KDE 4.3 “Caizen” is out!

Plasma on KDE 4.3

Plasma on KDE 4.3

The KDE team has released the latest iteration of their famous cross platform desktop environment. KDE 4 is a desktop environment that has great potential as it has embraced some really powerful and state of the art technologies as its pillars e.g. nepomuk, akonadi, Plasma, Qt4 and others. Also its creators have a really good vision of where they are heading and how they will keep the desktop from becoming obsolete in this Web 2.0 world.

I’ve been using KDE 4 on and off since its highly controversial 4.0 release. The 4.0 release and its subsequent 4.1 release were very immature and definitely weren’t ready for mass consumption. Although the developers claimed that these releases were not meant for regular users maybe they should have advertised that fact better and maybe they should have the 4.0 numbering. The 4.2 release was widely regarded as finally something for “regular users” and “what should have been the 4.0″. In my opinion not even the 4.2 release was ready for prime time. Many annoying bugs were still present, some caused by distributions, others due to driver issues and others were just plain KDE bugs. Also many KDE 3 apps still weren’t ported to 4 which caused a void that had to be filled with GNOME or KDE 3 applications, not a pretty thing.  But with this 4.3 release things are looking pretty good. I’ve been using this 4.3 release since this first beta and I’ve seen it grow and mature. And I have to say that this release is what I would finally label as a good release for mass consumption of general users i.e. not developers, hobbyists and enthusiasts, as long as the distributions don’t screw it up. I’m not saying this release is without problems or bugs, but they are not that noticeable and prevalent as before.

Something that has impressed me a lot about the KDE developers its the speed on which they develop the KDE environment. If you compare the 4.o release to this 4.3 release they are worlds apart. The things they have achieved in such a short amount of time is astonishing. Maybe it is due to the technologies they are using or maybe its just due to growth in the community and energetic developers.

The KDE community has fixed over 10,000 bugs and implemented almost 2,000 feature requests in the last 6 months. Close to 63,000 changes were checked in by a little under 700 contributors. Read on for an overview of the changes in the KDE 4.3 Desktop Workspace, Application Suites and the KDE 4.3 Development Platform.

Although the initial releases were somewhat half baked this 4.3 release is in my opinion a demonstration that the platform is starting to mature and that from this point on we will start seeing even more great innovations and progress on the desktop. 4.3 was released and I already can’t wait for 4.4. I’m sure 4.4 will rock big time. The GSOC student’s work will be merged in, some of the new ideas thought up on the GCDS will be implemented and this will be the first release using gitorious for development. Some of the things to look forward in future releases are the materialization of the  “social desktop” and the “semantic desktop” within KDE.

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Posted on August 4, 2009 at 4:27 pm by climatewarrior · Permalink
In: Linux, Technology, Uncategorized · Tagged with: , , ,

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