KDE 4.1 Rocks the desktop!

LazyLion

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http://www.linux.com/feature/142661

KDE 4.1 was finally released to the public today. After all the controversy since the release of KDE 4.0, I'm happy to announce that KDE 4.1 simply rocks.

KDE 4.1 packages are available for Kubuntu and several other popular distributions. If there are no prebuilt binaries yet for your distro of choice, you can compile the software from the available source packages. A live CD image is also available should you wish to try the new desktop without altering your existing installation.

The introduction of KDE 4 marked the introduction of the new Plasma desktop, which provides not only the panel that you interact with, but also widgets (or "plasmoids") that extended the desktop further. In KDE 4.1, one of the most welcome changes to Plasma is the return of multiple and resizable panels from KDE 3. Now you can configure your panels by clicking on the Plasma icon (by default it's on the right edge of the panel), which brings up a series of sliders for adjusting the panel's height and position. Also within this configuration control is the return of a way to reposition panel contents by simply grabbing objects with your mouse and pulling them to where you'd like them.

One of the most controversial announcements during the KDE 4.1 development cycle was the reported removal of icons for the desktop. In actuality, desktop icons are not missing from the new version, they're just handled differently. This version introduces a Folder View plasmoid, which is a container you can place on the desktop that can show the contents of any directory. Most distributions set one up in the default configuration to show the contents of the desktop folder, but you are no longer limited to having the contents of just the desktop folder displayed on your desktop -- you can add several instances of Folder View, each showing a different directory.
Click to enlarge

As far as eye candy, KDE 4.1 looks simply stunning. While its theme uses the same foundation as 4.0, the developers have improved it with many tweaks. Desktop plasmoids no longer have extremely thick borders, transparent objects appear cleaner, the KDE login manager and splash screens have a new theme, and a tweaked version of the Oxygen window border (called Ozone) is included and better blends into the styles. Plasma itself has also been given its own theme engine (separate from the KDE desktop theme) with several different themes already built in.

The default application roster contains the same lineup as before, with Konqueror as the default Web browser, Dolphin for file management, Gwenview handling image viewing, Kopete taking care of instant messaging, and JuK managing audio playlists. Although Konqueror doesn't seem to offer the same level of functionality (such as the number of available plugins) that Firefox and Opera do, it's still a solid app. Returning from KDE 3 for the first time in the KDE 4 cycle is ****act and its related personal information management tools, as well as the KDE CD Player.

Some of the most notable new features in KDE 4.1 include the introduction of the minimalistic Dragon Player for videos, tree view and tabbed browsing features in Dolphin, and several improvements in Gwenview, such as a thumbnail bar and the repositioning of the rotate and full screen options to easier to reach places to minimize mouse movement.

With all of the new features, one might think the responsiveness of the KDE desktop would take a hit. In my tests, everything ran fast and smooth, even when I had six plasmoids in use and desktop effects turned on, even on a modest 1.6GHz laptop.
On the down side...

Not all of the improvements are clear winners. The new interfaces may take some getting used to by those accustomed to KDE 3. In addition, users with Nvidia graphics cards and proprietary drivers may notice slowdown when resizing windows or moving plasma widgets, although I did not experienced this during tests with my Nvidia hardware.

Finally, users are likely to miss Amarok 2.0 (at the time of this writing it's not yet completed) and a KDE 4 version of KnetworkManager.

KDE marks a triumphant return to full usability with the 4.1 release. I've read that some KDE 3 features still need to be ported to KDE 4, yet I'm hard pressed to think of anything missing, except for a way of hiding the panel. The developers have done a wonderful job of keeping their promises of a return to glory for KDE. This new release has become the default desktop on several machines in my house, replacing KDE 3 completely.

ok, so if I wanna upgrade from KDE 4.0 ... will that happen automatically or do I have to trigger the upgrade?
 
Sounds good. Depending on your distro you can wait until they release 4.1 on their repos.
 
This is good news, if it is as good as this I might just move from Gnome back to KDE
 
my kubuntu still reads 3.5.9

surely it should have upgraded to 4.0 by now? or at least asked me?
 
4.1 is a huge leap in the right direction, but do not throw away 3.5 just yet...

They have done some amazing work and I was tempted to try it out again, but some of the features that bothered me in the 4.0 release has not been addressed fully, the desktop usability (it is a DE after all) and the panel at the bottom.

They did some work on both, but it's not there yet to convince me to do away with 3.5, but yes, try it and encourage the devs to make the most out of KDE 4!!!
 
I'm not ready to switch to KDE 4.x on my suse box either. had too many issues with it/suse11.0
Will go the wait & see route on this one
 
After all the controversy since the release of KDE 4.0, I'm happy to announce that KDE 4.1 simply rocks.

"KDE 4.1. Not as crap as the last one!"

Wonderful marketing slogan :D
 
Generally is kde better than gnome?
Used both, but only used kde briefly, but certain things seemed much nicer, seems smoother?
 
Generally is kde better than gnome?
Used both, but only used kde briefly, but certain things seemed much nicer, seems smoother?

I don't know about smoother, but it's a lot better looking.

I know that's a little subjective, but I mean really... They are chalk and cheese.
 
It messed up my desktop a bit, became quite unresponsive after a while. I also prefer the Gnome file browser to Dolphin. It's just too slow to load up.

Looks very nice though, and the start menu is okay too. :D
 
It messed up my desktop a bit, became quite unresponsive after a while. I also prefer the Gnome file browser to Dolphin. It's just too slow to load up.

You can use Konqueror as a file-browser in KDE. A lot of people prefer it to Dolphin.
 
You will get your die hard fans of everything in Linux, and a "which is better" debate rarely produce productive results, and that is why I love Linux so much, it is there, install it and play with it, if you do not like it then chuck it and stick to what you like.

Personally I have the following:
KDE 3.5 <-- default everyday productive desktop
Gnome (for some GTK apps I use, you need the GTK libs, so just went on and installed the whole shebang)
Fluxbox <-- <3
E17 <-- Now this is going to be one heck of a WM if ever they ship a release...

And I have tried them all, from ratpoison to blackbox and back again, I just love Linux!
:p:p:p:p:p
 
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I'm not ready to switch to KDE 4.x on my suse box either. had too many issues with it/suse11.0
Will go the wait & see route on this one

Will see if I will be able to switch tomorrow

abuse the last bit and bobble of bandwidth before month-end :D
 
Just installed KDE 4.1 on my Mandriva system seems better than 4.0.5 have to see how the day goes though :D
 
started using it a testing version on fedora last night. seemed to be wholly better. will see how it plays again tonight.
 
Come on guys, stop mucking around.. Screen shots? Give me a reason to switch to KDE. ;)

I'm downloading Linux Mint at the moment to fool around with... :D
 
Why do you need screen shots from us? There are plenty around on the net and KDE4 is not yet so functional that the one screen shot will differ much from the other.
 
I installed it on my daughters media centre and so far I'm impressed!

There are some old favourites that is not yet worked over for KDE4, and one I immediately missed is Kaffeine (it is a media centre after all), but there is a new Dragon Player which is nice, but as far as I could see very basic.

I have not yet explored everything, but I have noticed that the desktop cube effect has been removed in the desktop effects options/plug-ins. I'm sure it is just the package from Arch Linux that has probably broken them up in a separate package, but will look into it a bit later when I feel like playing with it a bit.

Nothing to rave about, but so far much better than KDE4.0
 
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