• Re: Kde Plasma Desktop Vs

    From Dr. What@VERT/CFBBS to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Feb 5 06:55:00 2026
    poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Nightfox <=-

    It works, I think the only problem is bloat - with needing libraries
    for multiple desktop environments.

    There's a new term now: "Getting Gnomed".

    It's when you install one application but it "needs" nearly all the Gnome environment loaded to run, whether you use Gnome or not.


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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to Dr. What on Thu Feb 5 13:37:29 2026
    Re: Re: Kde Plasma Desktop Vs
    By: Dr. What to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Feb 05 2026 06:55 am

    There's a new term now: "Getting Gnomed".

    It's when you install one application but it "needs" nearly all the Gnome environment loaded to run, whether you use Gnome or not.

    Yeah, I've noticed some Linux distros have packages for Gnome support libraries. There are also KDE support libraries as well.

    And for UI themes, I've noticed that even if you aren't using Gnome, some of the installed applications might be using GTK (the Gnome toolkit); there are a lot of GTK UI themes that will get applied to those GTK applications, but naturally, applications not using GTK won't get that theme. So you'll have apps with one UI theme and other apps with a different UI theme.

    Years ago, I used to like Gnome 2, and when running in Gnome, all applications would look consistent with the same theme. But that doesn't seem to be the case anymore with other desktop environments.

    One thing I've noticed is that KDE Plasma uses Qt, which is a cross-platform GUI framework that I've heard is considered one of the best and most popular (and wxWidgets being another one). Qt is available for Windows too, so theoretically, a program written using the Qt GUI framework (probably especially with C++) would probably be able to be built and run for both Linux and Windows with few modifications. I've done some C++ development using wxWidgets and that was one of the advantages of wxWidgets as well.

    Nightfox

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  • From MIKE POWELL@VERT/CAPCITY2/UUMOES to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Thu Feb 5 08:11:00 2026
    I *really* like running Debian like that. I'm running an SAP environment at

    Yes, it runs pretty good like that. ;)

    I *really* like running Debian like that. I'm running an SAP environment at work, and we had two choices of distro - RHEL or SuSe. I'm trying the latter for the first time in 25 years.

    Which distro is SuSe based on? I am not as familiar with it.

    Mike
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  • From Robert Wolfe@VERT/KLYNTAR to MIKE POWELL on Fri Feb 6 12:46:00 2026
    Which distro is SuSe based on? I am not as familiar with it.

    IIRC it's and rpm based distro that uses Zypper as a front end for
    package installation IIRC.

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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to MIKE POWELL on Fri Feb 6 09:46:45 2026
    MIKE POWELL wrote to POINDEXTER FORTRAN <=-

    Which distro is SuSe based on? I am not as familiar with it.

    They are their own distro, their own software/patch system - not an
    offshoot of Debian like so many. Apparently, it's close to RHEL in
    structure, which is why SAP supports it.



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  • From feoh@VERT/SDF1 to All on Fri Feb 6 18:01:00 2026
    Unfortunately I have the dread Nvidia GPU so I've never been able to get Kubuntu running stably on my desktop.

    Fedora either (although from what I read Nvidia now officially supports Fedora so that's good I guess.

    Lately I've been rocking CachyOS and LOVING it. The Arch experience is not for everyone, but I rather enjoy the constantly updated software and don't mind fixing things when they break every so often.

    Interestingly, Cachy works great on Nvidia GPUs. I use KDE on the desktop. I tried and quite like lightweight envs like i3 or Sway but find that tools I need for work like Zoom don't play very nicely with the simpler WMs, at least in my experience.

    And I really do appreciate how customizable KDE is.

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  • From MIKE POWELL@VERT/CAPCITY2/UUMOES to ROBERT WOLFE on Sat Feb 7 08:18:00 2026
    Which distro is SuSe based on? I am not as familiar with it.

    IIRC it's and rpm based distro that uses Zypper as a front end for
    package installation IIRC.

    Thanks. I thought it was RH/rpm based but couldn't remember.

    Mike
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  • From MIKE POWELL@VERT/CAPCITY2/UUMOES to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Sat Feb 7 08:19:00 2026
    Which distro is SuSe based on? I am not as familiar with it.

