See, that's what I mean, you can get the classic menu in KDE4, but you don't know, so it's a missing feature and KDE4 is useless...
I know that this feature exists, just not by default.
And to find something in the new menu you just have to type
Typing is waaay more difficult than clicking.
or use the favourites and recently used apps tabs in order to get faster with less mouse movements than in the old menu.
In KDE3 you also can use 'recently used', but I disable this feature completely because it usually shows something far from I want.
But that's the thing, you have to be open for new ways in order to make use of them and make them ease your work.
Thank you, I do not need 'new ways' which make my work more difficult.
Being inflexible and stuck to one way is the opposite of what drives technology forward.
Vandalism can only drive technology backwards.
Basic to who?
To the most file managers starting from mid-80s, including Nautilus, Kong (up to KDE3), Windows Explorer, MacOS Finder, OS/2 WPS, BeOS, E17, OpenGEM, Seal etc etc etc.
Did anyone file a bug
Of course
did anyone spend any time on implementing it?
Probably they spent time to break it up.
If not, might it be of no importance to the majority of users?
Of course, it is of no importance for the majority of KDE4 users. Those for whom it is important do not use KDE4.
So if nobody is willing to spend any spare time or money on it, including you
You just make yourself look silly by telling those that maintained the code
It is unreasonable to spent time or money on a desktop environment which such easily throws away the code implemented by others. that they did not understand it. If they understood it, they would not say it's a mess. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org