Coordinates | 3°49′00″N103°20′00″N |
---|---|
non-profit name | KDE |
non-profit logo | |
founder | Matthias Ettrich |
founded date | 14 October 1996 |
released | July 12, 1998 |
frequently updated | yes |
non-profit type | Community |
focus | Free software |
products | KDE Software Compilation, Calligra Suite, KDevelop, Amarok, etc |
method | Artwork, Development, Documentation, Promotion, and Translation. |
non-profit slogan | Experience Freedom! |
homepage | http://www.kde.org }} |
KDE () is an international free software community producing an integrated set of cross-platform applications designed to run on Linux, FreeBSD, Microsoft Windows, Solaris 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 Kubuntu, Pardus and openSUSE.
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, digiKam, 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 distributed to Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X.
Brazil’s primary school education system operates computers running KDE software, serving nearly 52 million children. KDE software is also running on computers in Portuguese and Venezuelan schools, with respectively seven hundred thousand and one million systems reached.
The name ''KDE'' was intended as a wordplay on the existing Common Desktop Environment, available for Unix systems. CDE was an X11-based user environment jointly developed by HP, IBM, and Sun through the X/Open consortium, with an interface and productivity tools based on the Motif graphical widget toolkit. It was supposed to be an intuitively easy-to-use desktop computer environment. The ''K'' was originally suggested to stand for "Kool", but it was quickly decided that the K should stand for nothing in particular. The ''KDE'' initialism is therefore expanded to ''"K Desktop Environment"''.
!Version | !Date | !Information |
! | October 14, 1996 | KDE development announced |
July 12, 1998 | ||
October 23, 2000 | ||
April 3, 2002 | ||
January 11, 2008 |
Debate continued about compatibility with the GNU General Public License (GPL), hence in September 2000 Trolltech made the Unix version of the Qt libraries available under the GPL in addition to the QPL which eliminated the concerns of the Free Software Foundation. Trolltech continued to require licenses for developing proprietary software with Qt. The core libraries of KDE are collectively licensed under the GNU LGPL but the only way for proprietary software to make use of them was to be developed under the terms of the Qt proprietary license.
Starting with Qt 4.5, Qt was also made available under the LGPL version 2.1, now allowing proprietary applications to legally use the open source Qt version.
The KDE community's developer meetings, servers and related events are frequently sponsored by individuals, universities, and businesses. The ''supporting members'' of the KDE e.V. are extraordinary members supporting the KDE through financial or material contributions. Supporting members are entitled to display the ''"Member of KDE"'' logo on their website or in printed materials. The ''Patron of KDE'' is the highest level of supporting member. The patrons of KDE also are entitled to display the exclusive ''"Patron of KDE"'' logo on their website or in printed materials. On 15 October 2006, it was announced that Mark Shuttleworth had become the first ''Patron of KDE''. On 7 July 2007, it was announced that Intel Corporation and Novell had also become patrons of KDE. In January 2010, Google became a supporting member. On 9 June 2010, KDE e.V. launched the "Join the Game" campaign. This campaign promotes the idea of becoming a supporting member for individuals. It is made available for those who would like to support KDE, but do not have enough time to do so. Georg Greve, founder of the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) was first to 'join the game'.
KDE-AR (KDE Argentina) is the group of KDE developers and users in Argentina, was officially opened in 22 November 2008 at the meeting in IRC channel. They can organize release parties on holidays to celebrate released of new version of the KDE SC since 4.2. KDE-AR has their own mailing lists and IRC channel.
KDE Brasil is composed by several local groups in Brazil, like KDE-MG, Live Blue, KDE Piauí, and KDE-RS. The main goals of local groups are regional promotion and direction of contributions of members, and still maintaining harmony with the KDE Brazil community. KDE-MG is a local group in Minas Gerais. The idea of structuring the group was arose during the FISL (Fórum Internacional Software Livre) 10. Live Blue is a KDE working group in Bahia. KDE Piauí is a group of users and contributors of KDE in the Piauí. The ideia was born during the Software Freedom Day Teresina 2009 and has concretized during the Akademy-Br 2010, where the group was officially created. KDE-RS is a group of KDE users from Rio Grande do Sul. KDE Lovelace is a Brazilian female group of users and contributors in KDE.
KDE España was registered as an association under the Spanish law in 2009. The aim is stimulating the development and use of the KDE software in Spain. The supreme governing body is general assembly, which is ordinary or extraordinary. The ordinary general assembly is held at least once a year. The extraordinary general assembly is held as necessary. The board consists of president, vice president, secretary, treasurer and members. Current board are Albert Astals Cid (president), Alejandro Fiestas Olivares (vice president), Aleix Pol i Gonzàlez (secretary), and José Millán Soto (treasurer). In addition, KDE España is the official representative of KDE e.V. in Spain.
