Linked by Rahul on Sat 11th Oct 2008 01:53 UTC
Linux PolishLinux has an interview with the KPackageKit developers. PackageKit is a abstraction layer over the different Linux package management tools. It is primarily designed to unify the graphical tools and provide a consistent distribution neutral framework for application developers to install add-ons as well. This project was initiated and continues to be maintained by Red Hat developer Richard Hughes who also wrote the initial GNOME frontend to it, called gpk-application. Multiple backends currently exist and it is the default for Fedora and Foresight Linux already. Other distributions including Ubuntu, OpenSUSE, Mandriva, and Gentoo are actively participating in the development of different backends. A KDE interface has been under rapid development recently and just did a 1.0 release last week. This interview provides more details.
Permalink for comment 333236
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE: hopeful but skeptical
by Thom_Holwerda on Sat 11th Oct 2008 03:46 UTC in reply to "hopeful but skeptical"
Thom_Holwerda
Member since:
2005-06-29

While I'm talking, is anyone else annoyed with the look-at-me-I'm-like-Apple way in which certain recent efforts have adopted the *Kit naming convention? As if choosing this as a name somehow gives your application the usability pluses of OS X. It's strange to see.


Apart from PackageKit, which recent projects...?

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2