It’s free. Go try it for yourself. There’s nobody better than you to see if it adapts well to your workflow and projects.
It’s free. Go try it for yourself. There’s nobody better than you to see if it adapts well to your workflow and projects.
Projects always struggle with this—development is always miles ahead. But, hey, look on the bright side: it’s a great way to contribute back.
Aren’t fundraisers great motivators 😉 ?
Try KDE’s Discuss Forum. Also check out the New Contributors’ chat room.
Which question was not answered?
Also, not to be harsh, but your comment is borderline violating KDE’s CoC. if the volunteers working for free helping out other people do not know the answer to your question, there is not much anybody can do about that 🤷. It does not mean other questions will not be answered.
My guess is that they had been developing the new version of SteamOS from before 6.3.3 was available and the newest version of Plasma was not ready in time, and that they were always going to prefer to go with something they had stabilised than risking putting a newer, less tested version of Plasma on a commercial device.
If you don’t get the answer you are looking for here, get yourself to our Discuss forum. Devs hang out there often and they may be able to help you.
Yeah. Muscle memory and so on—it is so hard to split from years of doing stuff a certain way. Keep at it! We are all rooting for you.
In the banner? It is the symbol for Plasma, KDE’s desktop environment.
Wrong thread?
Still don’t know who are you addressing. Are you addressing KDE’s customer support desk? Because KDE hasn’t got that. Or indeed customers. KDE is a non-profit, run by unpaid volunteer that makes free software available on the Internet. If there is something you don’t like, instead of demanding a fix, you should consider joining the community and getting to work to make it happen.
Who are you talking to?
There are KDE dragons of many colours.
Folks! Let’s all stop trying! This random person on the Internet says it’s not worth it.
What are you talking about. We spend zero effort on AI.
There is not a naming scheme. Projects can call their apps whatever they want.
Correct. In fact, once you rename a tab, that name “sticks” even if you move to another folder within that tab.