Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other? And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete? Regards /Per -- ******************************************************************************** This is Linux country, on a quiet night you can hear Windows Reboot. ******************************************************************************** The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners. ******************************************************************************** Your mouse has moved. Windows must be restarted for the change to take effect. Reboot now? [ OK ] ********************************************************************************
On Friday 06 January 2006 11:04, Per Kustemo wrote:
Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other?
hi i think its a personal choice..but everybody seems to rave about kde. i personally use kde.the interface seems to like me..and i like the layout and colours...
And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete? Regards /Per
-- *************************************************************************** ***** This is Linux country, on a quiet night you can hear Windows Reboot. *************************************************************************** ***** The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners. *************************************************************************** ***** Your mouse has moved. Windows must be restarted for the change to take effect. Reboot now? [ OK ] *************************************************************************** *****
Per Kustemo wrote:
Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other? And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete?
The best answer to give is simply.. .go try them and pick the one that YOU like. KDE, Gnome, Windowmaker etc etc etc all have their good and bad points. It comes down to personal choice for what feels right for you. When you install SUSE, you get to choose your default window manager. If you want to try other,s just install them along with your chosen default (you can select them in the YAST software installer). You can even run them side by side. For example, assume you go for KDE as a default. and you have also installed Gnome. - Click on the KDE menu button - Select Switch User > Start New Session - At the login screen enter your username and password - Click the session button and select the window manager you want to try It will log you into that new Window manager, and keep KDE running as well. To switch back and forth, press Ctrl+Alt+F7 and Ctrl+Alt+F8. This way you can compare and contrast the various window managers and pick the one that "Feels Right" (tm) to you. C.
The best is that you can choose, at install: KDE, Gnome, other. I think that what desktop you choose is a question of your preferences and taste rather than qualities of them -- to me, none of them is outstanding or very bad compared to the others. Install one of them, and install the other afterwards (YaST - Install software - Selection - KDE/Gnome... something like that), then you can choose at log in and try them both. /Lars Per Kustemo wrote:
Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other? And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete? Regards /Per
-- ******************************************************************************** This is Linux country, on a quiet night you can hear Windows Reboot. ******************************************************************************** The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners. ******************************************************************************** Your mouse has moved. Windows must be restarted for the change to take effect. Reboot now? [ OK ] ********************************************************************************
Gnome is less flexible and more sluggish, but also simpler to use. KDE is
used the most. There are other, lighter window managers that eat less
resources from your PC.
2006/1/6, Lars Norén
The best is that you can choose, at install: KDE, Gnome, other.
I think that what desktop you choose is a question of your preferences and taste rather than qualities of them -- to me, none of them is outstanding or very bad compared to the others.
Install one of them, and install the other afterwards (YaST - Install software - Selection - KDE/Gnome... something like that), then you can choose at log in and try them both.
/Lars
Per Kustemo wrote:
Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other? And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete? Regards /Per
--
********************************************************************************
This is Linux country, on a quiet night you can hear Windows Reboot.
********************************************************************************
The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners.
********************************************************************************
Your mouse has moved. Windows must be restarted for the change to take effect. Reboot now? [ OK ]
********************************************************************************
-- Check the headers for your unsubscription address For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the archives at http://lists.suse.com Please read the FAQs: suse-linux-e-faq@suse.com
the best is defined by your requirements
my own personal requirements include working with
a notepad, browser and terminals, so the smallest
and lightest system is best for me, hence fluxbox/blackbox
if you want to fool arround freely alike to using ms windows,
kde would be about your best choice
regards
RP
On 1/6/06, Jan van Kollenburg
Gnome is less flexible and more sluggish, but also simpler to use. KDE is used the most. There are other, lighter window managers that eat less resources from your PC.
2006/1/6, Lars Norén
: The best is that you can choose, at install: KDE, Gnome, other.
