quote:
Originally posted by Windows XP User #5225982375:
voidmain what is wrong with you?!?? It fucking rules! It's possibly the only version of Linux I like. The fonts are fucked? Hell no!! They look great compared to earlier versions of linux. GNOME hasn't crashed on my machine once, not even the panel. You don't like the icons?!??! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGGHHHHHH!! They look even better than the XP icons. And for once the system tools WORK without fucking up. And mozilla doesn't break up text while scrolling.
Nice job red hat, keep this up and I may consider dumping windows...
XP Luser, is that really you?!? Can't be.. If it is then I take back every bad thing I said about 8.0 and will recommend it to all the Windows users out there (while I secretly continue to run 7.3).
I can say with certainty that KDE 3.x kicks the crap out of the default Gnome desktop that Red Hat 8 comes with. Don't get me wrong, it looks nice and should be easy for a n00b but it's way too dumbed down for me and many things are just lacking. For instance, to browse Windows shares with Nautilus you have to use your windows login ID and password in the URL:
smb://userid:password@winserver/
There is no way that I have found to configure a default DOMAIN/USER/PASSWD you don't have to use that info in a URL. Konqueror was *much* more capable for browsing Windows servers. In KDE Control Center there was a place where you put your default DOMAIN/USERNAME/PASSWORD (or it would prompt for authentication) so accessing Windows shares on NT servers was very clean:
smb://winserver
Now, that option appears to be missing in Red Hat 8.0's KDE. Was it removed by KDE or by Red Hat?
So, as I said, I think I am going to remove Red Hat's KDE and download it straight from the source and see how that works.. Still, that wouldn't be too bad if that will be my only major issue.
Another thing I noticed is that "man pages" no longer display correctly in KDE's KTerm. Worked fine in 7.3 and it works in Gnome just fine. Hopefully this is just another *.0 bug and not intentional.
[ October 03, 2002: Message edited by: void main ]