
KDE 4.0.0
has been released onto the world.
"The KDE Community is thrilled to announce the immediate availability of KDE 4.0. This significant release marks both the end of the long and intensive development cycle leading up to KDE 4.0 and the beginning of the KDE 4 era." KDE 4.0 is the first release of "KDE 4", but take note that the developers have clearly stated that KDE 4.0 is
not KDE 4, but more of a base release with all the underlying systems ready to go, but with still a lot of work to be done on the user-visible side. Download it from the
KDE 4.0 info page.
Update: Screenshots.
Member since:
2005-07-06
One need not look any further than the comments under this story about KDE 4.0.0. Just scanning the first 8 comments I can't help but notice these
Comments on OSNews != developers, but people still feel that something significant is happening regardless. Go figure.
The claims are now migrating from 4.0, which people are beginning to realize is not really a walk-on-water release... to 4.1. I expect to be equally unimpressed then.
You can smell the palpable fear in the air..... ;-) The opposite of love is indifference. Go read up on how open source projects are developed as well, because this has been explained umpteen times. What are you going say when .5 or .6 is released, because this isn't really going to be all that far away?
I'll take compatibility with popular real world file formats, codecs, and web sites (many of the sites my customers need in in their business are still IE only) over desktop pizazz any day.
You might want to ask how those 'real world' file formats, codecs and IE-only web sites got there in the first place. If that's all that's propping up the software that you're using then, well, I would be worried.
The "miracles" which the KDE devs have performed have little to no relevance to my users.
It's not worth getting heated about then, is it? Reverse psychology ;-).
Go away then, because certainly between five and ten years from now, and quite probably less, if you're not using KDE on your Linux/Unix systems then you're going to be way behind.
Edited 2008-01-12 08:50 UTC