On 8/26/2010 7:33 AM, Michael S. Dunsaavage wrote:
On 8/26/2010 5:23 AM, Ilya Chernykh wrote:
I have just discovered that in KDE3 you can imbeed any windows into the desktop. The windows then has no borders, cannot be moved, shown behind all other windows, disappears from the taskbar and window selector. Like as in this screenshot:
http://www.linux.org.ru/gallery/5266021.png
Of note that the application have not to be specially written to allow for that.
What's the purpose of Plasma then? You never stop do you?
Actually, I think it's a perfectly valid question and don't understand why some are so emotional over anything that even tangetially involves kde. Ilya has said nothing inflamatory in any of her posts so far. Rather instead, other people for some reason spontaniously combust in the presence of kde. That is not really here fault but theirs. YOURS. Why not just answer the question if there is one and you know it? When people presented poor arguments in defense of kde4 or questioning "why waste time on that kde3 garbage?" she answered with plain simple facts and pointed out the holes in the logic of some arguments. So now here's your chance to do the same. "Plasma does this and that and the other, none of which are possible without it." Or here's a thought. Maybe she's actually trying to evaluate things and decide if maybe all the kde4 lovers are right? Or at least to be aware of both side of the divide so that if she still like kde3, she knows fully why, and knows fully what she is choosing to live without. Smart people do that sort of thing. They learn all about even the things they don't want. That way when they decide what they will or will not do, what they will or will not use, they do so based on full information instead of the prettiness of the logo or what the cool kids are doing. Instead, you and some others just resort to name calling. If people like that are it's proponents, that alone is almost reason to avoid kde4. -- bkw -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org