Linked by vivainio on Thu 14th Oct 2010 11:31 UTC
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Member since:
2006-01-09
What gives with that? Why is it so? Who is driving the discussion along the lines of absolutely trivial and often plain incorrect criticism and bitching about KDE, and almost complete suppression of mention of its benefits and advanced features?
This is something that has been bothering me for a while as well. There are many cases where KDE and/or Qt applications are clearly better than the competition but online reviewers somehow manage to completely ignore them. And despite people trying their best to set the record straight in the comments section, when one is available, these "articles" and "reviews" keep coming up with the same old glaring omissions and the same old rehashed complaints about KDE faults that in some cases no longer apply or are not even valid to begin with!
Even worse is the trend of crediting Ubuntu for *everything* that happens on the Linux desktop, completely ignoring that other Linux distros have pretty much the same feature set and in some cases, as in with Fedora, having them before Ubuntu.
From the things that actually are unique about Ubuntu, the stuff that Canonical itself actually develops, the only thing that I can think of that is worth something is Ubuntu One - which can be easily replaced with Dropbox to some extent so no biggie there - and the integration of Rhythmbox with 7Digital's music store which is nice despite me not being a Rhythmbox user and Canonical's complete failure to integrate other music players such as Amarok in the same mold.
Funny thing is that even though I find KDE the best looking and more powerful DE out there, I am not even THAT biased towards KDE/Qt applications and will happily use GNOME/GTK applications when they're clearly better - GIMP, Audacity and Inkscape for instance - but these trends I discussed above and your observation have been really disturbing...