Hi Jonathan, Am Montag, 28. April 2008, um 12:30 Uhr, schrieb Jonathan Riddell: > On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 05:32:53PM +0200, Friedrich W. H. Kossebau wrote: > > * kmilo - kded module to support various types of hardware input devices > > kmilo firstly transforms the various laptop keys (volume, brightness, > hibernate, music control etc) into something that can be used, > secondly it handles those keys either itself or by passing them onto > another app (such as kmix) and thirdly it displays the result on the > screen. > > The first two items above should be done elsewhere, fixing laptops > keys into something usable should be done by daemons like > thinkpad-buttons or just mapping them directly to X keysyms. Handling > the buttons should be done directly by the application best suited > (kmix, the power manager app, amarok) and showing the result on screen > could be done in a library class, no need for a kded module. Thanks for explaining, I had no time so far to dig into what KMilo is really about. AFAIU I agree with your findings. > However, it needs someone to do that. Perhaps I will make another call for the few programs from KDE Utils that are left without an interested person, and happily reuse your explanations above. Cheers Friedrich _______________________________________________ release-team mailing list release-team@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/release-team