With the release
of Version 4.1 of the KDE Linux desktop July 29, the KDE community made
statements on several fronts, including advanced cross-platform support and
overall improvements in the look and feel of the GUI.
In an interview with eWEEK, Adriaan de Groot, vice president of KDE
e.V., the nonprofit organization that represents the KDE
Project in legal and financial matters, said KDE
4.1 makes the move away from technology preview and toward being the
worthy successor to the successful six-year run by KDE
3.
De Groot said KDE 4.1 advances the goal
of having the free software desktop run across a host of operating systems.
"The .0 release was very limited and we're now getting over that,"
de Groot said. "The range of platforms has expanded again, where KDE
4.0 was basically a Linux-only desktop. For 4.1, we're realizing the
cross-platform benefits that we had in mind for KDE
4, so it runs on free software operating systems like FreeBSD and OpenSolaris
and also on proprietary systems like Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. That's one
of the reasons that it was important to get KDE
4.0 out relatively early: to mark a line in the sand and kick off the porting
efforts for KDE 4. I know both the FreeBSD
and OpenSolaris KDE communities had 4.1 in
mind as a good target to make available on those platforms."
RedMonk analyst Stephen O'Grady supports de Groot's claim that KDE
4.0 was more of a starter for 4.1.
"KDE 4.1 is a significant release
for the project, because 4.0 was controversial for some [with] its
architectural breaks and some quality issues," O'Grady said. "In that
respect, this is the Service Pack 1 equivalent to a Windows release. While I
haven't installed it on my Kubuntu instance yet, 4.1 is generally getting
positive reviews and seeing the kinds of reactions you'd expect from a follow-on
update."
De Groot said the KDE community
"recovered" from KDE 4.0 being released
in a state that was really only suitable for developers.
"Seeing the reactions to KDE 4.0 has
hammered home an important message to us as a whole, I think: It's not 2003
anymore and the number of users willing to use Linux and try new software has
grown enormously," de Groot said. "The demographics of our users are
different now. The message of 'stick with KDE
3 until KDE 4 matures enough for you' didn't
get through loud enough; KDE 4.1 sends the
message 'KDE 4 is mature enough for early
adopter desktop users' and I think we'll be putting on the remaining polish to
get it to casual users within the KDE 4.1
lifespan of about six months."
In addition, KDE 4.1 features
improvements to the user interface. At the recent OSCON (O'Reilly Open Source
Convention) held July 21 to 25, Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Canonical, the
maintainer of the Ubuntu Linux distribution, called on the community to help make
the user experience of desktop Linux even "prettier" than that of
Apple's Mac OS. Perhaps KDE is working
toward that goal.
"Something else that stands out to me, and forgive me if it seems
trivial, but the hovering icons in the startup screen have now had their
reflections adjusted to appear all in the same 'mirror'—earlier versions had
reflections floating around in strange places," de Groot said. "A
tiny graphical change like that stands out because in general KDE
4 is so pretty to look at and so consistent—I know there's plenty of grumbling
about the looks; all I can say is that I like them—that a small mistake stands
out like that. I'd like to congratulate the artists on their attention to
detail even in the face of tremendous work pressure."
O'Grady said he agreed with Shuttleworth's comments. "In a piece I
wrote a few years back, I echoed Mark's belief that 'Pretty is a
feature.' Obviously there must be substance behind the eye candy, but
Apple's ability to wow via its pretty UI is certainly instructive."
However, O'Grady said, it's less clear "how those looks are achieved,
and with what technologies. Many hold up Qt, the framework upon which KDE
is built, as the answer because it's easier to design good-looking applications
with it than with GTK [GIMP Tool Kit], its
GNOME counterpart. But GNOME is more popular with enterprises and has a lead in
adoption there, plus there are licensing issues, so it's a difficult question
to answer."
Shuttleworth is a backer of GNOME, but apparently has recently had some good
things to say about KDE.
De Groot said another barometer for him is the
relative portability of the desktop. "For me on a free software operating
system, KDE succeeds when it doesn't matter what OS is
underneath, it just works regardless, and we're pretty darn close there."