I think that what desktop you choose is a question of your preferences and taste rather than qualities of them -- to me, none of them is outstanding or very bad compared to the others.
Install one of them, and install the other afterwards (YaST - Install software - Selection - KDE/Gnome... something like that), then you can choose at log in and try them both.
/Lars
Per Kustemo wrote:
Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other? And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete? Regards /Per
--
********************************************************************************
This is Linux country, on a quiet night you can hear Windows Reboot.
********************************************************************************
The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners.
********************************************************************************
Your mouse has moved. Windows must be restarted for the change to take effect. Reboot now? [ OK ]
********************************************************************************
-- Check the headers for your unsubscription address For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the archives at http://lists.suse.com Please read the FAQs: suse-linux-e-faq@suse.com
-- ___________________________ If computers were made in heaven, would they be perfect? ___________________________
On Fri, 2006-01-06 at 10:04 +0100, Per Kustemo wrote:
Hi What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other? And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something? Pros and cons? Is there another that can compete?
Two things. Please direct surveys to the OT list which can be subscribed to at the same place you subscribed for this list. Opinions are like belly buttons, everyone has one. Also lose the sig or cut it back to no more than 4 lines. Thanks. I think this needs a repeat once a month for the new people. ****************************************************************** We seem to be getting lots of new people on the list recently, which is generally a good thing. However, some participants seem to be a little inexperienced in how to write a reply. Remember, this is not ICQ and Instant Messaging. You have some control over where and how your text appears. Use it wisely. In the interests of peace, good order, and getting lots of helpful responses, would everybody please: - edit your replies -- that means trim off everything from the old message except the paragraph or two to which you are replying. Never reproduce somebody's signature and tag-lines, unless that is specifically what you are replying to. If somebody included a lengthy excerpt from a log file or a shell script, or program output, then everybody in the list received it at least once. They don't need you to quote it to them again - trim it out of your reply. - write your replies below the material to which you are replying -- that means, either start writing at the bottom, or else write your replies between paragraphs of the other person's message, and there should be no quoted text after your last sentence. Writing your replies above quoted material is called "top-posting" and it seems to offend some of the old-timers (the people with the most experience and knowledge, whom you would therefore least like to offend...), and it makes it difficult to follow an ongoing conversation. As well, if you leave a lot of untrimmed quoted text in a message, it annoys people who scroll all the way down, only to find out that you made them waste their time. People who are receiving a digest version have to scroll past all your useless quoting just to get to the next message in the digest. You want to be more polite and accommodating than that, don't you? Good. We appreciate it. If you are using KMail, then when you see a sentence or a paragraph that really needs a response from you, highlight just that piece of text and press the "L" key. This creates a new message in the thread, containing only the text that you highlighted, and addressed to the mailing list (not to the original sender, who doesn't really need or want to see two copies of your reply in his in-box). In other words, text-select plus "L" key does most of the things that list-etiquette requests. The only thing that it doesn't seem to do automatically is to place your cursor at a starting position below the last line of quoted text. I guess the makers of KMail wanted to leave something for you to do. If you are using another mail program that doesn't support these KMail functions........ fake it. ********************************************************************** -- Ken Schneider UNIX since 1989, linux since 1994, SuSE since 1998
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 The Friday 2006-01-06 at 10:04 +0100, Per Kustemo wrote:
What is the best, KDE or GNOME or other?
Is this a serious question, or are you trolling? Try them all (not only those two) and choose the one you like best.
And how do I get to choose the KDE at login, do I have to install something?
Just choose one from the drop down list. - -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76 iD8DBQFDvoqitTMYHG2NR9URAgDmAJ40ghypqz1dP3L0pe9+oqpebHiCLACfdfSj 4gqxgTGTM0QA5q9UHH4HlHI= =oapL -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
participants (9)
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Carlos E. R.
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Clayton
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Jan van Kollenburg
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Kai Ponte
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Ken Schneider
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Lars Norén
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Michael
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Per Kustemo
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