On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 2:02 PM, Arthur Pemberton <pemboa@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 7:28 AM, Timothy Murphy <gayleard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> MKas wrote: >> >>> I like KDE, but what I see: >>> >>> bash-3.2# yum remove *gnome* >> >> Surely you don't have to remove *gnome* in order to use KDE? > > > True. But it makes the arguement that KDE in Fedora is vibrant more > difficult when you can't have KDE without Gnome. > > bluez i386 4.19-1.fc10 installed 979 k > firefox i386 3.0.5-1.fc10 installed 14 M > firstboot i386 1.102-1.fc10 installed 652 k > kdeutils i386 6:4.1.3-1.fc10 installed 5.6 M > setroubleshoot noarch 2.0.12-3.fc10 installed 275 k > system-config-date noarch 1.9.34-1.fc10 installed 3.8 M > system-config-keyboard noarch 1.2.15-4.fc10 installed 189 k > system-config-network noarch 1.5.93-2.fc10 installed 1.8 M > system-config-printer i386 1.0.12-2.fc10 installed 1.6 M > system-config-samba noarch 1.2.67-3.fc10 installed 2.1 M > system-config-services noarch 0.99.28-3.fc10 installed 1.5 M > xulrunner i386 1.9.0.5-1.fc10 installed 22 M > > None of the above should need gnome libs to work. gtk libs, sure.. but > not Gnome. > > One can argue the significance of this, but it makes the argument of > KDE being a first class citizen more difficult. We went a few rounds about this several months ago. I said at the time that Fedora is a Gnome platform that also supports KDE, but that seemed to bother some people (to be clear: I'm a KDE user myself). However even if this is the case with Fedora, it doesn't mean that Gnome has "won" in any meaningful sense. There are several popular distros out there that one could call "KDE based but also supporting Gnome", Suse being the most obvious example. poc -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines