KDE Commit-Digest for 6th January 2008

In this week's KDE Commit-Digest: Final commits for KDE 4.0 Final before the tagging freeze. KDE 4.0 Final tagged for release. Lots of optimisations and bugs fixed across KDE. Kickoff menu items can now be added to the Plasma desktop or panel. Improved resize and rotate for Plasma applets. Document list sorting in Kate. Various progress in KDevelop. Mailody moves towards using Akonadi for its IMAP functionality, various improvements in Akonadi. Start of a KHotNewStuff2 implementation in Kalzium for downloading molecular files. Experimental IVTV support in the Kalva video player. KGet uses more of the shared implementation of BitTorrent from KTorrent. Printing support for the DVI backend in okular. Improved text handling, support for printing multiple page sizes in a single document, and a much-anticipated Table Flake shape in KOffice (with further work on the Music Flake shape). Lots of work on colour manipulation for KOffice. Kile begins to use Kross as its scripting framework. Start of a new KDE game, KTank. GetHotNewStuff support disabled in okular, search runner disabled in Plasma for KDE 4.0. KHexEdit moved to the unmaintained module. The new Oxygen wallpapers, splashscreen, and sound theme are imported into KDE SVN for KDE 4.0. Read the rest of the Digest here.

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Comments

by zvonsully (not verified)

I must say I was impressed with kde400! It is so cool!
I will try it on Windows too !

by Dolphin-fanatic :) (not verified)

on Windows only kdegames, kdeedu + konquerror works for me. Dolphin has problems with folders on first run (yet it works when lounched from Places). There is no more working apps, so win32 is unusable for now. (however I use Kmines on Windows now :D )

Installation should have better UI (no need for choosing between mvc and this second compilation for normal user)

by Ian Monroe (not verified)

Normal users aren't install kde-win32 yet.

by Bobby (not verified)

Windows doesn't like animals. No Penguin, no Dolphin and no Dragons ;)

by Zig (not verified)

No leopards either

by Xanadu (not verified)

"KHexEdit moved to the unmaintained module."

What exactly does that mean (besides what it says... :-) )? Does that mean there is no hex editor "built into" KDE? I'm aware that it's not like that's the only hex editor out there, but, having one just "simply there" sure has been a handy thing for a good number of years now.

Just wondering.

Thanx.
M.

by Emil Sedgh (not verified)

Okteta is there and is maintained and developed.

by Frinring (not verified)

It means KDE 4.0 does not include a hex editor, as the old one is not maintained and not fully ported. For KDE 4.1 Okteta should be ready to jump in, it currently misses only a "few" things to match KHexEdit featurewise. Until then you can still run KHexEdit from KDE3 just fine inside a KDE4 environment. Seems like the fate with a .0 version of foundation libraries, as KRegExpEditor and others have similar problems, see http://techbase.kde.org/index.php?title=Schedules/KDE4/4.0_Module_Status.

Still anyone is free to revive KHexEdit if she wants to.

by me (not verified)

Who is "she"? And why isn't she already working on KHexEdit if it's obvious that she should?

by Hank Miller (not verified)

She is the female of the species (more deadly than the male - Kipling). Since hex editors allow dangerious things that are really hard to do any other way, hex editors are clearly more suited to female developers.

As for why she isn't working on it already, it isn't obvious that she should, just that she could.

by Hank Miller (not verified)

Note, I posted the above without reading other threads. Understand that above was written entirely in humor. There are serious questions about why more females don't contribute to KDE/software/technial projects as much as men. That doesn't mean we should lose our sense of humor about the situation.

by Emil Sedgh (not verified)

Thanks Danny.Youre doing a great job.

by mactalla (not verified)

Yes, a BIG thank-you, Danny!

by Michel Vilain (not verified)

First time I hear about KTank.....

Here is the development website:

http://ktank.free.fr

This (oldest post on the site) is what KTank is about:
"Ktank will be a remake of the wii tank play. For the moment being however, it’s just a project. Ktank will work with the last KDE4 gaming api. The game will be playable over the network using the latest GGZ library."

Sorry if this is already generally known....

by yman (not verified)

thanks for the info. I didn't know it.

by Beat Wolf (not verified)

I hope it will support the wii controller.

by DrIDK (not verified)

KTank Will use OpenGL too!

by Max (not verified)

One more day and KDE 4.0 becomes a reality!!! :)

Probably a few more days after that until there will be Kubuntu packages. :(

Any new KDE based distros coming out between now and Hardy Heron?

Hopefully somebody will fix the Compiz fusion dilemma, so I can enjoy all my compiz effects withing KDE 4.0...

Good Job on the Release guys... Now let's just crank up the publicity and the marketing!!!

-M

by Debian user (not verified)

A lot of Debian packages are already in experimental, and more in incoming.

