Words by Ric Moore [Sat, Mar 08, 2008 at 03:04:43AM -0500]: > On Fri, 2008-03-07 at 22:02 -0700, Craig White wrote: > > On Fri, 2008-03-07 at 23:43 -0500, R. G. Newbury wrote: > > > it's included but not enabled by default > > > > enabled=0 > > > > each is clearly labeled this way. > > > > But in reality, this shouldn't be that big of a deal to go to runlevel > > 3, remove KDE-4, disable development if you enabled it, and install kde > > all over again. > > I just peeked into my updates email folder and KDE4 is available through > updates without the dev repo being used at all. > -------------------------------------------------------------- > Update Information: > > This updates the KDE 4 development platform to the stable > release 4.0.0 and Soprano to the stable release 2.0.0 (required > by KDE 4.0.0). > -------------------------------------------------------------- > > So, it's considered a stable release, resides in updates and if > something decided that KDE4 is a dependency, it'll get dragged in. So, > if he installed Soprano or something that depends on it, he would have > gotten KDE4. Which may have not gotten all three packages installed if a > mistake was made. Maybe when he tries to yum remove it, he'll spot what > the cat drug in. I'd like to hear about that. I guess he might very well > have a beef and chewing the carpet would be a understandable reaction! > It would be in my world, Ric > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/SIGs/KDE/KDE4FAQ "Will KDE4 be released for F7, F8? Yes and no. Yes, KDE4 Development Platform packages are available, which provide the ability build and run KDE4 applications. No, a full KDE4 Desktop is not available for previous releases, and will included only in F9 and on." So you don't have a KDE4 desktop in any way. And the kde4 packages you have interfere in no way with your kde3. -- Jose Celestino ---------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.msversus.org/ ; http://techp.org/petition/show/1 http://www.vinc17.org/noswpat.en.html ---------------------------------------------------------------- "If you would have your slaves remain docile, teach them hymns." -- Ed Weathers ("The Empty Box")