KDE 4 Krash Packages on Mac OS X, SuSE and Kubuntu

Packages for the first KDE 4 developers snapshot "Krash" have started appearing. Most exciting is packages for a whole new platform, Mac OS X. More details are on Benjamin Reed's blog. For the traditionalists packages are available from openSUSE and Kubuntu. If you are a KDE application developer, this is the easiest way to start porting your application to KDE 4. Meanwhile work is continuing on KDE on Windows where developers have successfully got all of kdelibs compiling. Finally the KDE Women project has a new tutorial to get you started in KDE4 development.

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Comments

by chris (not verified)

Gentoo?

Probably there are Fluid Ebuilds , but i want some easy to use ones.

specially crafted for Krash, so there are no compile probs

by blragh (not verified)

"but i want some easy to use ones"

You want it easy? Then why are you using Gentoo? :-D

by c (not verified)

gentoo is easy , at least for me :-)

its always a matter of what you have to do by hand in a distro and what is done automatically, and most stuff on gentoo is working out of the box so i think that is called an "easy distro"

Can't start any KOffice app. Here is the error message:

dyld: Library not loaded: /opt/kde4/lib/libkabc.4.dylib

Installed kdesupport, qt, kdelibs, kdebase and koffice. Is something missing ?

Ok... Seems to be in the kdepimlibs :)

by Boudewijn Rempt (not verified)

Yes, kdepimlibs is now necessary for KOffice.

Just a warning, KOffice is basically unusable at this point; they're still doing a lot of infrastructure work for the kde4 version. :)

by LMCBoy (not verified)

Are there torrents for the OSX files? I'm grabbing the "everything" dmg, which is close to 2 GB! BT would definitely be gentler on the fink servers...

by chris (not verified)

come on, hdtv movies got 9gb now days.

by Stephan Boeni (not verified)

The 2GB download limmit is a well known problem on windows. Does OSX has the same restriction?

by c (not verified)

is well known? you mean WAS well known

by Ben Morris (not verified)

It's not a download limit, it is (was) a file system limit on the largest possible file in FAT32.

It doesn't apply to NTFS file systems, which are far more common now (although until recently, many dual-booters found it necessary to keep FAT32 as has been easier to write to from Linux, normal users of Windows XP have basically all been on FAT32 for ages, as it is the default FS in Windows XP).

Come on, there are better things to poke fun at Windows for ;)

by Sean (not verified)

"NTFS file systems, which are far more common now (although until recently, many dual-booters found it necessary to keep FAT32 as has been easier to write to from Linux,NTFS file systems, which are far more common now (although until recently, many dual-booters found it necessary to keep FAT32 as has been easier to write to from Linux,"

I realise this is off topic but what's changed recently which would allow linux to boot on NTFS?

by mmebane (not verified)

That would be ntfs-3g. AFAIK, it doesn't allow one to boot from NTFS, but ne can now have their Windows partition be NTFS and write to it from Linux.

by DJGM (not verified)

Quote:
"Windows XP have basically all been on FAT32 for ages, as it is the default FS in Windows XP."

Wrong. NTFS is the default filesystem in Windows XP/2000. FAT32 was the default for Windows 9x/Me.

Try to get your facts right before posting things you know very little about in public forums.

by cm (not verified)

Oh, come on, shut down your flamethrower.

His whole paragraph doesn't make any sense unless you assume that he has made a simple slip and has written FAT32 instead of NTFS the second time, by accident ("many dual-booters" use FAT32 as opposed to "normal users" who use FAT32; does that make sense to you?!).