KDE.in (KDE India) was founded in 2005, provide Indian KDE developers and users with a community hub to coordinate with and support each other. Besides making efforts in the internationalization and localization, a major aim is to foster the creation and adaptation of KDE applications to needs specific to India.
Japan KDE Users' Group (JKUG/日本 KDE ユーザ会) is Japanese local users' group of KDE. The membership type of the association are corporate members (法人会員) and individual members (個人会員). About 15 member is active staff. The officers include one president (会長), two vice president (副会長) and one accountant. Currently, president is Daisuke Kameda (亀田大輔), vice presidents are Taiki Komoda (菰田泰生) and 佐藤暁. The association will hold an annual general assembly in December. It's activities include message translation to Japanese, making patch for multilingualization, and exchanging information about KDE/Qt.
KDE GB is a KDE community with a constitution in Britain. At October 2010 meeting they agreed to register as a charity. KDE-ir (فارسی KDE) is a Persian KDE community. Korean KDE Users Group was started in 1999. The group's work is mostly translation.
The mailing lists are one of the main communication channels, and most problems are discussed on here. The community has several mailing lists, has two general user lists: ''Kde'' for discussion of users, and ''Kde-announce'' for version updates, security patches and other changes. And two general development lists: ''Kde-devel'', for communication of application developers, and ''Kde-core-devel'' for communication of development of KDE Platform. Many applications also have specific mailing lists.
KDE Community Forums is also activity in discuss. The forums have ''Brainstorm'' for user submit ideas to developers. The wish can be approved or disapproved by other users. Every few months, the highest-voted features will then be submitted to the developers. The forums have IRC bots that can announce new threads and posts on IRC channels, briding forum posts to mailinglist messages and offering RSS feeds.
KDE has three wikis: UserBase, TechBase and Community Wiki. UserBase provides documentation for end user. It contains tutorials, links to where to get more help, as well as an application catalogue. The logo is designed by Eugene Trounev. TechBase provides technical documentation for developers and system administrators. Community Wiki provides a place for coordinating community teams. It is used for publishing and sharing community-internal information.
And IRC channels is real-time discuss way. Planet KDE is made from the blogs of KDE's contributors. KDE.News is the website of office news announcements. KDE Buzz tracks identi.ca, Twitter, Picasa, Flickr and YouTube to show social media activity concerning KDE. KDE Pastebin allows for posting of source code snippets and uses syntax highlighting which adds ease to reviewing code. The pastes can be password protected. And use RSS notification to get aware of new posts. KDE Bug Tracking System provides anyone, who report bugs that was found in the software. Bug tracking uses Bugzilla. Behind KDE is a site that interviews contributor of KDE.
The KDE community’s mascot is a green dragon named Konqi. Konqi has a girlfriend named Katie. Konqi and Katie made their costumed appearance at the KDE 4.0 Release Event and Camp KDE 2010. Konqi also appeared on the KDE software's about dialog. Kandalf the wizard was the former mascot for the KDE community during its 1.x and 2.x versions, but he was dropped owing to copyright issues (his resemblance to Gandalf).
KDE has community identity guidelines (CIG) for definitions and recommendations which help the community to establish a unique, characteristic, and appealing design. The KDE official logo displays the white trademarked K-Gear shape on a blue square with mitred corners.Copying of the KDE Logo is subject to the LGPL. Some logo of local community is derivation of official logo. The KDE software labels are used by producers of software to show that they are part of the KDE community or that they use the KDE Platform. There are three labels available. The ''Powered by KDE'' label is used to show that an application derives its strength from the KDE community and from the KDE development platform. The ''Built on the KDE Platform'' label indicates that the application uses the KDE platform. The ''Part of the KDE family'' label is used by application authors to identify themselves as being part of the KDE community.
