Free Newsletters :

Why I Switched from GNOME to KDE

The two desktops are remarkably similar, but for now KDE is closer to where more of the action is.
May 14, 2009
By

Bruce Byfield



Bruce Byfield



(Page 1 of 3)

Three weeks ago, I switched my main desktop from GNOME to KDE. The switch was not a rejection of GNOME, nor an unreasoning enthusiasm for KDE. It was based on my determination to learn about a side of GNU/Linux that I had been partially neglecting, and a growing appreciation of KDE's innovations on the desktop. And, thanks to the attitudes that GNU/Linux has taught me, the switch needed almost no adjustment period, either.

The truth is, I had been tempted to make the switch for fifteen months, ever since I saw the finished KDE 4.0 in January 2008. One or two aspects of KDE 4, such as the separate mode for customization and the de-coupling of the desktop from the file manager had immediately intrigued me. I was less thrilled about other changes, such as the Kickoff menu, but even these suggested a philosophy of advancing the desktop without breaking with tradition -- an attitude that struck me as exactly right.

But 4.0 was not ready for every day use, and, while I was willing to do the occasional experiment, I did not want to repeatedly do my own compiling on a desktop that was obviously undergoing rapid development. Once or twice might have been fine, but ultimately I'm no code jockey and as lazy as the next user. So, I waited until Debian, my main workstation's distribution, finally added a reliable version of KDE 4.2 to its repositories. A day or two after that, I made the switch.

Moving from GNOME

Since I have heard over-simplified rumors on the Internet that I have turned against GNOME, I want to stress that the switch reflects no complaints about GNOME, let alone that I've rejected it. I still have GNOME installed on my system, alone with several other desktops and window managers, and I still use one or two GNOME apps like file-roller and gFTP in preference to any alternatives. Most of the time, too, booting into GNOME is the best way to try out an application designed for it.

The closest I come to any dis-satisfaction with GNOME is a vague impression that its incremental releases did not seem to be leading in any particular direction. Yet even that was a mild feeling. After all, there is something to be said about a desktop that works unobtrusively in the background and lets you get on with your daily work without noticing it.

If anything, I moved from GNOME because I knew it too well. I was far from a complete stranger to KDE, having used it for my first two years on GNU/Linux, and continuing to use regularly such applications as DigiKam and Amarok. But as a regular writer about free software, I felt the need of more prolonged experience with other projects. So, just as I have Fedora on my laptop and regularly try out different distributions, I wanted a closer experience of software that I didn't use every day.

In other words, it was time for something different. Aside from the odd week or month on Xfce or Ratpoison or some other interface, I had been using GNOME daily for seven years. As much as anything else, it was simply time for a change.

So, I moved to where the most interesting changes seemed to be coming from. Considering the changes in the KDE 4 series, as well as experiments such as Nepomuk, the new desktop layer for tagging and retrieving information, and the KDE Social Desktop, that place seems to be KDE.

Next Page: Making the GNOME to KDE switch


Page 1 of 3

 
1 2 3
Next Page

Tags: Linux, Gnome, KDE, desktop

0 Comments (click to add your comment)
Comment and Contribute

 


(Maximum characters: 1200). You have characters left.

 

 

IT Offers