On 20/11/03 Jim Cornette did say:
I would like to see KDE and GNOME more as separate programs myself.
The
reason for the separation would be more for time line development
between KDE and GNOME coming out at different times.
I'd like to see less bias against KDE in Fedora. I tried KDE, and I
took me 30 minutes to enable features to make it half-way decent, like
anti-aliased fonts. Why were these disabled by default? Why is the KDE
menu full of Gnome programs, with the KDE programs buried deeper? Fedora
seems like a terrible place for people who prefer KDE.
Mike
--
Michael P. Soulier <michael_soulier(a)mitel.com>, 613-592-2122 x2522
6000/6010/60* Development, Mitel Networks Corporation
"...the word HACK is used as a verb to indicate a massive amount of nerd-like
effort." -Harley Hahn, A Student's Guide to Unix