Skip to main content


Congratulations @gnome on your 28th anniversary!πŸŽ‚πŸ₯³

@kde@lemmy.kde.social

This entry was edited (4 months ago)
in reply to KDE

Isn't KDE older than GNOME though? (KDE 1.0 being released in 12 July 1998 and GNOME 1.0 released on 3 March 1999, so yes it is.) Still nice to see that in this regard, there's still some appreciation for both sides!

Still, looking back, it's impressive to see where both desktops started from and where both desktops ended up!

in reply to Cameron Bosch

@Cameron Bosch @KDE @GNOME

Yes, Gnome was a response to KDE choosing the QT Library which at the time had a fairly restrictive proprietary license (according to the Gnome team and supporters of the project). Though KDE reached Version 1 (first non alpha/ beta version) first the two projects are not more than a few months apart in conception. One aspect that allowed KDE to grow faster was the funding the project received from QT (owned by TrollTech at the time) {*this detail has been question and may not be accurate}. Were Gnome was entirely volunteer based. Meaning people work on it when they can. And the initial development team was quite small.

in reply to Unus Nemo

@unusnemo Afaik, Qt 2.2 fixed that licensing issue as they offered a GPL option solving GPL compatibility that plagued Qt and KDE since the first version and Qt 4 offered a LGPL option.

What I like about Qt is that it isn't fully controlled by a project, unlike with modern GTK, especially GTK 4 with libadwaita. GTK has increasingly become more intertwined with GNOME, which has hurt projects like Cinnamon, Xfce, and actually caused LXDE to move to Qt; LXQt.

in reply to Cameron Bosch

in reply to Unus Nemo

@unusnemo If you want to or prefer to develop with GTK, I have no problems with that. I'm just glad that there are options.
in reply to Unus Nemo

@unusnemo @cameron_bosch

Slight corrections:

1. Arguably, the original license was more on the freer side than the proprietary side, even deemed "free" by the FSF (although not by Debian and was incompatible with the GPL).

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q_Public…

But the degree of freeness is open to interpretation, and KDE is much better off with the GPL notwithstanding.

2. KDE was always a volunteer-based project and remains so to this day. Trolltech did not become a patron of KDE until 2007 (KDE was started in 1996), and then they only became a regular patron. Even today, patron's donate a maximum of €10K a year to KDE.

So the affirmation that "KDE grew faster because of the funding the project received from [Trolltech]" is inaccurate.

in reply to *The* Paul Brown

Cameron Bosch reshared this.

in reply to KDE

@KDE @GNOME

At first I preferred KDE though as the two matured, I migrated to Gnome. I just prefer the DE. Though there is no best DE, only the one that is bast for you.

in reply to KDE

I think this is a lovely gesture and I enjoyed seeing it.
⇧