@liza_zhukova15: #девочкаизпитера

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KDE + Rolling release = bomb of bugs KDE stands for K Desktop Environment. It’s one of the oldest and most famous desktop environments for Linux. The Beginning (1996) In October 1996, a German university student named Matthias Ettrich posted a message on the Usenet newsgroup comp.os.linux.development.apps. He was frustrated because back then Linux looked ugly and every app behaved differently (different menus, shortcuts, look & feel). He proposed creating a consistent, beautiful, and easy-to-use desktop environment for Linux, inspired by what Windows and macOS had at the time. He called the project KDE (Kool Desktop Environment at first, then just KDE). Early Days (1997–1998) A small team of developers joined him quickly. They decided to use Qt (a C++ framework from Trolltech, Norway) as the base for building everything. In July 1998, KDE 1.0 was released. It was a huge deal — suddenly Linux had a proper, modern-looking desktop with a file manager (Konqueror), panel, menus, etc. The Big Controversy (1998–1999) Big problem: Qt was proprietary (not open source) at the time. A lot of people in the free software community got mad and created GNOME as a completely free alternative (using GTK instead of Qt). This
KDE + Rolling release = bomb of bugs KDE stands for K Desktop Environment. It’s one of the oldest and most famous desktop environments for Linux. The Beginning (1996) In October 1996, a German university student named Matthias Ettrich posted a message on the Usenet newsgroup comp.os.linux.development.apps. He was frustrated because back then Linux looked ugly and every app behaved differently (different menus, shortcuts, look & feel). He proposed creating a consistent, beautiful, and easy-to-use desktop environment for Linux, inspired by what Windows and macOS had at the time. He called the project KDE (Kool Desktop Environment at first, then just KDE). Early Days (1997–1998) A small team of developers joined him quickly. They decided to use Qt (a C++ framework from Trolltech, Norway) as the base for building everything. In July 1998, KDE 1.0 was released. It was a huge deal — suddenly Linux had a proper, modern-looking desktop with a file manager (Konqueror), panel, menus, etc. The Big Controversy (1998–1999) Big problem: Qt was proprietary (not open source) at the time. A lot of people in the free software community got mad and created GNOME as a completely free alternative (using GTK instead of Qt). This "KDE vs GNOME" war started here. KDE Becomes Truly Free (1999–2000) Trolltech changed the Qt license to QPL (a free software license) in 1999. Later they made it dual-licensed (GPL + commercial). This solved the main criticism and KDE grew a lot. KDE 2.0 & 3.x (2000–2008) KDE 2.0 (2000) was a massive improvement. KDE 3.x became very stable and popular, especially with KDE 3.5 (2005–2007) — many people still say this was the golden age of KDE. The Big Rewrite: KDE 4 (2008) In 2008 they released KDE 4.0 — it was a complete rewrite using new technologies (Plasma, Phonon, Solid, etc.). But 4.0 was super buggy and many users hated it at launch ("KDE 4.0 broke my desktop" memes everywhere). Later versions (especially KDE 4.4 and 4.5) fixed most issues and Plasma became really powerful. Plasma Era (2014–today) In 2014 they rebranded: The whole project is still called KDE. The desktop environment is now called Plasma (KDE Plasma). Current version is Plasma 6 (released in 2024). KDE Today (2026) KDE Plasma is considered one of the most customizable, beautiful, and feature-rich desktop environments in the world. It runs great on both normal PCs and low-end hardware. Huge community, tons of apps (Dolphin, Kate, Krita, Kdenlive, etc.). #viral #fyp #kde #linux #Tech

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