On Wednesday 13 Jan 2016 15:38:09 Emilio Recio wrote:
Also, please don't jump all over me... I am just relaying my frustrations and experiences with plasma5/kf5 (and *just* the crashing part, not the cosmetic part - e.g.: not being able to set the date the way you want to - missing KLocale?). Perhaps it's my hardware, or whatever, HP Compaq Elite 8300 SFF, i5, i915. I have been coding in QT and using KDE since 1998, so it is not as if I am new to these difficulties.
Best practice is never to upgrade to any bleeding edge system on a work machine, always be a release or 2 behind but up to date with patches. Bleeding edge is only for those who don't care if their system crashes and burns because it a test system. Good luck.
On 2016-01-13, 10:21, "Anton Aylward"
wrote: On 01/13/2016 10:00 AM, Emilio Recio wrote:
I apologize again, I look forward to SUSE and KDE4.
In many ways you post made no sense. The (b)leading edge of Suse is LEAP and that use KDE5/plasma as well. If you weretalking about the (b)leading edge of Redta then of course it will be using KDE5/plama.
Looking forward to a version of Suse that uses a stable and proven KD4 is about the same as looking at a version of Redhat (or Mandriva or CentOS) that uses KDE4 as its baseline.
Heck, even if you installed using the Gnome DM you can always install KDE4.
Betcha if you run LEAP you could too!
Patrick does have a good point. --
/"\ \ / ASCII Ribbon Campaign
X Against HTML Mail
/ \
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kde+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kde+owner@opensuse.org
The information contained in this transmission contains privileged and confidential information. It is intended only for the use of the person named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any review, dissemination, distribution or duplication of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message.
CAUTION: Intended recipients should NOT use email communication for emergent or urgent health care matters.