LinuxWorld: Why KDE Apps Have A Bright Future

In what started as a series on KDE versus GNOME, columnist Nicholas Petreley has concluded the run with an article that details why he feels the future for KDE/Qt is so bright. He points out a few shortcomings in KDE (like the lack of tabbed browsing in Konqueror or underlining of typos in KWord -- both in CVS!) and says he feels confident that the KDE developers will fill those gaps. "Put simply, the KDE class libraries and examples are a brilliant testimony to reusable objects done right. Features such as the sophisticated file dialog and toolbar functions are obviously a part of the standard KDE class library, which is why most KDE applications now include them. If you upgrade the file dialog, all applications that use it get upgraded automatically." Basically, it's a essay for the layman explaining why a good foundation of coding tools is important for the final product.

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Comments

by JL Lanbo (not verified)

I agree with all what Nicholas Petreley said, but I think there is something I would also would like to be written: SPEED. Actually, I don't care that some apps take long to boot, it's only konqueror (the file manager).

I never use konqueror to browse files because of its speed. I end up openning a konsole and doing it quicker.... :-(

Anybody has results/benchmarks of konqui with gcc 3.1?
Should be expect the amazing speed improvements that were announced back in time when developers said that speed problem was only due to the C++ linker?

Apart from that, KDE really rocks and I'm so happy with it ;-)

by Chemerer (not verified)

...and stability ;)
P.S. ...and MANY interface(usability) cleanups, and ...

by ellis (not verified)

I have compiled KDE 3.0.1 with prelinking and gcc 3.1. And the result is
30% faster not more. So as you, i don't use konqueror : when i want use konqueror, i launch it and go to have a coffe. My Konqueror starts in 5s
on my laptop (PIII 700). By Comparaison, nautilus 2 starts in 1/2s.
But i use many KDE and love Keramik...

by JL Lanbo (not verified)

4 seconds in my case. I also got a laptop, but 1Ghz.
Let me do some maths: 5 secs * (1 Ghz / 0.7 Ghz) = 5.7 secs. :-) your boot up should be slower. Just kidding :-) I guess this is not as easy as dummy maths ;-)

Actually it really surprised me when I counted the seconds. You tend to think that boots faster, but if you press the icon and start counting until you get the window it shocks you...

As I said, I don't care to wait for the web browser, or programs like kmail, but file browser should be fatser IMHO.

2 seconds until the window appears, on AMD K7 1GHz, without prelinking, with gcc 2.95

after 2 1/2 seconds the window is completely built up :-)

by Thomas (not verified)

4 seconds to start konqu as filemanager on my PII 266 with SuSE 8 (standard kde3.0.1 rpms) till the window appears. One second later files and folders
appear.

by /mrc/ (not verified)

i was very suprised when installing KDE 3.0.1 binaries for SuSe 7.2.
On my [email protected] GHz Konqueror starts almost instantaneously like much of
the other version 3 apps do too. Nice comparison between Version 2 and 3 apps
running in parallel shows a (massive) speed improvement to me.
(Konq. 2.2 took around 4-5 seconds and more to come up, no significant
difference if already cached)
I guess it's there with prelinking but i don't know any details.
To me, to be honest, it now sets the pace...anyone using Win****XP?
Forget about luna...

by kavau (not verified)

Nine @#$%&# seconds on a 400 MHz PIII laptop! It always seemed slow, of course, but until now I didn't realize just how slow things are! Actually, the speed issue is the only thing that ever made me think seriously of switching to a faster DE. But up to now I remained true to KDE, and I hope the developers will improve things someday.

by Alx5000 (not verified)

Well, mine takes as much 3 secs (Athlon 1.1 Ghz, precompiled RPMs, SuSE 7.2), but i deeply agree with improving usability. Some options are difficult (or even impossible) to set up.

by ealm (not verified)

Konqueror 2.2.2 used to take like 10 s on my box.
Yesterday I installed the new KDE 3.0.2 debs ('apt-get install kde' in debian), and Konqueror starts in amazingly 4s first session, and then 2s for next!!!

This is on a PII 300 with 160 MB ram so I'm deeply impressed. The DEBs are compiled with GCC 2.95.x without optimizations or pre-linking.

