• WeLoveCastingSpellz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 months ago

    Hard disagree. My desktop is as stable as it’s pretty and I find it really good that both me and a friend of mine that uses KDE have very different workflows that KDE is able to adapt to. I am quite the fanboy of KDE tbh. It never failed me and is s dream to use everytime I turn on my PC

    • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      5 months ago

      see i hear things like this but when i install it’s basically the same resource-hungry unstable mess as it was the first time i checked it out over a decade ago. i figured maybe it’s me and tried some distros that come with it preinstalled and it’s not any different. are you running a supercomputer or what?

  • Mia [she/they]@lemmy.cybergirly.com
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    5 months ago

    KDE has always been buggy for me, switching to AMD makes it a lot more usable but still too annoying, last time I tried KDE, all the panel widgets refused to load and deleting my panel and making a new default panel did nothing to solve this.

    I’m on NixOS.

  • taanegl@beehaw.org
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    5 months ago

    6.1 promises to fix some of that jank. I’m a few changes away from switching over.

      • iusearchbtw@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Be the most versatile and usable DE with the best applications

        Also works on my machine (14 year old thinkpad)

        • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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          5 months ago

          versatile

          sure. idk about “the most”, i haven’t seen it do anything that other DMs can’t do with some tinkering. hell just installing cairo-dock yields a very similar ui experience imo.

          usable

          i can’t agree, my experience is things not staying where i put them, random crashes, layout and themes not “sticking” between logins, and occasionally the entire session crashing - all this from a fresh install on an untinkered-with system, and it’s been a consistent experience through the years. maybe you’re luckier than i am?

          best applications

          i never met an application i wanted to run that i couldn’t because i had the wrong DE. what are you talking about?

        • Jumuta@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          You’re running a t410??

          that’s amazing that it’s still usable today after 14 years, gives me hope that I can keep my t430 running until a similarly good device appears on the market

          • iusearchbtw@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            A t420, but yes

            It’s not my main machine but it is my only laptop, and sticking an extra 8gb of ram and an ssd in it was all it needed to become very responsive even for modern software. Unless you’re playing video games or doing some heavyweight media editing projects, those older CPUs and GPUs can cope better than one might expect

            • kaboom36@ani.social
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              5 months ago

              Eyy a fellow t420 user in the wild! There is the rare game that can be played on it, I once survived off of Minecraft and holocure when my desktop’s motherboard decided “no” and it was my only machine until I could get a replacement

  • joojmachine@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    it’s something I’ve been pointing out for almost half a decade now, the main problem with KDE isn’t any of the bugs, it’s the lack of vision of what the project wants to be

    it ends up being a mix of windows with now GNOME’s design due to it never being able to say no when people want “more features and more preferences”

    • iusearchbtw@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      It wants to be feature rich, configurable, and flexible

      GNOME already has the Apple “we know better than you so it’s our way or the highway” design strategy down to an art

      • joojmachine@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        it’s a project with a cohesive idea of what it wants to build, to a certain extent they are perfectly right to stand with “their way or the highway”

        this isn’t an apple thing, it’s just that in the operating system market there isn’t any other example of someone having a defined idea of what they want to build

        KDE tries to be all of those things, but trying to cast too wide of a net just gets you a mess of settings and unfortunately buggy experience overall

        small edit: I have a ton of respect for the KDE devs, I just realized I’ve been sounding too negative about them, I just don’t like the end product

    • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      5 months ago

      it’s been the same buggy mess for as long as i’ve been using linux, always with the promise that the next update will take it from “neat tech demo” to “suitable permenant DE”, i’m just really confused why it’s the hot shit right now because my experience with the current release was literally identical to the first time i tried it way, way back on maverick meerkat. if i didn’t know any better i’d say they changed the version number and nothing else.

      • Claire@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        5 months ago

        Does that mean you’re on Kubuntu? Which would mean you haven’t even tried Plasma 6 yet right?

        Honestly Plasma is moving so fast it feels like the experience would unironically be better on something like Arch or Fedora where you get new updates almost instantaneously. Anyway, I’m on Fedora and Plasma is pretty stable for me, especially since Plasma 6. Some minor annoyances I encountered are also getting fixed in 6.1.

  • youpie@lemmy.emphisia.nl
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    5 months ago

    I’m sorry, but KDE apps are literally the ugliest things on the planet. I really like how many features KDE has, but I just can’t switch due to the looks

  • trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    5 months ago

    KDE is buttery smooth (165Hz, no stutters ever) for me and kwin is a much nicer compositor than mutter.

    • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      5 months ago

      nice assumption. i’m a brokeass who typically runs hand-me-down hardware, stable all day.

      also that copyright license is hilarious, you know it’s the neckbeard equivalent of posting “i do not consent to my data being collected” as your fb status right? or are you going to take a giant company to court for copying your nerd insult from lemmy?

    • Chloé 🥕@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 months ago

      Idk, i used KDE 6.0 stable on fedora and it was still a jankfest

      <rant>

      simple example: when I setup my distro the first time I didn’t set up a password for the user (i don’t remember if it was for the root user or the base user). to me, it meant that on next boot, I wouldn’t have to enter a password. (I know this is incredibly insecure, I was just testing things out in a safe environment, I figured that I would add a password later)

      nope! the account used a default password instead. which I didn’t know, obviously, and had to look up. yes, this is really silly and my fault. but honestly, a good DE should have done something to stop that from happening; if anything, just not letting me not setting a password in the first place

      and I’m not getting into the nightmare that was trying to figure out the desktop edit mode… (looks like KDE 6.1 is fixing that, thank god)

      say what you will about distros like gnome or pantheon but this sort of stuff just doesn’t happen

      </rant>

    • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      5 months ago

      i’ve had problems with every version i’ve installed on every distro i’ve installed it on since the mid '00s when i started using linux

  • zagaberoo@beehaw.org
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    5 months ago

    Man, I don’t understand this sentiment at all. I don’t know what would be different from my setups, but KDE has always been rock solid for me. Back when I used it on Mandrake Linux and today.

    OP, might you be an Arch user?

      • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        KDE on Arch + Nvidia Wayland was a buggy experience for me a few months ago. But honestly, even X11 on Intel integrated graphics gets a few buggy releases every couple months.

        I still love KDE though. Way better than MacOS

  • eldain@feddit.nl
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    5 months ago

    I love how it works, I hate how careless they handle user data. I don’t trust kdewallet because it forgot my wifi passwords multiple times, suddenly demanded a password for a passwordless wallet, or lost the wallet alltogether. I lost tons of old emails when kmail switched to akonadi storage instead of plain mail folders. And why did they change my desktop background after an update? Can’t they just respect my settings and stuff a little bit -.-