On Friday 21 February 2014 00:24:08 =C0lex Fiestas wrote: > On Thursday 20 February 2014 22:29:30 Tassos Koutlas wrote: > > Hello all, > > = > > I know this comes out of the blue but I have decided to weigh in this > > debate, sorry but it turned out rather long. I am a KDE user since the > > RH6.5 days back in 1999. I've experienced first hand the evolution of K= DE > > and all the controversy surrounding the 4.x release, the bad press on > > nepomuk and so on. I have been however in numerous occasions presenting > > KDE > > software to students and professional groups and I have been outlining = its > > merits, vision of the future and cutting edge technology included in ea= ch > > release. > > = > > But let's step back a bit and think about KDE as software. What has alw= ays > > been its number one advantage over other desktop environments (DE)? I > > believe it's been primarily consistency and platform integration and > > secondarily a unified UX (a distant third IMHO was stability but rememb= er > > back in the day you had to recompile Xfree86 from source to be able to > > play > > DIVXes so stability for non technically inclined people is out of the > > question). People are using or switching to KDE to experience consisten= cy, > > integration and unified experience in a FOSS desktop environment. In my > > opinion regardless of trolling and early criticism the 4.x releases > > strengthened KDE in those respects. Recently there was an article showi= ng > > KDE having a concrete 30% of use in a very fragmented market. > > = > > Having said that, my initial reaction at the Baloo announcement over at > > planetkde was a sense of relief; I guess bad feelings on nepomuk overwh= elm > > me too. However my next reaction was a sense of disappointment feeling > > that > > we yet again rush new technology when in fact should spend our time > > strengthening KDE's core values (consistency and integration). Please n= ote > > however that these were my personal immediate reactions and they don't > > necessarily reflect reality. I understand that Baloo will be better than > > nepomuk in those respects and that it would be able to provide all > > integration nepomuk was destined to do. I also don't want in any way to > > diminish Vishesh's contributions on building a better and more suitable > > tool, he is doing a great job advancing KDE on that front. > > = > > But we, as a community, have to understand that technology developed in > > the > > context of KDE ultimately aims to serve people. Let's face it as far as > > software goes, a DE is as people-centric as software can get. People ca= re > > about solutions and products that deliver them. Please note that product > > in > > this context is used as an entity in a competitive market claiming mark= et > > share, not necessarily reflecting monetary attributes, after all a prod= uct > > is much more than a price tag. As a product, KDE, is destined to be > > something more than the underlying technology, it must have a unified > > front > > presenting itself to others in terms of narration, a set of core values > > and > > principles, a certain community ensuring continuity. > > = > > The above serve as a compass when arguments arise. Developers may change > > and users may increase or decrease, the project as a whole, however, can > > continue to fill market needs as it always did and it can expand > > incorporating new narrations based on values and principles. How these = are > > presented to people matter. They matter because they define how people > > perceive the project and how the press perceives the project. For insta= nce > > if our core values are consistency/integration/stability then marketing > > Baloo as anything different than the continuation of nepomuk is invalid. > > If, on the other hand, we want to be perceived as a project where cutti= ng > > edge technology is presented to the user as soon as it is available then > > keeping nepomuk brand alive is invalid. But we cannot do both at the sa= me > > time. > > = > > If we ultimately care about people and how KDE is offering solutions to > > people, then we have to treat it as any other technology product. There > > are > > three distinct characteristics in a technology project targeted at > > different audiences: > > (a) technology related matters targeted at developers, > > (b) marketing related matters (including product/user relationships, > > distribution/promotion matters, copywriting material and so on) targeted > > at > > people, > > (c) and community related matters target at people to ensure project > > continuity. > > = > > So there is a question, given that KDE is an advanced project in terms = of > > technology and technical vision how can this can be communicated back at > > people both in terms of users and press? > > = > > First and foremost kde-promo mailing list is a very good step at > > coordinating efforts made, as are the development of the Visual Design > > Group (VDG) and the Human Interface Guidelines (HIG) group. But these > > alone > > are not enough. The cornerstone of these efforts is to distil and decide > > the core values of the project in terms of its audience. Then to change > > our > > idiosyncrasy towards the project given those values and principles. What > > that ultimately means is that instead of feeling that each component of > > KDE > > is vertically aligned we should change to a more horizontal approach. > > Developers may have authoritative control over the technical merits of a > > component, identity characteristics however should be vested in people > > with > > expertise in the marketing/promo space and the usability space. > > = > > To conclude with my thesis, I would like to thank you all for your effo= rts > > building KDE, an indispensable part of my everyday computing experience. > > My > > thoughts above have been piling up for quite some time now. I don't know > > if > > my expertise is adequate enough to contribute at the marketing/promo sp= ace > > of such an important project as KDE, but I indent to get more acquainted > > with efforts so far and participate more. > > = > > Best regards, > > = > > Tassos > = > I just want to say that I have really enjoyed reading your email, thanks = for > supporting us all these years. +1 On a related note, Vishesh, Peter, Kevin and myself had a productive = discussion last night about our communication. We realized that the point = Aaron made about our communication about Baloo being different from our = initial plan of not talking to users about these details is very true. What = the underlying tech is named is irrelevant - what matters for the user is = Desktop Search. So, the article will be about that - not Baloo or Nepomuk. I will work on integrating the feedback from the thread(s) as well as this = aspect into the article, ask for feedback again, and then - it is good to g= o = as far as we are concerned. I think this not only makes everybody happy but it is also the most obvious = solution :D Hugs, Jos > _______________________________________________ > This message is from the kde-promo mailing list. > = > Visit https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-promo to unsubscribe, set > digest on or temporarily stop your subscription. _______________________________________________ This message is from the kde-promo mailing list. Visit https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-promo to unsubscribe, set d= igest on or temporarily stop your subscription.