Can you Kubuntu guys use those?

by Level1 (not verified)

Don't, you'll break your system.

Just be patient, its only a day or two.

by Odysseus (not verified)

Kubuntu packages are already hitting the mirrors, just not for all packages as yet. Very exciting seeing the 3.98 roll over to 4.0.0 :-)

John.

by Bobby (not verified)

I don't think that I will sleep until the openSuse packages are up.
A very big thank you to the whole KDE team for the supurb job, for crossing the finishing line in style in spite of the tongue lashings in the past few weeks :)

by Chani (not verified)

what compiz dilemma? you don't need compiz in kde4; there's composite support built into our dear old kwin now :) it might not have as many cool effects yet, but I doubt it's hard to add them... I saw someone asking questions the other day that made it sound like he was working on wobbly windows :)

by Max (not verified)

cool..

As long as I can get the same effects as compiz and more effects I'll be happy...

I hope KDE Developers are working together with Compiz fusion developers. No need to reinvent the wheel here.. Just adapt existing ideas and modernize them. :)

by Joost Ruis (not verified)

http://sabayonlinux.org will surely release with KDE4 pretty soon.

by Max (not verified)

I just looked at the statistics of the commit:

88.4% Male
5.42% Female

Seriously!! We need more female developers. The Linux world shouldn't be an ol'boys club. That's what the old computing world was for (Windows, etc.)
Open source should be about equal opportunity.

Also, I'm sure that KDE would benefit from a female touch. :) We all know that women have a better sense of style (and beauty) than us men ever will.

-M

by yman (not verified)

it might just have to do with personal interests. no one is stopping women from getting involved, so they probably just don't want to. there are equal opportunities, if women aren't taking what they can have, it's because they don't want it.

by Chani (not verified)

sadly, it's not that simple. there are lots of subtle things that can push women away; society in general pushes them towards more 'feminine' things, teaching children that girls are supposed to be one way and boys another (it seems to me that the *boys* who don't fit into this are the ones who suffer most these days - grade school can be such a cruel place). computers are seen as a male thing. geeky male stereotypes are all over the place. women still have more trouble than men in the workplace, which may turn some of them away from comp sci in general.
I find it quite interesting that in china, the gender ratio in comp sci is actually close to equal (or at least my teacher said so; I haven't checked the numbers myself).

also, perhaps some girls just don't like being surrounded by guys all the time. bit of a chicken-and-egg problem, that. :)
then there's the problem that when there are few girls around, the atmosphere can be kinda... male-centric? 'guy talk' can kinda make girls feel left out (thankfully I don't see kde channels having conversations about pr0n or anything) and sometimes guys tend to communicate differently from girls. in the same way that people from asian cultures can be unintentionally pushed away by the directness of criticism, girls can be pushed away by what people on the inside see as perfectly normal behaviour. most will either adapt to it by acting more like a guy (this isn't really a good thing; co-operation and discussion tend to be feminine traits), or turn away. and then on top of that there's the whole free-software-culture thing to adjust to. I think in this a little flexibility is required from both sides. :)

while women on *average* may be less likely to enjoy programming, I'm certain that the difference is far smaller than what we actually see.

I think KDE is really a great community, and I've hardly seen any seen any sexist behaviour (what little there was was unintentional, I'm sure), but people aren't likely to discover kde until they've already got past other potential barriers - in the general free software community, in school, at work, and in society.

by Leo (not verified)

>> also, perhaps some girls just don't like being surrounded by guys all the time.

Now how did a female friend of mine in engineering put it.. Something like there's quantity but a real lack of quality :)

Also I have a current female co=worker that started out in engineering but was repelled in her first semester by the masses of socially awkward engineering males. Not that it's the rule, but engineering/csc certainly has more than its share of those kinds.

by LMCBoy (not verified)

> Now how did a female friend of mine in engineering put it.. Something like there's quantity but a real lack of quality :)

Or what the female students at Caltech say: "The odds are good, but the goods are odd".

by Leo S (not verified)

Haha yeah that was it. Your memory is significantly better than mine :)

by Kefah Issa (not verified)

No doubt. But I don't think any one is pushing the females away. its the difficulty and complexity of such a system that makes it naturally an ol'boys thingy.

But still, as you said, there are things that we men admit we would never be as good as female in.

So, in addition to development, females can contribute tremendously to UI (and usability/user experience in general), Quality, and Documentation.

Maybe they are not approached properly? maybe tasks are not clearly classified and then advertised properly?

I leave this to the core kde team to tell about...

at last, all kudos to the great 4-oh-oh !

- Kefah.

by random kde user. (not verified)

its the difficulty and complexity of such a system that makes it naturally an ol'boys thingy

If I were a woman, that comment would have pushed me away.

by Kefah Issa (not verified)

Yes, its a known fact that boys like to tinker with more complex things, including when that thing is simply pointless.