I cannot do else than recommend these DEBs to any debian user.
http://calc.cx/kde.txt

by JL Lanbo (not verified)

First it was a prelinking problem... and now is a distribution problem???
What comes after? :-P

I will try kde 3.0.2
2 seconds on a PII 300 looks impressing. I hope the 3.0.2 release finally hits the speed improvement !!!

by Navindra Umanee (not verified)

2s on my Celeron 400Mhz, 192M. My harddrive is relatively recent from last year. KDE compiled from CVS, no special optimisation, all debug stuff removed.

by Sad Eagle (not verified)

Odd; here, on my Celery 950 (using combreloc+glibc 2.2.5-post) with a hot disk cache, for release builds Konqueror starts in about 1.5-2 seconds (in fact, with MDK-GCC-2.96, it would be about 1-1.5 seconds, but I didn't try to optimize as aggressively with 3.1 yet, since I mostly doing debug builds).... Make sure you use --enable-fast-malloc=full on kdelibs flags (if you're on x86 Linux or FreeBSD), and --disable-debug for best performance of release builds; and of course using CPU-specific optimizations can be somewhat helpful.

Another data point: one of the Kopete developers has mentionned on IRC that for his P133, Konqueror takes 8-10 seconds to start... So something sounds weird about your 5 seconds..

by DavyBrion (not verified)

hmm, on my PIII 450 konqueror starts in 3-4 seconds on a system with gcc 2.95.3 using objprelink in QT and KDE3. on my other system (on the same box) with gcc 3.1 using combreloc prelinking it also takes about 3 to 4 seconds to start the first time, then once it's cached it takes 2 seconds tops.

I have a P4 1700 (ok, It's a faster machine, but is a normal one these days) and never experienced a startup time so long. My home dir has over 900 files and is opened in less than a second. Maybe you use it with the preview enabled for every file you have. Or need more RAM. I tried KDE3 when I saw the Gnome 2.0beta5 version (I used Gnome from pre1.0 to 2.0beta5, really disappointing) and was really surprised by the completeness and ease of use of KDE. It is far superior to Gnome in my opinion.

by LukeyBoy (not verified)

Whoah, P3/700 Mhz? My system is a P2/300 and it takes me less than five seconds to launch Konqueror (albeit not much less :-)

by Scott Baio (not verified)

Jeez, thread the damn thing already. I have 541 files in my home directory (ls -1 | wc -l) and there is NO REASON that the entire UI of konqui should be frozen while it parses these and draws the stinkin' icons. Sometimes I just want to open up a directory, then type "Alt-o subdir/subdir", but I have to wait for my home directory to be parsed every freakin' time. I can stand a lot of CPU wasteage and a less than optimal internal implementation; what I want is PERCEIVED speed.

by aleXXX (not verified)

Konqy shouldn't block and it doesn't block here, neither on the 1 GHz nor on the 200 MHz box. While loading the dir contents it ain't very responsive, but it doesn't block.
I'm not sure if the file previews in icon mode might block.

Alex

by Jesper Juhl (not verified)

On my box, 1.4GHz Athlon Thunderbird with 512MB DDR RAM and 10.000RPM Ultra160 SCSI disk and KDE 3.1alpha1 compiled from source with gcc 2.95.3 (no obj. prelink etc.) Konqueror starts in ~ 1½ - 2 sec.

by Bryce Harrington (not verified)

Edit your /etc/X11/XftConfig and comment out all directories that
don't exist, then restart X. Konqueror (and perhaps other apps) should
start up much faster (e.g., from 5 sec to 2 or less on a PIII/1Ghz).

Next question is how to get it from 2 sec to 1/2 sec...

Bryce

by Lucian (not verified)

KDE isnt for speed, is built for power and ease of use.

You cannot have speed and power along with ease of use.

Speed = hard to use commandline, or slim interface with mostly commandline.

Power = commandline.

Speed, Power and Ease of use = KDE, OSX, etc, when you try to bring power of the commandline into the GUI, you cannot expect it to be fast and easy enough for normal people to use,

KDE does its job. I like it, the stability does need work though, konq should never crash.

by Matt (not verified)

My take on KDE speed: There are two tasks that should start up really fast. They are both handled by Konqueror; web browsing and file management. They form the basis of today's computer use. That's why having Konqueror start up fast is so important. Don't kill me, but I can actually see the use of a "quick start" utility for Konq. I.e. a program loading some parts of Konq, making the start no slower than opening a new window in an already active Konqueror. It's not the best solution for everyone, but some of us have memory and CPU to spare for such a tool. That is if it's not possible in another way to make Konqueror start in a second or less. That would be even better.

by D.E. (not verified)

That's bul...

