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KDE1 on Debian 13

76 points| indigodaddy | 2 years ago |ariasft.github.io | reply

33 comments

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[+] zokier|2 years ago|reply
Something is seriously wrong with the fonts here; contrast this to the screenshot in Wikipedia which has crisp pixel-perfect fonts: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d9/KDE_1.0....
[+] BearOso|2 years ago|reply
The article's screenshots are using scalable fonts without hinting bytecode instructions built in. Many modern fonts don't have those because of anti aliasing and auto-hinting. You can see the terminal font is fine because it's a bitmap font. At the time, you generally stuck with bitmap fonts or TTFs with binary bitmap blobs built in.
[+] sombragris|2 years ago|reply
This was my first Linux desktop (on Red Hat 6.2, no less). I really miss these looks. I may not care for the oversized status bar, but I loved the window decoration, the color scheme and the widget style.

Now there's a way to recreate more or less the look, with the Reactionary theme/style. But the window decoration is not native, the color scheme gets quirky in some places, and inconsistencies appear everywhere. I had to settle for Breeze, but I'll always miss the good KDE1 looks.

[+] don-code|2 years ago|reply
KDE2 on Mandrake 8 for me. The look and feel of that desktop was a big part of what made me want to start using it over Windows. Whereas XP had just launched the Bozo the Clown-inspired theme, KDE offered something that somehow looked more real, and lived-in.

The other part, of course, was that the tools it shipped with were far and away better than the ones on Windows. Konqueror (way faster than Netscape) and Gaim (way more functional than AIM - I know that wasn't part of KDE) are two that came to mind almost immediately. Nowadays I live my life in a Web browser, and I'm not sure I'd have had the same impressions there.

[+] cmiles74|2 years ago|reply
I switched from TWM to KDE, I was running MkLinux on a Apple PowerMac. It took a while to build but when I started it up, it seemed amazing at the time.
[+] BirAdam|2 years ago|reply
I always preferred the look and feel of KDE1 over all other GUI environments. Glad to not be alone.
[+] sph|2 years ago|reply
Eh, if we need to go "retro", I'd choose the Windows 98 or Windows 2000 UI. That was the apex of low-res design, and GNOME/KDE have never even got close. And I say that as a life-long Linux user that started with KDE1 (though soon moved to GNOME and Window Maker).

Just look at how terrible the font rendering or icon design was compared to its Windows contemporary. At the time Microsoft spent a ton of money in usability research, that no free environment could afford.

[+] indrora|1 year ago|reply
You may enjoy LXQT.
[+] whalesalad|2 years ago|reply
My first linux experience was SuSE 7.3, a boxed set that I picked up from a Borders book store in Glendale, CA. It came with KDE 2.2 and Kernel 2.4. This is such a throwback! I have been meaning to spin something up to revisit this period of my life and soak in the nostalgia, so this will be awesome to play with. https://www.suse.com/news/73/
[+] drooopy|2 years ago|reply
My first Linux experience was Suse 6 that I got from the CD ROM of a PC magazine. KDE 1.x is permanently tattoed onto my brain. I wish there was a simple and straightforward way to make plasma look and act like classic KDE. Is Trinity any good?
[+] lproven|1 year ago|reply
Linux anecdotes making me feel old, now.

KDE 2.x was when the rot and bloat set in.

KDE 3 was when it drove me away forever, because it was intolerable.

KDE 1.x was great. Already over-fussy and over-complicated, but it did the job. You never saw it in its prime. :'(

[+] pmontra|2 years ago|reply
This looks like my customized GNOME desktop, except of course the theme and two things: I don't show the virtual desktops in the bottom bar (I switch with hotkeys) and I merged the task bar into the bottom one. To be clear, I don't have the top bar.
[+] butz|2 years ago|reply
870MB ISO file from Google Drive without any signatures. Have we learned anything from last week or forgot already?
[+] Lammy|1 year ago|reply
Not sure what point you're trying to make here since the sophistication of the recent attack was in the construction of a trusted identity to sign the vulnerable releases.
[+] zshrc|1 year ago|reply
I'm so gonna try this out... in a maximum security isolated VM
[+] hulitu|1 year ago|reply
> Have we learned anything from last week or forgot already?

I bet you never heard about Solar Winds. /s

[+] anthk|2 years ago|reply
Trinity would have more sense, the impact for a Pentium 3/4 machine would be almost the same and there are KDE1 themes for QT3/KDE3 included in the main theme pack.
[+] cies|2 years ago|reply
LXQt may be something for you :)

Trinity is great too, dont get me wrong.

[+] wildrhythms|2 years ago|reply
Looks neat. The download link takes me to a Google Drive URL. I think a magnet/torrent option would be preferred.
[+] vintagedave|2 years ago|reply
What a beautifully simple, clear UI. The font rendering needs work: the rest is so easy to look to at.