He's perfectly aware of what the default file system type for WinXP is.

by Jordan (not verified)

I know this reply is late. Initial versions of Windows XP Home Edition (Prior to the Service Pack 1 and 2 slipstreams) did not seem to even -offer- NTFS as far as I remember, using FAT32 by default whenever possible, and then making NTFS the immediate default for partitions that were too large for FAT32. (This is only something like, 30GB maximum for these partitions!) They just offered the option to "format" your entire hard disk, assuming that the average home user had no real grasp of how that works. Microsoft has rescinded since then though, making NTFS the default and allowing some sort of partition selection. So, if you're speaking of initial machines featuring Windows XP (Like the later AMD TBird-based OEM boxes, and early P4 and very early Athlon XP OEM boxes) - and the user has the Windows XP home edition, then chances are they do indeed use FAT32. Modern boxes don't use it at all though.

by Ranger Rick (not verified)

I've switched everything to torrents; should work now. :)

by Scot (not verified)

Are the OSX builds native toolkit or X11 ?

by Ranger Rick (not verified)

Native Qt/Mac (well, as native as Qt/Mac is ;)

by aaa (not verified)

I think I like the new text under icons policy, but wouldn't text to the right of icons (with some suitable borders around icon + text) be even better? It would preserve vertical space and make more efficient use of the horizontal one. On the current screenshots there is lots of empty horizontal space on toolbars, with vertical space taken up instead of it.

by Louis (not verified)

I've been using "Text Under Icons" for a while now. What I've found to be quite effective is to find a good, readable font, and use a smaller point size. This cuts down the amount of dead space. Maybe changing the default font and size would help. Of course, that doesn't help the vision impaired :-( but you may want to try it.

by fred (not verified)

I agree with that, the new text under icons policy hurts those with 1024x768 or less (yes i still have 2 monitors only capable of 800x600). One reason I use KDE instead of GNOME is that under GNOME every widget seems sooo big so that my 1024x768 screen looks like a 800x600. (I don't intend to start classic flame war again - just express what i feel). IMHO M$ Windows has a pretty good usability where the widgets and text fit nicely even in 800x600 screen. Btw - KDE rocks!

by David R. Litwin (not verified)

I am using Debian Sid (unstable) and am wondering if the Kubuntu packages are Debian compatible.

Thanks.

by Jonathan Riddell (not verified)

No, since Ubuntu has no binary compatibility guarantees with Debian and it uses packages of qt-copy that are only available in the Ubuntu archive.

So Ubuntu took over Debian. Who will overtake Ubuntu? Kubuntu?

Suse presented this "build server" stuff. Is it used by KDE? Why are no Fedora or Mandriva packages provided? Does anyone know who to get it run there?

by Vlad Blanton (not verified)

Ubuntu did not "take over debian". Whatever that means, I assume your saying that Ubuntu doesn't give anything back to debian. Which is false. I had read that Ubuntu sends the largest amount of upstream patches to debian than any other debian derivative. Also, taking over would actually mean that Ubuntu's administration has taken over debian's administration, which is entirely false.

Vlad

by Luke Plant (not verified)

Calm down, I think he/she just meant 'overtook', as implied by the rest of the sentence :-)

>>Why are no Fedora or Mandriva packages provided?

You should ask Fedora and Mandriva that question.

KDE only releases source code, the distributions or users of distributions create the binary packages for the different flavors of Linux.

So, if there are nog packages for fedora or mandriva, then no one from those distributions took the time and effort creating them.

>>Does anyone know who to get it run there?

You can compile it from source ;)

I much prefere the fedora and mandriva way to do. This release is for developers, they know how to get and compile the source.

by waiting (not verified)

Why does KDE4 take so long?

Is there a clear plan available, or is it just drifting away indefinitely?

What needs to be implemented and finished in order for someone to say that it's ready to ship?

What is KDE4 actually? What does it focus on? Does it focus on something?

by ale (not verified)

An exiting new thing about KDE4 is that it's based on Qt 4.

This means that all KDE apps will be available for alla platforms supported by Qt 4, like Windows.

by waiting (not verified)

Well most not all, it depends on whether they use X11 specific things or not. But that's beside the point. Higher portability is obviously not by far the only target for KDE4. I wasn't asking what new things are planned, I was rather wondering whether there's not too much planned without clear priorities and an efficient release criterion.

by Debian User (not verified)

Is even has the best possible release criterion to users. "It's released when it's ready. Sooner if you help."

The KDE 3.x series is so good that we can allow for a longer time frame to release KDE 4. No need to panic if it takes longer. There are indeed plans for times to release KDE 4, but these are based on the experience and knowledge of the job from the past. They need not hold true.

