Regular users happy with KDE 4.4.0 SC?

Eli Wapniarski eli at orbsky.homelinux.org
Wed Feb 24 12:53:49 UTC 2010


This is not the way to go at all. The transition should have been  
transparent. There should have been no need to communicate anything.  
The developers should simply have taken into account the work that was  
done before, provided the means to automagically transition to  
whatever changes that needed to made, informing users with a dialog  
box that a transition was being made when running the app for the  
first time after the upgrade, and letting the user continue on with  
their stuff.

Anything less is simply unprofessional.

Eli

Quoting Martin Kho <lists.kho at gmail.com>:

>> On Wednesday 24 February 2010 10:46:18 Martin Kho wrote:
>> > Hi,
>> >
>> > Today KDE 4.4.0 came in on my production system - fully updated FC12.
>> >
>> > First, congratulations and thanks for the hard and mostly good work!
>> >
>> > Next, I was hit by (1) errors during the start of akonadi and (2) a
>> > messagebox that was telling me that nepumuk is disabled.
>> >
>> > I've followed the discussions on fedora-kde, so I knew what could happen.
>> > But what would a regular user think? Is KDE 4.4.0 some what to early
>> > pushed?
>>
>> Most of the problems seem to have been caused by an essential update to
>> virtuoso coming out far too close to the 4.4 release date for comfort, yet
>> needing to be included.  Most of us that suffered worst were the ones that
>> had been running virtuoso already.  The developers thought that hardly any
>> 'ordinary users' would fall into that category, and were surprised by the
>> result.  The 4.4.1 update should be out soon, and I'd be inclined to not
>> push 4.4.0 to users that are less than comfortable with fixing things.
>> Just my opinion,of course.
>>
>> > How can we be - a little more - sure this won't happen in the
>> > future? Any thoughts on this? (I tried kde 4.4.0 on rawhide and not on my
>> > production system for obvious reasons :-))
>>
>> I've already been talking to various people about this.  As often happens,
>> a failure of communication was a part of the problem.  Work is being done
>> on how best to spread the information when something can cause a major
>> issue, as was in this case.  One suggestion is a plasmoid to be placed on
>> the desktop at update time, with a link to any essential release details.
>> Hopefully we will be able to do better in the future in respect to
>> communication.
>>
>> Anne
>
> Hi Anne,
>
> Thanks for your info. We'll see what the future will bring :-) After a second
> reboot everything seems fine now. It looks like the 'conversion'  
> from KDE 4.3.5
> to the current version had some sort of hiccup.
>
> Martin Kho
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