For example, its a known fact that violant games are designed for boys... this why girls (in general) don't like playing them.

Its does not have any thing to do with who is better than the other.

Its important that we understand, that our actions as a community, and our expectations could be the real reason why feminine contribution is minimal.

Please take what I say in a good well.

by Aaron J. Seigo (not verified)

puh-lease. in the mainstream industry the numbers are something like 30% women in software. in some countries like malaysia the number of women getting management and technical degrees is greater than the number of men.

yes, there are gender biases (which don't always line up with your gonads, btw) but we are far away from the much smaller differentials those biases may create.

by Joe (not verified)

Then you just proved his point.

by Anon (not verified)

"its the difficulty and complexity of such a system that makes it naturally an ol'boys thingy."

"So, in addition to development, females can contribute tremendously to UI (and usability/user experience in general), Quality, and Documentation."

Did I just timewarp back to the 1950's, or something? These are awfully ignorant comments.

by Kefah Issa (not verified)

mmm. What I mean here is we are different! I do fully acknowledge the equality concept. I am not saying one is superior over the other. I am just saying that by nature we are different!

for example i would say a similar thing if it was brought up : why arabs or africans are not contributing as much. I would say that maybe the system complexity for them presents an obstacle, and maybe they can still help in many other things, (while keeping the door for helping in development open).

Please don't be hard on me.

by attendant (not verified)

perhaps it would be best if you just STFU.

by Joe (not verified)

Yes, you should.

by Martin Fitzpatrick (not verified)

I get the impression that English is not your first language? Discussing these things is potentially explosive at the best of times, so I've given you the benefit of the doubt on some of the clumsy phrasing.

In an attempt to dig you out of your hole, would I be right to assume by "complexity" you mean in the "learning curve" sense. That is, because those groups you identify as being under-represented have - to date - less experience/track record of working on open software projects, there is a barrier to entry for them to take part? Even if only in terms of exposure, peer contact or community.

The comments on the UI stuff does smack a little of "girls play with the pretty things". That said, they are good areas to contribute for people from non-programming backgrounds, a description that fits more women than men. For now.

Hopefully that's you rescued... ...now, go get back to less complex things ;)

by jospoortvliet (not verified)

I think he has a point, even though he put it rather crudely. Boys generally enjoy technical and philosophical talk more than girls. There are many exceptions to that rule, of course - and it might very well be a cultural thing. In the Netherlands, more woman study and graduate from medicine schools - the average young surgeon here is woman, and she does a better job than males do... As that used to be a very male profession, I suppose it's kind-of a hint at the cultural basis of such biases.

by Thomas (not verified)

In my (computing graduate) school, the number of women has been on par with the number of men during many years (70s and 80s basically). They were even around 60% some years. But their number began to dwindle in the 90s, to become less than 10%. They are almost 25% now so it's better but it's still unbalanced. (But most of the teachers are still women.) According to some people they began to flee when the socially challenged geek cliché became widespread. But still, it means that the situation is far from being unrecoverable.

But when talking about men/women differences, bear in mind that more often that not, personal differences are greater than gender _average_ difference.

by blacky (not verified)

Women are no more sensitive to public opinion than men are. Jeez, what a bunch of patriarchs in this thread.

by anon (not verified)

see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_computing for some of the more famous women who have contributed over the years, also highlights that there are ~2.5 times more men educated in CS at the moment - this may be due to comments like Mr Issa's?

by anon2 (not verified)

No... it's because people are different.

The stats speak for themselves. Women aren't interested in developing for KDE. Just because 3 are, doesn't mean anyone is "better" than anyone.

To each his (or, to put it in KDE's obsessive political correctness, "his/her" or "her") own task. I write a little bit of code, tear apart cars and work on computers. I'm not a businessman, day trader, gardener, house cleaner, welder, pilot, construction worker, stay at home person, ...

by anon (not verified)

I do take your point, just seems such a waste of available talent. Anyway, I get the feeling these posts are like trying to have an argument with oneself - in lieu of any actual women posters hereabouts I mean :)

by Chani (not verified)

um, that's kinda like saying that women just weren't interested in having jobs or voting before the 19th century.

by MamiyaOtaru (not verified)

Going slightly off topic here, but Wyoming (while still a territory) gave women the right to vote (and hold office!) in 1869, before any other US State or Territory, and before New Zealand, which was the first nation as a whole to do so.

http://tinyurl.com/2oj2g4

It's one of those things that makes me wonder why we get painted as backwards rednecks so often :-/

Back to your regularly scheduled thread!

by Anonymous (not verified)

88.4% + 5.4% = 93.8% != 100%

So what are those neither male nor female. They can't all be hybrids, can they?