Speed and power CAN go along with ease of use. Take ROX-Filer for example, it's an very comfortable file manager, and it's fast, first time takes less than a second, and afterwards it loads INSTANTLY.

I use a Pentium III 450Mhz, with KDE 3.0.1, and Konqueror takes 4 seconds to open.

I really liked Kde3, but the only problem was the speed, I don't mind waiting ~10 seconds for it to load, but after it loads, I wanna work fast, Gnome apps load in less then 2 seconds, even Nautilus 2 load in 2 seconds, so don't give me this crap of speed and power with ease of use, IT'S POSSIBLE!!!

If kde would only take care of the speed problems it would be the leading desktop enviroment, because besides the speed it's perfect.

by John (not verified)

I use the rpm's for SuSE 7.2, on an Athlon 550 with 512MB mem. KDE 3.0 was very slow, rather buggy and consequently a disappointing experience.

KDE 3.0.1 feels like a whole new desktop. Much much faster and more stable too. I would even descibe it as snappy.

I just wish the KDE team would finally tackle the issue of making the cut'n paste user experience across KDE, consistant and user friendly. For instance, I can RMB cut/copy/paste while typing in this text - but there is no RMB copy option available for the text of the article I'm replying to.

Same absence goes for Konsole .. does Lars Doelle have a personal hatred of Menu based cut/copy/paste?

These omissions continue to blight the KDE user experience! And frankly are becoming more noticable now as KDE features increase.

by John Califf (not verified)

Actually I don't agree with much of what Nicholas Ptrelely said, because Kde has already won the desktop war, in my opinion. Congratulations.

As a former koffice developer I can't even use Kde because Kde is not a desktop for poor people. I'm sure that Kde 3 runs with acceptable performance on relatively new equipment, but I can't afford that right now. Maybe never. I could try to walk out of Walmart with one of those preloaded Lindows systems running at 1.2 Ghz. Hmmm... Would they let me develop software in jail as some kind of vocational rehabilitation program? It seems that criminals have more rights here in the USA than poor people.

You want volunteers for koffice but cannot even see that they get the tools needed to do the job. We are supposed to pay for the priviledge of contributing to your wonderful endeavour. If that isn't elitism, what is?

Recently I scraped up the cash to get my internet connection back, which was cancelled for non-payment over a year ago. That wasn't so bad as I was broken of an addiction to computers and got some fresh air for a change. For the past week or so I've been trolling the linux message boards some, and have finally mustered up the courage to drop by the old neighborhood. It doesn't seem to be a bad place to live. I just have to remember which side of the railroad tracks I live on, and to take off my hat in deference when nobility pass by.

You should be ashamed of all the filth and abuse you heaped on dep for expressing his opinions on some things. This is how you treat people who refuse to bow down to your sacred cows. The Kde project is not God, and I will never bow down to it either. It's just a software project. I think some of you owe dep an apology.

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

> I'm sure that Kde 3 runs with acceptable performance on relatively new
> equipment, but I can't afford that right now

i run it and develop for it daily on a PII-400. this is a several-years-old machine. what do you have?

> This is how you treat people who refuse to bow down to your sacred cows.

no, this how people who purposefully misrepresent the truth to satisfy personal grudges get treated. i wish he would've made some decent points because then the project could've learned something from it and responded to it with improvements.

by Carbon (not verified)

KDE3, with the same feature set enabled, is about as fast or faster then KDE2. There are new, cycle-eating features added with each release, but the vast majority of them can be disabled easily, in case you're hungry for more speed.

by John Califf (not verified)

by Aaron J. Seigo on Sunday June 30, @09:12AM
i run it and develop for it daily on a PII-400. this is a several-years-old machine. what do you have?

PI-200. I think performance would be ok for routine use with plenty of RAM, but not for a development box, especially for working on koffice. There is also the problem of disk space for intermediate files with a 2.5 G hard drive. So by the time you add all that, may as well buy a new computer. But what I now have works just fine so long as I do not use kde.

Many people who do use Linux and many others who might want to can't use Kde 3 on perfectly good equipment because of hardware and resource requirements. That doesn't have much to do with Kde 3, more with changes in Kde 2.0. I did find Kde 3.0 to be considerably less responsive than 2.x, though, especially in starting apps. I don't think that matters much for people with new hardware who may actually find Kde 3 faster. Konqueror does use less memory.