Many KDE applications have a ''K'' in the name, mostly as an initial letter. The ''K'' in many KDE applications is obtained by spelling a word which originally begins with ''C'' or ''Q'' differently, for example Konsole and Kaffeine. Also, some just prefix a commonly used word with a ''K'', for instance KGet. Among KDE SC 4 applications and technologies, however, the trend is not to have a ''K'' in the name at all, such as Stage and Dolphin.
colspan="2" | Featured Partners | |
! Name !! Work | ||
Nuno Pinheiro (artist) | Nuno Pinheiro | Oxygen |
David Vignoni | Oxygen | |
Eugene Trounev | Artists | |
Aaron Seigo | Develop | |
David Faure | Develop | |
Duncan Mac-Vicar Prett | Develop | |
Dirk Müller (programmer) | Dirk Müller | Release, Develop |
George Staikos | Develop | |
Lars Knoll | Develop | |
Volker Krause | Develop | |
Waldo Bastian | Develop | |
Sebastian Kügler | Marketing team liaison | |
Stuart Jarvis | Marketing and public relations |
Currently KDE community use the Git repository, but they still have some software on the Subversion repository. KDE Projects site give an overview of all projects within Git repository. QuickGit is orther repository browser. It shows all the git repositories. ReviewBoard site give patch review. Commitfilter will sends an email with each commit for the projects you want to watch, without either getting tons of mails or getting infrequent and redundant information. English Breakfast Network (EBN) is a collection of machines that do automated KDE source artifact quality checking. The EBN provides KDE API documentation validation, user documentation validation, source code checking. It is operated by Adriaan de Groot and Allen Winter. Commit-Digest site give a weekly overview of the development activity. LXR indexes classes and methods used in KDE.
Season of KDE (SoK) is a program for people could not accept into Google Summer of Code. They will have a mentor from the KDE community to help them if any question arises or if they do not know how to continue.
On 20 July 2009, KDE announced that the one millionth commit has been made to its Subversion repository. On October 11, 2009, Cornelius Schumacher, a main developer within KDE, wrote about the estimated cost (using the COCOMO model with SLOCCount) to develop KDE software package with 4,273,291 LoC, which would be about US$175,364,716. This estimation does not include Qt, Calligra Suite, Amarok, Digikam, and other applications that are not part of KDE core.
The work can be measured in figures: Over 6 million lines of code. This does not include Qt. More than 1800 contributors help develop KDE. About 20 new developers contribute their first code each month. KDE has more than 114 official FTP mirrors in over 34 countries. The KDE community is the second largest Free Software community behind the Linux kernel community.
The ''Release team'' defines and executes the official software releases. The Team is responsible for setting release schedules for the official releases. This includes release dates, deadlines for individual release steps and restrictions for code changes. The Release Team coordinates release dates with the marketing and press efforts of KDE. The release team is composed of Module Coordinators, Marketing Team liaison, and the people who actually do the work of tagging and creating the releases.
''Akademy'' is the annual world summit, held each summer at varying venues in Europe. The primary goals of Akademy are to act as a community building event, to communicate the achievements of community, and to provide a platform for collaboration with community and industry partners. Secondary goals are to engage local people, and to provide space for getting together to write code. KDE e.V. assist with procedures, advice and organization. Akademy including conference, KDE e.V. general assembly, marathon coding sessions, BOFs (birds of a feather sessions) and social program. BOFs are meet to discuss specific sub-projects or issues.
The KDE community held KDE One that was first conference in Arnsberg, Germany in 1997 to discuss the first KDE release. Initially, each conference was numbered after the release, and not regular hold. Since 2003 the conferences were hold one a year. And they were named Akademy since 2004.
The yearly Akademy conference gives ''Akademy Awards'', are awards that the KDE community gives to KDE contributors. Their purpose is to recognize outstanding contribution to KDE. There are three awards, best application, best non-application and jury's award. As always the winners are chosen by the winners from the previous year. First winners received a framed picture of Konqi signed by all attending KDE developers.
''Camp KDE'' is another annual contributor’s conference of the KDE community. The event provides a regional opportunity for contributors and enthusiasts to gather and share their experiences. It's free to all participants. It is intended to ensure that KDE in the world is not simply seen as being Euro-centric. The KDE e.V. helps travel and accommodation subsidies for presenters, BoF leaders, organizers or core contributor. It is held in the North America since 2009.
In January 2008, KDE 4.0 Release Event was held at the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California, USA to celebrate the release of KDE SC 4.0. The community realized that there was a strong demand for KDE events in the Americas, therefore Camp KDE was produced.
Camp KDE 2009 was the premiere meeting of the KDE Americas, was held at the Travellers Beach Resort in Negril, Jamaica, sponsored by Google, Inte, iXsystem, KDE e.V. and Kitware. The event included 1-2 days of presentations, BoF meetings and hackathon sessions. Camp KDE 2010 take place at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) in La Jolla, USA. The schedule included presentations, BoFs, hackathons and a day trip. It started with a short introduction by Jeff Mitchell, who was the principal organizer of the conference, talked a bit of history about Camp KDE and some statistics about the KDE community. The talks of the event were relatively well attended, and an increase over the previous year to around 70 people. On 1/19, the social event was a tour of a local brewery. Camp KDE 2011 was held at Hotel Kabuki in San Francisco, USA, was co-located with the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit. The schedule included presentations, hackathons and a party at Noisebridge. The conference opened with a introduction spoken by Celeste Lyn Paul.
