Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 14th Oct 2007 15:10 UTC, submitted by michuk
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Member since:
2005-07-07
No, I just meant to say a more powerful desktop environment makes one more productive. Like Windows Vista with all it's modern software is probably more productive than Windows 1.0 (even though I should probably compare KDE 1.0 with 3.5 and Gnome 1.0 with 2.22).
And I've just quoted myself already, so here again:
I'm only saying you could be more productive if the environment would implement features to 'shortcut' tasks - even if they sometimes could make things harder. You'll get used to it if you use your pc a lot, so a bit more complexity won't matter. (a BIT, not a lot, it should be as easy as possible - but no easier).
Let me give an example.
You want to save a file. There is another file with the same name there, but you don't want to overwrite it.
With KDE, you select it, right mouseclick -> properties -> change name.
With Gnome, you have to start Nautilus, navigate to that location, rename (and close it again).
It would be even more efficient if F2 would just work, but either way KDE would be faster.
Let's cut to the chase: This stuff adds up over a day (week, month, year), so use KDE and save time. If features and improvements like the above didn't matter, we'd all be using DOS 1.0 or Windows 1.0 or whatever.
I installed Gedit to test this, btw - how horrible. You have to click a button to get a locationbar, and there is no auto-complete! Boy, am I spoiled, with autocompletion(dropdownlist + automatic) in all text input fields... And why doesn't a doubleclick on empty tabbar not open a new document? Now on the other hand, firefox shows suggestions when doing spellcheck right here, Konqi can't do that. And Kwrite doesn't have tabs - those in Kate suck. Nothing is perfect, and if you like your Gnome, enjoy it.