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Although KDE does give you more options in customizing everything, but are perfectly functional setups that accomplish the same task. I find them quite similar and the whole religious war kind of pointless. Linux needs to focus more on getting hardware compatibility and driver support than a gnome vs kde civil war.
Agreed.Linux needs to focus more on getting hardware compatibility and driver support than a gnome vs kde civil war.
Agreed.
I haven't used Linux in years, so I'm not qualified to comment on the current versions of Gnome or KDE; but on many of my linux boxes, I'd installed both desktops. I found myself using KDE most of the time, so I guess that's what I preferred.
But the larger battle is getting linux onto desktop PC's in the first place, and that battle involves--as you point out--device driver compatibility, as well as linux ports for "industry standard" software by major developers. One of the reasons I run a Mac today is OSX's deep BSD roots and the fact that it just works really well; with very few glitches, seamless updates, and ease of device integration. Once I stopped working in geek jobs (which provided exposure to lots of OSes, and immediate access to lots of hardware and additional technical expertise), my desire to fight with hardware dwindled. But I still wasn't convinced that Microsoft offered the best alternatives.
Regards,
DAR
And I've attended meetings with product development groups that had to weigh the pros and cons of different architectures and operating systems on which to develop our software products, firmware, and discreet device drivers. Most of us in those meetings had worked with linux quite a bit; running our web, mail, FTP and database servers; screwing around with it at home, and utterly amazed that such a strong, reliable server operating system could be downloaded for free off the internet.You have to take into consideration that Microsofts only strength is hardware support, and that their hardware support is strong because of their cooperation with the hardware industry. Same goes for big software houses like adobe for example. Corruption/threats/monopoly/money is the reason for all these things.
My only gripe with Apple is their proprietary hardware model. Macs cost 2 - 3 times what comparably equipped win-tel machines cost. But as far as ease of use, stability, compatibility and support it's worth the extra money up front, IMO.Poor Mac, they were only allowed to step in to stop the Linux threat, and allowed only a small niche part of the market, and special hardware compatibility as their reward(and to avoid them competing with Microsoft on equal footing)..
-Nautilus file brower sucks, its not a / browser, and it opens new windows constantly
-Its difficult to get an overview in Nautilus
-No tool menues in Nautilus!!! Grrrr.(file, edit, view, tools, bookmarks and so on)
You haven't spent enough time with it. That is Fedora's default implementation of Nautilis, which does suck but it can be configured. This is what Nautilis looks like on my Ubuntu machine complete with tabbed browsing.
IMG]http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m67/wormmy1/Nautilis.png[/IMG]
Yes, but you seem to have not ever tried conqueror, its lovely by default, you can configure it to be erotic and heavenly. Then you have dolphin for KDE4 which is just marvelous when you configure it right, and decent by default(better than any config of nautilus).
I will send attach some pics later. I use kde4 in Fedora 10 btw, and Kde3 in PcLinuxOS. I have to reboot and such, as of now I dont have time, and I am just too lazy.. Here is one of Konqueror for Kde 3(more or less default settings).
I have tried both Dolphin and Konqueror but I didn't just run them and assume that that was what I was stuck with. My point was that you didn't give it enough time to even tinker with Nautilis and just assumed that it was non-configurable. I don't know what Fedora was thinking when they made the configuration you describe the default. If you don't want to customize it, try another distro. If you're going to make such a comparison, put as much time into learning one as you have the other. KDE was a confusing mess UNTIL I took the time to learn my way around it. I still find it buggy and unstable while Gnome is rock-solid - one of the reasons Gnome gets compared to Mac and KDE to Windows.
Another thing you got wrong is that Gnome has an ugly and non-configurable look. It can look like Vista, Mac OS X, KDE... you can even very easily mix, match and custom-select buttons, boxes, colors, window borders, icons, fonts and mouse pointers.
IMG]http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m67/wormmy1/Screenshot-CustomizeTheme.png[/IMG]
So, you are actually suggesting I should change distro just because of Nautilus? No way, I just intalled KDE4, yes it was VERY different from any GUI I have ever tried, but after some 30 minutes of playin around I understood that that type of Desktop is just far further into the future than any Windows desktop and just decades ahead of Gnome.
I am not sure if I prefer kde3 or 4 yet though. I thnink both beat Gnome by a HUGE margin..
Actually I am so satisfied with KDE that it sucks to use ANYTHING else. Every time I use Windows vista it feels like a nightmare, every time I use XP, it feels like an ancient past, every time I try gnome, it just feels like an error, a primitively programmed and built desktop.
I have given both Gnome and Nautilus enough time and attempts, it just SUCKS huge time in my opinion, its just actualy a nightmare in comparison to KDE.. But certainly, for simplicity and stability nothing beats Gnome, except perhaps KDE on stability, and if you understand it, it also is much simpler to use than gnome.
I dont think you understand what I am talking about.. Sure Gnome is configurable, but not as configurable as KDE, not by far. Sure I configured Nautilus, but it still sucked, because I have tried Konqueror. Dolphin for kde 3 sucks, but for KDE 4, its actually the type of file manager we need for the future.
Yes, sure you can change theme in Gnome, but in KDE you can change every single part of the look of the desktop separetely and easy.
KDE is just about the only perfect thing in this world.. Its just IN THE FUTURE right NOW! I complain about everything else in the world as imperfect all the time, I never once complained about KDE, its like a computer paradise GUI, its heavenly and dream like, a mirror into the future.
If you knew that Nautilus could be configured as a file browser, with tool menus, why did you say that it couldn't?
You CAN configure every single part of the desktop including backgrounds, panels and their looks, sounds, menus, etc much more easily in Gnome. If you knew this also, you were being misleading in your original post. By the way, I can easily put panels where ever I want with whatever I want on them and change their looks independently. You can install a theme in Gnome but, like I said, you can change every part of that theme and mix and match. How is that any different from what KDE can do.
In Gnome, pictures, PDFs, videos and other documents are preview icons. In KDE, you must click on the file to see a preview of it. Unless you've memorized all the file names, this is a quite useful feature in Gnome. The same for forgotten sound files. Just hover over them and they start playing.
KDE does have some great technology behind it but it's primarily for programmers, which isn't a bad thing at all. I can use those programs in Gnome and Mac and Windows users will be able to as well.
KDE is a great piece of technology but it isn't for everyone -- just like Gnome isn't for everyone. Let's please stop beating a dead horse and let prospective users make their own choice.
I had to say something because your comparison is so biased that you felt the need to flat out lie as evidenced by your stating that you knew about my corrections to your original post.
How many times have you actually used KDE? Did you ever learn it properly? Did you ever go around configuring every possible thing you could?
Bingo! NOW we are on the same page! Would you want me writing a comparison when it's obvious to you that I don't know everything there is to know about KDE?
Now put yourself in my shoes as a Gnome user reading your desktop review!
Answer me this: did you not bother to learn what Gnome could do or were you intentionally deceptive in your original post?
I have tried everything in gnome in several different Distroes over many years. I am not just claiming a bunch of things for no reasons..
I have used Linux for about 5 years as my main system and about 8 years in total. About 12ish different distroes. I think I know what I am talking about
So, having used Linux for so long, are you admitting that you lied in your original post or that you'd never really used Gnome long enough to learn it properly?
You are the master of side-stepping the issues. You should be a politician. :lol:
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