    They are their own distro, their own software/patch system - not an
    offshoot of Debian like so many. Apparently, it's close to RHEL in
    structure, which is why SAP supports it.

    Yeah, I did not think it was debian based but wasn't sure which one it was related/close to. Thanks!
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  • From MIKE POWELL@VERT/CAPCITY2/UUMOES to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Sat Feb 7 08:31:00 2026
    if you just wanted to borrow something like their calculator, or the neat little task manager, you would need to install almost the entire desktop environment. for one little program.

    Ditto for Gnome - when I ran Lubuntu, loading a single nifty applet
    would need a ton of supporting files and libraries. I don't recall if
    the *second* applet was any lighter...

    Looking at it from a different angle... there was a machine I bought with
    linux pre-installed that was set to use gnome. This was before it got its "touchscreen" look and the way it was configured it worked well.

    There were applications that, if you tried to remove them, they would
    indicate that the whole of gnome would be removed with it... libraries and all. I always wondered why they were set up that way.

    Mike
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  • From phigan@VERT/TACOPRON to MIKE POWELL on Mon Feb 9 08:04:22 2026
    Re: Re: Kde Plasma Desktop Vs
    By: MIKE POWELL to POINDEXTER FORTRAN on Thu Feb 05 2026 08:11 am

    Which distro is SuSe based on? I am not as familiar with it.

    SuSe is kinda almost not really but sort of similar to RedHat. It's more like Arch, though, in the way that it puts things in different places just to be different. It's not AS different as Arch, but same BS.

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  • From phigan@VERT/TACOPRON to feoh on Mon Feb 9 08:07:19 2026
    Re: Re: Kde Plasma Desktop Vs
    By: feoh to All on Fri Feb 06 2026 06:01 pm

    Lately I've been rocking CachyOS and LOVING it. The Arch experience is not f everyone, but I rather enjoy the constantly updated software and don't mind

    Arch is ok, but when I tried CachyOS on my laptop, something new broke every time there was a major update. After the third time, I said eff it.

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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to phigan on Mon Feb 9 08:33:51 2026
    Re: Re: Kde Plasma Desktop Vs
    By: phigan to MIKE POWELL on Mon Feb 09 2026 08:04 am

    SuSe is kinda almost not really but sort of similar to RedHat. It's more like Arch, though, in the way that it puts things in different places just to be different. It's not AS different as Arch, but same BS.

    What kind of BS? I used to use SuSE for a bit, around 1999-2001ish, and at the time I really liked it, as its included configuration tools (such as YaST) seemed to work better than other Linux distros' tools. I've tried OpenSuse and then OpenSuse Tumbleweed more recently but haven't looked into the recent versions too much.

    Nightfox

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  • From feoh@VERT/SDF1 to All on Mon Feb 9 16:05:00 2026
    Arch is ok, but when I tried CachyOS on my laptop, something new broke every time there was a major update. After the third time, I said eff it.

    I get it!

    It broken one day after an update, and I had to pop onto IRC and ask for help. The fix was easy enough.

    For a LOT of people, that diet of constant change is a turn-off. I'm strange I guess because I love it for a desktop.

    Servers? No way! But on the deskop? Give me the very latest please and thank you, and I'm more than willing to minister to the occasional scrapes and bruises as they happen.

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  • From phigan@VERT/TACOPRON to Nightfox on Mon Feb 9 10:49:01 2026
    Re: Re: Kde Plasma Desktop Vs
    By: Nightfox to phigan on Mon Feb 09 2026 08:33 am

    What kind of BS? I used to use SuSE for a bit, around 1999-2001ish, and at time I really liked it, as its included configuration tools (such as YaST)

    Sure, there are GUI/TUI tools, but that doesn't really change anything. There's a reason for those tools :). AIX has Smitty. HP-UX has .. something that started with 't'.. It's been a minute.. I might even have those backwards. But anyway, prior to SuSE using NetworkManager, it put its network configuration files in some goofy nested /etc path. There were plenty of other differences with it. I'm used to the differences between Debian and RedHat, but SuSE and Arch just go beyond being different to annoying.

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