To suggest that someone work on koffice with a setup like mine is ludicrous. I did that for some time, so it can be done. However, I don't want to further argue the point of why koffice developers need to have decent setups if kde is indeed serious about developing and maintaining koffice. There might be quite a few developers with more to offer koffice than I had similarly limited by hardware. Kde does not seem interested in attracting people to koffice work or doing anything to make it easier for them to stay involved.

> This is how you treat people who refuse to bow down to your sacred cows.

no, this how people who purposefully misrepresent the truth to satisfy personal grudges get treated. i wish he
would've made some decent points because then the project could've learned something from it and responded to it
with improvements.

Some of the points were good ones. Others seemed to stem from a misunderstanding of technical issues about klipper, etc., and some were as you say motivated by personal grudges. People have a right to express their opinions, dissatisfactions and grudges. The response from the person who represents the Kde League just confirms the allegations dep made about immaturatity and vindictiveness among some kde people. Anyway, I do not feel that a computer journalist should be a mouthpiece for Kde or Gnome or any project. Evidently dep needed to break away from being a Kde mouthpiece.

This reminds me of vicious personal attacks on Richard Stallman, who may not be all here in some ways. I don't think he's capable of responding to personal attacks in kind, which is to his credit. Dep may be capable of doing that but won't stoop to the level of filthy namecalling kde sychophants indulge in. Surely dep realizes that his article was not very well thought out, and is wise enough not to compound the damage. So dep is going to use and report on Gnome now, instead of kde. Big deal.

Finally, nothing in dep's article is going to damage kde. It may even get more people interested. Anyone who reads the article will understand that dep has personal issues, as most of us do. That is not the same as indulging in vicious personal attacks which seek to destroy the other party. People who do that may have to live it down with years or even lifetimes of regret.

by Anonymous (not verified)

In case you didn't notice, Petreley has criticised KDE too, but nobody is jumping on him. There's a reason for that.

by Kuba (not verified)

I have got a used HP Kayak XV in perfect condition so far, w/ 2xPII300, 256mb ram, Seagate scsi 10k RPM 6 gb hard drive for $260, salestax included, bought in a brick-and-mortar store (ack, foam-and-chipboard here in U.S. ;-). I doubt you can buy it that cheap outside of U.S. I also imagine that a hard-enough-working pizza delivery driver ($17 before taxes in some places) can afford to buy that after a couple of months, if he/she doesn't have to pay previous credit card debt...

I didn't have problems working on kdevelop on it (using kdevelop itself ;-). One doesn't have to wait for compiles to finish, that's what multitasking systems are for...

After some tweaking, I even made qt applications work reasonably on a 486/100 notebook with 640x480/8bit mono display and 24 megs of ram.

Single-processor 300MHz systems with at least 64 megs of ram and a tweaked linux kernel should be enough for development work if you care to set-up things minimally in the first place (recompiling XFree without most of the extensions, and optimized for *size* (not speed) is the first step, I admit).

That's my experience, your mileage may vary, obviously.

Cheers, Kuba

by Christian Parpart (not verified)

Well, in my case, Konqi just needs about 1 second to get started. This seems quite fast but it may be because I'm using an AthlonMP(2 CPUs) 1.5 GHz with 1GB RAM, although, yes, I'm using a completely gcc3.1 compiled system (including KDE CVS).
So it may be either the hardware or gcc3.1 wich lets me feel to have a quite fast KDE.

Cheers,
Christian Parpart.

by A person (not verified)

That raises an interesting point.

On my P4-1.5GHz, Konq takes forever and a day to start, either as a browser or a file manager.

On my dual P3-750Mhz, Konq loads super-quickly.

Why is it that dual processors speed it up so much? Does that indicate that perhaps there might be a way to parallelize/thread the startup tasks to achieve the same speed on a uniprocessor machine? I am not a developer so that could be an entirely clueless suggestion, but I thought I would mention anyway.

There is something very wrong with your first setup. Konq is fast on my years old computer.

by Peter (not verified)

I am surprised how many people use console for file work, thought I was a GUI dummy:)

Yes the konqueror startup is a problem for me, but I do a lot of head/tail, find, and grep stuff, which is _really_ difficult in konqueror. I also make up temporary scripts, build long command lines, and switch user accounts, too, but I don't know how this 'console work' translates into a GUI.

