About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 53. Chapters: Slackware, Qt, Mandriva Linux, Matthias Ettrich, Konqi, OpenSUSE, Kubuntu, List of KDE applications, Sabayon Linux, PC-BSD, Pardus, Kanotix, BeleniX, PCLinuxOS, KDE e.V., Akademy, Ark Linux, OpenDesktop.org, Frugalware Linux, Red Flag Linux, MEPIS, DesktopBSD, Avahi, Rosegarden, Everaldo Coelho, Matriux, BackTrack, Social Desktop, Ultracopier, Nuvola, How does one patch KDE2 under FreeBSD?, Bluecurve, KDE Education Project, ALinux, Oxygen Project, Kongoni, YOPER, QtCurve, Open Collaboration Services, Frank Karlitschek, KDE on Cygwin, Kdemultimedia, Cornelius Schumacher, David Vignoni, KaXUL, Harri Porten, WAR file format, Harmony, QGtkStyle, ScrollKeeper, Kdewebdev, Rarian, KDE Dot News, Kdebindings, Kdeadmin, Kdeutils, Kdegraphics, Kdesdk, Kdenetwork, PerlTop. Excerpt: KDE ( ) is an international free software community producing an integrated set of cross-platform applications designed to run on Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X systems. It is best known for its Plasma Desktop, a desktop environment provided as the default working environment on many Linux distributions, such as openSUSE, Mandriva Linux, Kubuntu, and Chakra GNU/Linux. The goal of the community is to provide basic desktop functions and applications for daily needs as well as tools and documentation for developers to write stand-alone applications for the system. In this regard, the KDE project serves as an umbrella project for many standalone applications and smaller projects that are based on KDE technology. These include Calligra Suite, KDevelop, Rekonq, K3b and many others. KDE software is based on the Qt framework. The original GPL version of this toolkit only existed for the X11 platform, but with the release of Qt 4, LGPL versions are available for all platforms. This allows KDE software based on Qt 4 to also be distribu...