Qt/Mac KDE Call for Help 60
aqsalter writes "Benjamin Reed of Fink fame is calling for help porting KDE to Mac using Qt/Mac. Interested parties should swarm the KDE-Darwin mailing list. KWrite for Mac here we come!"
A consultant is a person who borrows your watch, tells you what time it is, pockets the watch, and sends you a bill for it.
Disturbing (Score:4, Interesting)
GNU-Darwin almost seems to be hindering the entire Mac OSS unix community. It's only logical that the community should be centered around the PPC. Especially now that the G5 is on its way. This is where OpenDarwin and Fink are pouring all of their porting energy into. GNU-Darwin on the other hand has strangely abandoned the PPC in favor of x86 compatible chips. I believe the spokesman "proclus" said that they had to refuse to work with Apple over some free software issues.
This almost surreal splintering can do nothing but harm the overall effort of ported OSS software for the Mac. If we can't agree that the PPC is the heart of the Mac, than what can we agree on?
Re:Disturbing (Score:1, Interesting)
GNU-Darwin is irrelevant. (Score:5, Interesting)
OpenDarwin [opendarwin.org] is a project launched in April 2001 which works towards porting BSD-style software to Darwin, and features a crown jewel of DarwinPorts [opendarwin.org]. OpenDarwin was founded by Apple, although they now have no control over the project's operation. Jordan Hubbard [slashdot.org] is one of many Apple employees closely associated with the project.
Virtually no-one in the Macintosh community cares about GNU-Darwin.
GNU-Darwin [gnu-darwin.org] is a project founded by a person that goes by the name proclus [slashdot.org]. This proclus character spends a fair majority of his time replying to valid criticism of his project on sites such as Slashdot and MacSlash [macslash.org]. Unfortunately, this time would be much better spent working on the actual GNU-Darwin project; GNU-Darwin has nothing to offer that hasn't already been done better by either OpenDarwin or Fink [sf.net].
What splintering? GNU-Darwin is totally irrelvant.
GNU-Darwin are not even involved with Metapgk [metapkg.org], an alliance formed between DarwinPorts, Fink, and Gentoo [gentoo.org]. All the major packaging groups in the Macintosh community are part of this alliance.
That GNU-Darwin isn't going to exist much longer.
DarwinPorts is going to be a part of Panther, and OpenDarwin is assured of a bright future. Fink and Gentoo are part of Metapkg, so all porting work that OpenDarwin does will help those projects as well.
GNU-Darwin is totally insignificant, has virtually no support in the Macintosh community, and is let by someone with a warped view of reality. When it inevitably disappears, no one will care.
But....why? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:But....why? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:But....why? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:But....why? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:But....why? (Score:2)
Re:But....why? (Score:4, Informative)
Porting KDE is another beast altogether, we are not talking about a few controls and widgets. We are talking about application design frameworks. This means:
Re:But....why? (Score:3, Informative)
At the beginning, I think the idea is just to get the apps running on QT/Mac effectively.
(KDE already links into OSX's printing, since that uses the open-source CUPS, although it still uses its own GUI.)
Re:But....why? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:But....why? (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree (myself being a person who uses OS X a lot; I type these very words on an iBook 800). Indeed, the guy does not capitalize Mac correctly, but his point remains valid. Power users usually require extensive customization of their working environment. The
Re:But....why? (Score:2)
But what would be the point? At that point OSX will just be reduced to a Linux clone (albeit one that can run Photoshop etc natively). Why bother?
If having a desktop environment of their own choice on OSX is such a big deal, run rooted X11 and take Aqua out of the equation. It won't run quite as snappily as Linux, but hey if that's what you want to d
Re:But....why? (Score:1)
On the other hand, OSX is highly customizable, it just takes a little more work th
Power users with a lot of time on their hands... (Score:3, Interesting)
You miss the point by a mile (Score:4, Insightful)
This is not true.
The point of KDE customizing is so that people that want one or two things to be a very specific way can make it that way and be happy.
Very few people customize every last thing on the desktop. But many people customize a few things, and for different people, it's different things they want changed.
You don't have to customize everything to appreciate KDE's deep and broad customizing options. All you have to do is customize a couple of GUI features in a way that other DE's don't allow, and you'll see the benefit immediately.
Re:You miss the point by a mile (Score:2, Interesting)
My point was not that extensive customizability is a negative thing, but that it's usually unnecessary, and does very little to make your actual computing experience more powerful.
I know guys who dedicate their lives to perfecting their shell setup files. I'm sure they have lots of fun doing it, but I don't think it really makes that much difference to how much work they can get done.
Re:You miss the point by a mile (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, the last time I spent a significant amount of time using KDE as my default desktop, I did spend a lot of time noodling around in customizing every last aspect of the interface. I did not do this because it was fun. It was not fun. No.
I did this because if I didn't find a way to fix the default settings, I was going to shoot so
Because we want KOffice (Score:2)
Re:But....why? (Score:2)
I would. The point is to be able to run KDE apps natively in OS X. That would be a major infusion of free software - some of which (KDevelop especially) I use extensively.
It would lessen my need to dual-boot my Powerbook, and let me run OS X alone a lot more.
KDE works quite well on the Mac allready (Score:1)
He got rid of the osx and installed debian.
And guess what, KDE runs fine.
No porting needed
Re:KDE works quite well on the Mac allready (Score:1)
but a more precise name would be "Qt/OSX" anyway...
How about (Score:1)
Re:How about (Score:1)
Re:How about (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How about (Score:2)
I agree with the sentiment, but you'd have to be a fool to think the game developers are going to listen to a pathetically tiny fraction of their audience. Particularly when Direct3D has new effects and other fuckery to show off.
OGL ! DirectX (Score:2)
Newsflash - OpenGL is extensible WITHOUT releasing a new version, and they do update fairly often.
Note that our Slashdot Lord John Carmack writes all of his engines (which many a game then proceed to license) in OpenGL. So don't tell me that OGL doesn't have new effects and fucke
Re:How about (Score:2)
Re:How about (Score:2)
Frankly, the only reason why people think Windows is easy is simply because they're used to it. The actual window manager component is lame. No snap-to's, no z-order control, no window shading. Sure, it looks pretty, but in terms of functionality, even Blackbox has it beat.
If I could run a native (not cygwin) KDE, GNOME or Xfce under Windows, I would do it in a h
Re:How about (Score:2)
A simple Google Search [google.com] finds a bunch of them. Some for-pay, some for-free.
I don't use them because WinXP's taskbar acutally does everything I want it to do, and when I use Win2k at work, I can't customize it that much.
If I could run a native (not cygwin) KDE, GNOME or Xfce under Windows, I would do it in a heartbeat.
So would I, probably. But they're simply not ported.
Re:How about (Score:1)
Peace out.
KWrite? (Score:2)
KWrite? *yawn*
KDevelop? Woohoo!
But would it behave like a Mac app? (Score:3, Insightful)
Panther and X11 (Score:1)
when I go to the panther website, this is all that I see:
Panther will include a final X11 window server for Unix-based apps, improved NFS/UFS, FreeBSD 5 innovations as well as support for popular Linux APIs, IPv6 and other important acronyms.
It w