Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 29th Dec 2005 15:34 UTC, submitted by oGALAXYo
KDE "This document was created to show non-KDE people what they're missing - and if you haven't used KDE a lot, you're missing a lot of things and you may interested in reading this page to learn how many wonderful things you've been missing. I promise, this is a subjective analysis of why KDE rules. I was a GNOME user for a long time, one of those users who loved GNOME UI, and I didn't know how much things I was missing with KDE until I tried it."
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Just works
by Morty on Thu 29th Dec 2005 17:22 UTC
Morty
Member since:
2005-07-06

That's really the biggest point, it just works out of the box. By having sensible default settings and even the opportunity to easy modify the environment if those default not exactly fit your optimal work pattern. Not to mention advanced core technology working uniformly and predictably over the whole application stack. That's the reason KDE is the leading desktop environment for Linux/Unix. KDE is all about ease of use, contemporary functionality, and outstanding graphical design, and they are making it better and better with every release, in all three aspects.