Windowing konq and kate helps, but can become clumsy - particularly with copy/paste sometimes working X11 style and sometimes Windows (I like to switch pasting between ctl-v and middle-click, and mouse-select doesn't always copy). Replacing a simple command line with several windows is not the way to go. I also get annoyed when the right-click menu doesn't have what I expected.

Konqueror is my web browser and file transfer manager, _but_ the .part file is often rejected by the remote server when uploading (partitularly html) docs, so that also worries me.

Anyway, kde 3.0.4 (release sources) gcc 2.95.3, glibc2.2.3, 5s on 128mb/256mbswap 800Mhz asus,trio3d (S3virge) from click to final display. Oh wait, that displays local web server page. 'k 4 secs then, maybe:)

I had a power Windows user, who had _never_ seen Kde before, jump on my machine and show a newbie how to send email (I have single-click enabled). Also had a dummy windows user download internet .mp3 and play them on xmms. He remarked later,"So if it runs Mediaplayer, can I install Reason on it, my machine is much slower than yours?" I gave up explaining the issues and wine when he interrupted, "Sure that's great, but I'd prefer a beer, thanks!"

So what's with this Kde useability thing I've been reading about?

by Chris Parker (not verified)

Yes, yes, yes. That is the reason why I am typing this from a GNOME 2 desktop in Galeon. I love KDE, and I think that for my wife it is the way to go, but for bloated desktops GNOME 2 is much faster (Don't get me wrong, I like my bloated desktops - blackbox and the like are just too limited for me).

I have not compiled KDE 3 against gcc 3.1, but if there is a significant improvement I might switch over - and I develop most of my GUI apps in Gtk(wish Inti hadn't died).

This is in no way to be a flame towards KDE developers, just an observation. KDE does rock as a desktop, and - like I said - my wife finds it very useable.

by Somebody (not verified)

Oh, I would like to have speed, too. But this sort of drugs are still illegal in Germany.
I don't think this speed discussions are necessary, I've read posts on other sites where people express their hate on the new GNOME (2.0), because not everybody seems to have the promised accelerations.

by KDE User (not verified)

As Earlier posted by Asif Ali Rizwaan with the title "Konqueror Failed a Test" with KDE 2.2.x's Konqueror. I have tested again and found that Konqueror and KDE just get non-responsive if you open the 3.9 mb english to hindi (html)dictionary. If you open that with Kwrite there is no such trouble. Even Mozilla 1.0 hangs, so are Opera 6.03

http://dot.kde.org/1005758245/1005822570/

And the HTML file is at:

http://sanskrit.gde.to/hindi/dict/eng-hin.html

My System Configuration:

Celeron 622Mhz
128 SDRAM
20 GB HDD
RedHat 7.2 with KDE 3.0
Nvidia TNT2 32mb
4G / partition
848 swap partition

It seems that KDE ignores stability alerts :(

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

on my pII-400 w/256Mb of ram running KDE from CVS with 5 konqi windows, compiling kdebase (in my 15 session konsole window), running kmail, ksirc, several kwrite windows, etc, etc.... it loaded just fine ... scrolling is beautiful as well ... before loading the memory pressure on this system was pretty high already due to the compile and other apps open so konqi didn't have a lot of room in that 256Mb to play with and it did just fine.

the only slow thing about it was how slow the file downalded as the server its coming from doesn't seem to be the best place to be getting 4Mb files from.

so i suppose you can happily put this ersatz flaw aside now.

> It seems that KDE ignores stability alerts :(

you mean like all the bugs that get closed on bugs.kde.org on a daily basis?

whatever.

by gunnar (not verified)

i agree to the speed issues above.
i really love kde and i use it daily, but

1. i am using the console (starting konqui takes too long!)
2. i am using mozilla, because a. see 1. and the missing tabbed browsing (witch is in cvs and coming soon)

hoping the speed problem will be adressed soon. for me, its one of the biggest problems of kde.

greeting from an very satisfied kdeuser
-gunnar

btw: congratulation to brasil !!!!!

by Maarten Romerts (not verified)

IF object-prelinking-embedding makes the KDE-sestem for at least 30 procent faster, why don't we enable this by default in KDE? If we already have the technology to make it a lot more faster, what is the reason for not using.
The devolpers should face the fact that KDE is to slow. At hate to say this but compared to Windows ME and 2000 the MS-software starts up a lot faster and works much quicker and nicer.

The reason I use Linux and KDE as desktop is because I like the philosophy of open-source, but in functionality and performance Windows 2000 is better, when using it as a productive desktop.

