To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Oh, it is is it? Then please enlighten me on how to make the Win95 (or vista for that matter) desktop to simultaneuosly show files from a smb-share, the users desktop, a ssh-server, and a ftp-server to use a somewhat extreme example (and without the user necessarily having to know where the file(s) is/are located). And how to filter it so you only see the relevant files (such as .zip files for example).
The only way I know of how to do the first is to create shortcuts to whereever the "My Documents/Desktop" happens to be located (which, of course, is possible in KDE as well even if it's called symbolic links in unix/linux terminology) which is a clumsy workaround at best. And the latter is not possible at all without third-party applications AFAIK. The BIG difference here is that is that the folderview is far more flexible than any "fixed directory for desktop icons" could ever hope to be.
Besides, even if it is a copy Microsoft copied it as well. I remember having "icons on the desktop with a context menu" feature in MacOS and AmigaOS before Win95 was ever released.
If you can tell me what relevance that has to the actual question I asked...........
Right. Did you actually read the question that was asked? When and what?
What was Windows doing last century that matches the functionality Nepomuk, Plasma and the folderview provides? I want a description of what Windows was doing last century so we can all be enlightened. I'm just willing to bet that you haven't used KDE 4.1 though, and we'll find that out if this thread continues.




Member since:
2007-03-30
Windows 95 was released last century, which also happens to be last millennium. Over a decade ago. Are these terms you understand?
The KDE 4.1 FolderView Plasmoid is a copy of what Windows was doing last decade, century, and millennium. Does that penetrate the cotton in your ears?