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Archive for April, 2009

Preview of Kubuntu 9.04

April 11th, 2009 Mega No comments

It is that time of the year again, along with the beginning of the spring, yet another release of Ubuntu 9.04 codenamed Jaunty Jackalope is coming shortly to a server near you. As the beta version was released couple of weeks ago, I decided to have a quick look and see what can be expected from this coming release. To give things a little bit of twist though, I decided to go with the KDE flavour, and downloaded Kubuntu. I have to admit I didn’t have a particularly positive encounter with Kubuntu 8.10. It was rather short and disappointing, after I played a bit with the live CD I decided to give it a try and install in on my laptop, unfortunately Kubuntu wasn’t in a cooperative mood, and despite few attempts, it wouldn’t install on my HP Pavilion dv6238ea. This was particularly strange as Ubuntu 8.10 installed flawlessly, it puzzled me a bit, but then I decided not to hold a grudge against Kubuntu and give it another try when a new release became available. I decided to use exactly the same laptop, just to see if the things have improved, and I’m pleased to report that they did although not everything went as smooth as I hoped, but let’s start from the beginning.

Installation And Booting For the First Time

This was fairly easy and flawless experience, it took me less than 20 minutes to have the system installed. A simple and straightforward guide takes you through all the installation stages and unless you are determined to get things broken, you should not experience any trouble with it even if you are a complete novice to the subject. After rebooting I was welcome by grub menu, I have to say I’m not particular fond of the Spartan style of it, developers could really come up with something visually more pleasing but the bottom line is – it does the job. One of the more advertised features of the new release was the quick booting time, and I’m pleased to report that Kubuntu indeed boots up very quickly – about thirty few seconds I was presented with a brand new KDE desktop. Kubuntu 9.04 ships with KDE 4.2.1 as the default desktop, and my first impression was very positive, everything looks very slick and well arranged. After few moments of visual appreciation I decided to dive in to the system to see it working.

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KDE 4.3 – early preview

April 11th, 2009 Mega No comments

Finally the day has come, when the curiosity about the KDE4.3 development branch took the better of me. Unfortunately the gap between what I was blogging on caused some confusion on what is really new out there. So the review will be a little unusual, more like a shooting in the dark ‘oh this looks like it’s not in 4.2′ :) If anything, you’re welcome to send corrections :) just in case.

KRunner’s New Face

First visible change concerns the different presentation style of the search results in KRunner. Previously these were presented ‘checkerboard’ style, now however, they are simply listed out. Interestingly, I haven’t found any setting to make it work ‘old style’. However KRunner has an impressive list of available plug-ins expanding its functionality, which is cheering us up.

r949375-krunner r949375-krunner-settings r949375-krunner-settings2

Quicksand might be a good option for the future – so far it is far from being handy and intuitive. Maybe someday …

r949375-quicksand r949375-quicksand2

Mixing Oxygen with Nuno gives us… Air

A while ago, Nuno has presented mock-ups of the new, default Plasma style for KDE 4.3 commonly dubbed Air. Today I took the first closer look at it… But let me talk about experience later on.

Just to let us compare the key elements, let’s try to remind ourselves the Oxygen style:

r949375-oxygen r949375-krunner

and now, how they look Air style :

r949375-air r949375-air2 r949375-air-menu r949375-krunner-air

Well :) Personally, I think Air is heading in the right direction, as an alternative for “the darkey” :)

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The World Beyond Microsoft

April 11th, 2009 Mega No comments

Some time ago I read an article on how some Microsoft developers call for some of their leaders to be replaced. Not that I actually care too much, but I started looking at the possible courses of action to happen if Microsoft vanished. What would a Microsoft-free world look like ?

The World Won’t End

First of all, its obvious that the world wouldn’t collapse in this case. Yes, there are plenty of software, either home and business dedicated, that relies 100% on Windows. Microsoft has a large market around its operating system, a market commonly driven by “sell plenty and earn even more” attitude. Such a single-crop area.

But life always would find some way. Something would have to happen – so let’s look at the possibilities, shall we?

Would diversity work ?

Not so long ago, a home computer was usually 8 bit machine, followed by 16 bit over time. I mean such traditional “consoles” like Atari, ZX Spectrum, Commodore/Amiga, and so on. Software developers, releasing a new game for instance, would prepare different versions for different hardware platforms. So it was possible back then! Well, actually, it still is – just look at game consoles like PlayStation, GameCube, DreamCast and so on – it is often possible for a game to be released for different platforms. Of course, not always and not all titles, but it happens.

The traditional model of software development (dated before Microsoft time) assumed the hardware to be a starting point, where this hardware creators were putting the operating system into and were selling applications. Look at IBM and Sun for example – still selling mainframe and server platforms. A tight ship, allowing everybody to earn decent money on each component. The only common things were OS standards (like POSIX) or communication protocols. Single crop area ? Yes, and also repeated over and over again.

In reality, PC class computers are currently the majority of hardware out there. One could say that this is Microsoft hardware, for which the named company creates its software (Windows, Office, more predominant amongst others). Microsoft Hardware ? Say, which hardware box doesn’t bear the ‘Designed for Microsoft Windows’ logo ? Only the less-known producers’ ones. As you can see, everything depends on the right attitude to customers (generating demand) and hardware developers (trade deals, certificate schemes). One must develop its market niche, create his own ‘typical approach’. This is the only way to guarantee biggest income to yourself.

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