KDE on Windows
Tom Metro
tmetro-blu-5a1Jt6qxUNc at public.gmane.org
Sat Jan 30 16:06:50 EST 2010
The February 2010 issue of "Linux Journal" has an article on running KDE
4 applications on Microsoft Windows. Apparently what's been holding them
back is the licensing on the Qt UI library they use, which Nokia (after
acquiring Trolltech) has since changed, making a GPL version available
for Windows.
So in a short period of time, there seems to be a flood KDE applications
that now run on Windows. (That seems to imply the porting effort was
minimal, and perhaps Qt gets all the credit for that. Still, an
impressive feat.)
Unlike the many Gtk apps you can find that run on Windows, which are
each packaged and installed individually, the KDE developers took the
approach of creating a combined installer, due to the large base of
common code shared by most KDE apps. The installer looks like much like
a GUI package manager, like say Synaptic.
You can even install the KDE Plasma desktop shell in place of Explorer,
to get a more complete KDE experience, but it is experimental, and the
reviewer says it isn't all that usable yet.
Aside from some rough edges when dealing with file paths, the reviewer
said the applications worked pretty well on Windows.
I've sampled many KDE apps on Linux, and while none have risen to my top
choice in their category, this still seems like a useful tool for
helping people migrate from proprietary to open source. Add KDE apps to
the list with Firefox, Thunderbird, Pidgin, and OpenOffice, and they'll
have even fewer reasons to stay locked-in to Windows.
-Tom
--
Tom Metro
Venture Logic, Newton, MA, USA
"Enterprise solutions through open source."
Professional Profile: http://tmetro.venturelogic.com/
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