewijns desk looks definetly the way I want the desk of the devs look like who care for the applications i'm using. ;-)

by fast_rizwaan (not verified)

it is not possible to drag and drop a file/folder/selection from a maximized window to a non-maximized window. as soon as we click to drag, the window focus changes to the maximized window, hiding the non-maximized window.

try this:

1. open konqueror $HOME
2. open one more instance of say konqueror /tmp
3. maximize $HOME window
4. make /tmp window smaller and in front of the maximized window (*without* always on top feature)
5. just try dragging a file/folder to the small window from the maximized HOME window (which is visibile)
6. as soon as we click on the maximized window's content/file/folder to "start the dragging"
7. small window loses focus.
8. and now where to drop the item we've selected?

The whole idea of drag and drop is failed in KDE due to KWin focus on click.

The window focus should be changed only on "mouse button *release*" and not on click!

I did report a bug (with KDE 3.3, and it is not fixed yet even in KDE 3.5.1), perhaps KDE developers don't use drag and drop.