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This affects only a few ATI and Intel cards, BTW.
You don't have to disble default features if you don't want to: alternative options are to use compiz for KDE instead of Kwin, or in the case of R600/R700 ATI cards you could use the proprietary fglrx driver instead of the open source ATI driver.
Yes ... but not the Kubuntu package, it is KDE 4.5 SC that is affected. This is just as true for Fedora, Arch, OpenSuse, whatever ... it is not a Kubuntu issue.
Yes, it is only a few cards affected, it is affected for KDE 4.5 SC only (on any distribution), and it affects only the desktop compositing, for which an alternative (compiz for KDE) may be selected.
Not the best I grant you, but given that a few work arounds exist it is not an absolute disaster either. Remember also it is not a Kubuntu issue, not an issue for most graphics cards, and not a Qt issue.
You don't get it. Kubuntu suffers because people with those cars will be forced to do workarounds. Kubuntu should repackage KDE so that the workarounds are already present directly after installation if you're video card doesn't support certain features.
The same goes for any distribution or anyone who create packages.
I don't get the why some people blame up/downstream for bugs? If your stuff uses broken stuff you can't just ship it to people and tell them: not my fault. Work around the bugs in the software you depend on, depend on other software, anything. Just don't be lazy.
if (upstream has bug) { work around bug }
else { do it the normal way }
Remove if when possible later on when bug is gone and you are cleaning up the code.
In the end, users will blame Linux, even though it's a kernel. So stop blaming each other and come up with solutions and try to ship working software.
(Oh, not really accusing you, lemur, for shipping bad software, btw
)
Edited 2010-10-21 01:06 UTC





Member since:
2007-10-15
So it's fine, unless you have an ubiquitous video card in which case you'll have to disable default features in order to get things working?
Drivers fault or not, it's all part of a package and the package suffers for it. Having to search for workarounds after installation does not engender good first-impressions.
Thankfully my test machine uses an Intel chipset which seems well-supported (if a little sluggish). Overall, my personal first impressions are actually quite positive. If it can work with my Samsung MediaLive...
Edited 2010-10-20 23:58 UTC