As for waiting for a version that's going to be based on Ubuntu Presumable, or hopefully , Ubuntu will fix that hot mess themselves with The most recent version of KDE is an LTS release, so they'd be hard-pressed to choose wrongly there, and they previously had such an outdated version of Qt, because they used that outdated version in Unity 8, which they've stopped developing, so they should not fuck up there either.
Also, Ubuntu And they usually release in April and October which is why you usually XX. For smaller fixes, they add a number behind that: e. Absolutely true.
At work, we use A stark contrast to what actually maintained, recent versions of the DE bring to the table. Which distro should you use for KDE? Then Manjaro is also solid, mainly because KDE is at least no second-class citizen on it, like it is on most distros.
And if you want something Ubuntu-based, then KDE Neon is the way to go, even though there's essentially no integration testing between the KDE software and the underlying Ubuntu base.
Manjaro with KDE is yummy. X days. KDE 5 has been excellent and suprisingly lightweight aswell. SXX on March 25, parent next [—]. I would agree, but Plasma still using up to MB RAM for me with no obvious reason since I use pretty much default panel with 6 saved app launcher icons. I'm pretty sure every KDE 5 version of Plasma has a memory leak somewhere, but it seems like tracking it down would probably be hell.
SXX on March 25, root parent next [—]. Might be it's time to finally run it under Valgrind's massif and try to fix it myself. You should look into using heaptrack instead, it's much much faster than valgrind and has a very efficient UI - the memory flamegraphs in particular are fantastic.
I am using XFCE for it being lightweight. However, I'd be willing to give KDE a shot if it has some nice features that can enhance my productivity while remaining lightweight. KDE's search, called KRunner, is pretty nice, too. It searches applications and files, mails and calendar entries etc. It's also got autocompletion and acts intelligently to a limited degree basically it remembers that when you typed in "Fi" last time, you wanted Firefox, not Filezilla, so it puts Firefox at the top.
The blocker was that in order to get there, they need you to agree to the Windows App Store agreement which has a lot of liability and support and obligations that we just felt we couldn't commit anybody in the Fedora project to.
I find it very frustrating. It is possible to sideload Fedora in WSL and there is a third-party "remix" app for the determined. What is the relationship between Fedora and Amazon Linux? There are "AWS employees who are also project members," Miller told us. They help with things like the Fedora cloud image, for creating general purpose virtual machines. I am hoping we can get more Amazon people working directly in Fedora, they're a stakeholder, their stuff is based on what we're doing.
At one time Fedora had "the same legal problem as WSL with the Amazon Marketplace, where they wanted us to sign an agreement, and we were actually able to say, this is open source, we don't need to sign an agreement to do this here, just do it, and they did. I'm hoping Microsoft can learn from that example.
Miller told us that the Fedora project has grown despite or perhaps in part because of the pandemic. I was worried that the project would have depressed activity, but the opposite happened. F designer Don Syme said this week that the new version, 6. There was a telling moment in the. A developer asked: "What is the best way to do optional values in records in F?
NET evangelist Scott Hanselman, with commendable honesty, acknowledged that "I know how to say the words but I don't know what they mean," while even Dollard was uncertain how to answer. Autonomy's former chief financial officer has alleged the firm collapsed partly because two financial analysts agreed to badmouth it in the hope of making a profit from its demise, according to US court filings.
He accused former JP Morgan analyst Daud Khan and industry colleague Paul Morland, once of analyst firm Peel Hunt, of carrying out "concerted and improper efforts to depress Autonomy's share price for their and their short-selling clients' benefit" and being "vehemently antagonistic towards Autonomy and its management. If you struggled to get into your Gmail this morning, it wasn't just you. Unhappy users from Europe all the way to South Africa reported a significant outage.
The issues kicked off at around 8. Interview New Zealand's Rocket Lab is set to launch another Electron rocket - a precursor to the rocketeer's first attempt at catching a descending booster. The launch, dubbed "Love at First Insight", is currently scheduled for no earlier than 16 November owing to an "out of family ground sensor reading" when the launch window opened yesterday morning and has the primary objective of popping a pair of Earth-observation satellites into orbit for Black Sky.
Also featuring on the launch is Rocket Lab's latest evolution of its recovery technology. Unlike SpaceX's crowd-pleasing propulsive antics, the first stage of the Rocket Lab Electron will descend by parachute and attempt a controlled splashdown into the ocean, making it the third ocean recovery if all goes well.
The eventual plan is for a helicopter to snag the stage as it descends. This time, however, everything will be done except an attempt to catch the rocket. Facing rising demand for high-end Linux boxes but also issues supporting the software on its high-end kit, HP is trying solve the problem for customers by using Windows as a universal shim. This feature extends to Redmond's WSL2. HP is using this to enable customers who want to do fancy GPU-accelerated stuff with Linux apps on the more familiar familiar to HP, that is basis of Windows.
On Call A reader takes us back to a bygone era, when Blighty's brass inhabited wood-panelled offices, and the air was thick with pipe smoke and WW2 anecdotes.
Welcome to On Call. It gets old. Rebooting for every update gets a little irritating. But, overall, Windows 7 is cool. Well, with the exception of Windows 7 Starter Edition, that is.
It's a waste of media, time and disk space. Windows 8 is a whole new animal that's really a vegetable. I hate it. I hate the look with all those ridiculously large icon things that you have to swipe through. It looks like it was designed for preschoolers not adults and certainly not for technically savvy folks like you and me. I know it's in beta or alpha or whatever--blah, blah, blah--it's crap. I won't be using it. Oh sure, most of the goodies are still somewhere on the disk but finding them can be a real challenge.
What's with the three new desktop systems I've described here? Is the new thing to make you search endlessly for your applications and things you work with? I don't want to do that. I want to know where my programs are. I want to know where my documents are. I want to be able to work efficiently. And, searching through a bunch of flippy, gloppy icons is not my idea of efficient. How can you take something that works and then make it not work? Any of you. And, I kind of hate both of those too.
I'm reluctantly leaning in that direction. Hopefully, it's less buggy than it was a couple of years ago when I installed it the first time. Whatever I try, I'll first put it in a VM and give it a good test run. If it won't install into a VM, forget it. I won't use it either. I hope that by the time my current computer draws its last Watt that someone will have come up with something usable, efficient and not crappy.
I don't like the dumbed-down garbage that they're tossing my way. If you're trying to appeal to a wider audience, don't. If people are too dumb to use a computer, then so be it.
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