[ale] What were they thinking?
hirsch at zapmedia.com
hirsch at zapmedia.com
Mon May 7 08:44:07 EDT 2001
James Kinney writes:
> I saw that as well on a box that was setup for KDE as the default
> environment. It doesn't remove kde, but it changes the default
> environment. I've seen several things that redcarpet said it was going to
> need to remove, but it didn't actually remove. It seems to need work in
> the user notices area. If it needs to modify a default it claims it needs
> to remove it. I think this is very poor wording.
Okay, that makes me feel a little better. I may try it, then.
Thanks Jim,
--Michael
> On Sun, 6 May 2001 hirsch at zapmedia.com wrote:
>
> > I concur. I only started using KDE with 2.1, but I think it is great,
> > and 2.1.1 is even better. I'm using it right now on my K6-2 400 with
> > 128M and it seems quite responsive.
> >
> > Speaking of gnome 1.4, can anyone explain why, when I tried to install
> > the Ximian stuff it said that it needed to remove my kde installation
> > first? I consider that worse than Microsoft blowing away a LILO
> > installation. I expected much better behavior from a linux company.
> >
> > Or am I misunderstanding something? This happened when I tried to do
> > the net install from Ximian on my Debian (potato) box.
> >
> > --Michael
> >
> > Jim Philips writes:
> > > As a recent convert to KDE, I couldn't be more pleased with it. My machine
> > > has 128 megs of ram and a Pentium 333. It doesn't seem slow at all to me and
> > > I was happy to escape the nightmare that is Gnome 1.4. I had been a huge fan
> > > of gnome until recently. But the attempts to add on the bloatware of Nautilus
> > > and Red Carpet they have created compatibility problems that would make most
> > > people throw in the towel.
> > >
> > > On Sunday 06 May 2001 12:42 pm, Eric Z. Ayers wrote:
> > > > I concur. The new KDE seems to be very bloated, and it seemed like
> > > > things that used to work were broken. I'm not saying that our software
> > > > is NOT bloated, but the crux of the matter is that we cannot run our
> > > > product demos on it, because the machine starts to thrash in the middle
> > > > of the demo...
> > > >
> > > > Irv wrote:
> > > > > I got Mandrake 8.0 and RedHat 7.1 in yesterday's mail, and spent most of
> > > > > the evening trying these out. While the installations are much improved
> > > > > on both of them, the new KDE is so slow and bloated that it is unusable,
> > > > > at least on my pc, (PII, 300mhz, 128megs ram).
> > > > >
> > > > > I can't wait 15 - 45 seconds for an xterm, or a browser window to
> > > > > open, or an error message to pop up. I have work to do, so back to SuSE
> > > > > 6.4, where everything happens more or less instantly.
> > > > >
> > > > > Are the KDE folks trying to do what Bill Gates couldn't do: destroy
> > > > > Linux? Or do they think everyone is running gigahertz processors?
> > > > >
> > > > > Regards,
> > > > > Irv Mullins
> > > > > --
> > > > > To unsubscribe: mail majordomo at ale.org with "unsubscribe ale" in message
> > > > > body.
> > > >
> > > > --
> > > > To unsubscribe: mail majordomo at ale.org with "unsubscribe ale" in message
> > > > body.
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > To unsubscribe: mail majordomo at ale.org with "unsubscribe ale" in message body.
> >
>
> --
> James P. Kinney III \Changing the mobile computing world/
> President and COO \ one Linux user /
> Local Net Solutions,LLC \ at a time. /
> 770-493-8244 \.___________________________./
>
--
To unsubscribe: mail majordomo at ale.org with "unsubscribe ale" in message body.
More information about the Ale
mailing list