Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 26th Jun 2011 18:01 UTC, submitted by Debjit
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Member since:
2006-12-05
Compiling even the smallest programs can be a massive pain in the ass. I wouldn't want to see a complete desktop compile (that is, assuming it will compile without you pulling all your hair out in the first place...). Not to mention all the time required, even if it did work successfully.
I would actually recommend just waiting for KDE 4.7 to officially be released, and soon enough distros will start shipping it. And certainly at least a few of them will be live CDs/DVDs. And of course they will all implement it somewhat differently and with their own finishing touches, some of them better, some worse--which IMO is definitely better than having one standard sub-par set of binaries with the same exact feel (or in other words, one distribution). KDE hasn't been making too many huge changes though, so I doubt that anything new is truly groundbreaking.
I have to admit though, I was wondering "why the f*** would you want to integrate a desktop environment with a bootloader, and how the hell would you integrate it with such a low-level piece of software?," and once I read why and saw the screenshot, I thought that's pretty cool. But still... not groundbreaking, because the only difference is that you select the OS before rebooting instead of after. Very cool, but not amazing. It seems like every new release is full of those things, little things that aren't groundbreaking, but they add up and really give you feeling that the desktop is very fresh and full-featured.
Edited 2011-06-27 04:01 UTC