The goals are increased plug/play support in applications, e.g. in networking, like my mail program suddenly knowns if it's ok to attempt to send email now.

A new sound framework to accomplish more in this domain and make it easier to accomplish the easiest things.

A integration of desktop and taskbar.

Some more usability and better internal structures.

Cleaning up things that have only been kept for compatability and where better things are now available.

Too much? Probably, but we will never know how things would turn out in the long run, if the plan had been otherwise. My impression is that everybody is having fun, so the most important objective has been reached already.

by Thiago Macieira (not verified)

It's taking long because there is more work than people available to do it. We're trying to clean up the API and do the reworks that we want to do because this is our only chance in 5 years.

by waiting (not verified)

> there is more work than people available to do it.

Then why not convert more work to less work through focusing on what's important? (And deciding that first of all) It's the only chance in five years, but if the reworking takes two years itself, then maybe some things are already good enough (although not perfect) and don't need to be reworked. I admire the perfectionism of KDE, but I don't know whether it's really practical.

What I mean is that a plan like , for instance

- port to Qt4
- port to windows and mac os
- clean up APIs but only where experience has proven them dirty (i.e. don't fix what's not really-really broken)
- something instead of arts (arts is really-really broken)
- new HIG
- new workspace
- desktop search
- and this is all, when we have it do the release.

And this is probably already too much. HIG and desktop search can be added at 4.1 without breaking compatibility (let's just assume, I don't really know), so drop them for now and focus on the rest.

(What I mean is not prevent someone from working on them now - people work on what they want to anyway, but realeasing independently of dropped or postponed targets.)

Without a strategy like this I fear it might take even longer than spring 2007. Remember Sarge? It can happen. I'm not being absurd.

by fur (not verified)

Now, the real answer is of course:

- recruit more developers.

When hacking KDE4 becomes easy and is explained to many we will improve speed.

by Anne-Marie Mahfouf (not verified)

and the mentioned tutorial makes hacking KDE4 easier :-)
it refers to a doc on develop.kde.org which explains how to build KDE4 as a new user. it has been used by newbies with success. so it is easy to start looking into kde4, even for new comers! please join the fun and participate to this exciting adventure!

by Jordan (not verified)

KDE 4 appears to be a rather complex redefinition of the "Desktop Paradigm" - so it's probably going to take for-bloody-ever. Not to speak for the KDE developers, as I am not one of them... but this is what it appears. I'm willing to wait. KDE 3.5.5 is a lovely desktop environment, i'm running Beryl/Emerald on top of it. Alt-tab features and a feature like OS X's "expose" add yet more to it. Plus, it looks pretty. KDE 4 will be out whenever it's out, and it'll change the way you think about your desktop. I used to be a big fan of GNOME/GTK, but it looks like the development is somewhat stagnant. GNOME 2.16 is not different from when I used 2.4 some years ago, except for a slight performance improvement, being less ugly, and having a decent tree-viewing file manager. Oh, and they keep adding little insignificant desktop-accessory apps.

by Cavendish Qi (not verified)

I had installed all packages from
http://software.opensuse.org/download/repositories/KDE:/KDE4/SUSE_Linux_...

How can I run KDE 4 in my SuSE 10.1? Thx.

by Kevin Kofler (not verified)

You're not supposed to _run_ KDE 4. These packages are there so you can _develop_ programs for kdelibs 4. But unless you really like bugs, KDE 4 isn't your everyday desktop right now. (If it was, the 4.0.0 release would be out already!)

I'm considering trying to package the KDE 4 snapshots for Fedora to make it easy to develop against them, but I must say the prospect of getting lots of questions like yours discourages me. :-(

That said, the SuSE packager provided instructions for the use of his packages on his blog, I'm sure you'll find them if you look well enough.

by Cavendish Qi (not verified)

Ths. It's a "developers snapshot". I will wait for new release of KDE 4. ^_^.

Can somebody help me here? I was downloading the torrent for the everything-20061112.dmg file and it's been stuck at 99.9% for the last few days. Thanks.