Linked by Eugenia Loli on Thu 11th Jul 2002 19:00 UTC
KDE KDE 3 was released only a few months ago, and it is, to date, the most successful version of the series, serving more than 50% of the Unix and Linux desktops, surpassing Gnome (~21%) and the rest of the gang. However, KDE is not perfect, and still not as comfortable as the Windows or as sexy as the MacOSX desktops. It lacks two things: integration with the underlying system and UI polishing. Today, I will mostly talk about the polishing part, as a lot has been already said elsewhere about the seemingly unsolvable integration issue (because of the modularity and completely independant/remote software projects.) Update: And as I was just publishing this article, KDE 3.1-Alpha was released. I hope that some of my recommendations will make it to the final version of KDE 3.1.
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XP-Style Context in Konqueror/KFM
by Anonymous on Fri 12th Jul 2002 21:46 UTC

What I would love to see is something like XP's active context elements when using browsing your hard disk. Having a context menu at a RMB click is nice, but it is so much nicer to have context-aware options just one click away and VISIBLE on the screen. Same goes for searching...

This could be integrated in the sidebar but could also be placed directly inside the browsing window (see XP).

I know some people will hate this idea, but despite me being an absolute fan of KDE, when I first worked with XP that feature really hit me as being great for both beginners and experienced users.