Hopefully the KDE-developpers are goiing to take the performance problem seriously, instead of hiding themselves behind all sort of tecnicall blabla!!

To be short: if the are technologies to improve the performance, the use them. Object-prelinking-embedding was already available before KDE 3.0, but not enabled in KDE. I like to know why.

Some info about my system:
Mandrake 8.2
AMD 450 mhz
512 mb sd-ram
Geforce2 graphicscard
20 GB harddisk

1) Object prelinking works, as far as I know, only for Intel x86 systems. The KDE user- and developer-base isn't comprised purely of x86 machines.

2) Object prelinking has been linked to some stability problems: just do a Google search and you'll see what I mean.

3) Despite how much faster it can make things, objprelink is nothing more than a hack, and shouldn't be relied upon like so in the future. The real work needs to be done in the dynamic loader itself.

If I have to choose between system speed and system stability, I choose the latter. There's no point in having a system go fast if it's not stable -- Windows ME proved that. ("Boots 50% faster!", Well, fine, but if it crashes 250% as much as Win98 did, there's no point...)

And KDE HAS been taking the performance problem seriously, for quite a while now. Do you know what kdeinit was designed to do? Haven't you looked through the KDE mailing list archives? Have you looked at Waldo Bastian's analysis of the bottlenecks in the linker for C++ systems, which is the first hit if you do a Google search for "Waldo Bastian" "Link"?

I guess not.

by Evan "JabberWok... (not verified)

Regarding 1, it's not just for x86, it's a gcc specific hack. It's addressing a problem in GCC, specifically, how it handles objects in C++ code.

One of the really nice things about KDE is that it works across all Posix systems - AIX, Solaris, BSD, Apple's OSX, etc. Most have compilers that handle C++ code efficently. GCC does not (yet). So, objprelink is pretty much a bandaid on a GCC problem. And yes, the GCC team is working on making it handle objects in a better manner.

--
Evan

> IF object-prelinking-embedding makes the KDE-sestem for at least 30 procent faster, why don't we enable this by default in KDE?

Because it's incompatible/obsolete with glibc 2.2.5 and recent binutils, read http://objprelink.sf.net/.

by snorkel (not verified)

Kde may be a little slower, but it is far more usable than gnome 2 hands down.
On my athlon 1800xp everthing is snappy and I have gnome2 installed as well, and I never use it.

Tony Caduto

by fuck_you_kde_we... (not verified)

(previously banned abuser)

by Moritz Moeller-... (not verified)

Both the links you give do not point to any factual statements.
Both fail to point out any shortcomings of KDE, but attack the developer community.

dep is a person who thinks KDE is developed by Nazi Germans. What can you respond to such a person? How can one take crisizm of a Desktop Environment serious if the basis of the critisizm is such an absurd notion?

I do not know sisiphus ([email protected]), but I think calling the justified pride of the KDE developers arrogance and telling them that Gnome is "a work of art" because of "great user manuals", "comprehensive accessiblity" and killer "international support" is no way to improve KDE or even Gnome2.

by SilentStrike (not verified)

resist how he keeps calling inertia a force?

Repeat after me.

inertia is not a force.
inertia is not a force.
inertia is not a force.
inertia is not a force.
inertia is not a force.

by Joseph B. (not verified)

I think that KDE apps and KDE itself will have a bright future as long as attention to overall UI issues is kept and even increased. Right now, KDE3.0x still has some "geekish" feel to it, albeit way, way, way less than abominations such as TWM and FVWM (sorry if I offended fans of these WMs). While KDE is no longer a primitive environment like it was in v1.0, right now what the end-user sees has become a bit too complex for its own good.

A good hard look at the environment, from the "K menu" to various items in the Control Centre, including various standard dialog boxes should be had to see where there is an overload of options & features. Sometimes, really, less is more.

I'm not saying make KDE 3.x less flexible and feature-rich, just make the UI less overwelming (sp?). It's just a question of how things are presented to the user (remember, not all users are developpers).

by Maarten Romerts (not verified)

Perhaps KDE could use hidding-options in the menus (like the hidding-option in the menu of Kprint). With this concept we can make thing much more simpler (by shielding the advanced options), while preserving its flexebility at the same time.

by Joseph B. (not verified)

Bingo. You got it.

In many places, there are surely some core options & features that the end-user *must* see, while there are others that only confuse quite a few users (the advanced ones). That would be a good approach to take.