''Akademy-es'' is a conference for Spanish community since 2006, aimed at Spanish speakers. The event is organized by Spanish local organization. KDE España organizes the event since 2008. The annual KDE España Assembly took place during the event.
Akademy-es 2006 was held at Espai Jove Bocanord in Barcelona, organized by Badopi. Akademy-es 2007 was hosted by Hispalinux, Wireless Zaragoza, and the Zaragoza council. Akademy-es 2008 was held at University of A Coruña, was organized by the KDE España and GPUL, sponsored by Oficina de Software Libre de la Universidad de Coruña, Mancomun, Igalia, Qt Software and eyeOs. Akademy-es 2009 was held in the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Akademy-es 2010 was held in the Engineering Technical School of Bilbao, was organized by KDE España and Itsas. There were approximately 80 participants. The KDE España Assembly elected the new board consists of Albert Astals Cid (president), Rafael Fernández López (vice president), Aleix Pol (secretary), and José Millán Soto (treasurer). Akademy-es 2011 was organized by KDE España, was sponsored by Google and Nokia, and was supported by the Linux and Todo-Linux magazines. The event was held in the in two different locations: the Polytechnic University of Catalunya for presentations of fist day, The School of Sant Marc de Sarrià for last two day.
{|- class="wikitable" |- style="background:#efefef;" ! colspan="3" | Akademy-BR |- style="background:#efefef;" !Year !Venue !Date |- !2010 |Salvador | 4/9-4/11 |- !2011 |Porto Alegre | |- |}
{|- class="wikitable" align="right" |- style="background:#efefef;" ! colspan="3" | conf.KDE.in |- style="background:#efefef;" !Year !Venue !Date |- !2011 |Bengaluru | 3/9-3/13 |- |}
''conf.KDE.in'' is the first KDE and Qt conference in India. The conference was organized by KDE India, was held at R.V. College of Engineering in Bengaluru, India. The first three days of the event had talks, tutorials and interactive sessions. The last two days were a focused code sprint. The conference was opened by its main organiser Pradeepto Bhattacharya, over 300 people were at the opening talks. The Lighting of the Auspicious Lamp ceremony was performed to open the conference. The first session was by Lydia Pintscher who talk "So much to do – so little time". At the event, Project Neon announced return on Mar 11, 2011, provides nightly builds of the KDE Software Compilation. Closing the conference was keynote speaker and old-time KDE developer Sirtaj.
''Día KDE'' is a Argentinian event focused on KDE. It gives talks and workshops. The purpose of the event are: spread the free software movement among the population of Argentina, bringing to it the KDE community and environment developed by it, to know and strengthen KDE-AR, and generally bring the community together to have fun. The event is free.
{|- class="wikitable" |- style="background:#efefef;" ! colspan="3" | Día KDE |- style="background:#efefef;" !Year !Venue !Date |- !2011 |Rosario |8/27 |- |}
''Release party'' is a party, which celebrates released of new version of the KDE SC (twice a year). KDE also participates other conferences that around free software.
{|- class="wikitable" align="right" |- style="background:#efefef;" ! colspan="3" | Promo sprint |- style="background:#efefef;" !Year !Venue !Date |- !2009 |Stuttgart, Germany | |- !2011 |Southampton, England | 5/6-5/8 |- |}
''KDE PIM Meeting'' is the annual meeting of KDE PIM team, held in Osnabrück, Germany since 2003. ''Akonadi Sprint'' is anther meeting of KDE PIM team since 2007; it focus on Akonadi. ''Calligra Sprint'' is the meeting of designers and developers of Calligra Suite. Usually the meetings are held in Berlin, Germany. ''Krita Sprint'' is the meeting of Krita team since 2009. ''KDE Education Meeting'' is the meeting of KDE Edu team. ''KDE Marble sprint'' is the meeting of Marble team, held in Nürnberg, Germany. ''KDE Games Sprint'' is the meeting of KDE Games team. ''KDE Imaging Sprint'' is a sprint for KDE photography applications. ''Tokamak'' is the meeting of designers and developers of Plasma, KWin, and Oxygen since 2008. ''KDE Finances Sprint'' is the meeting of developers from KMyMoney, Kraft and Skrooge. ''Promo sprint'' is the meeting, which discuses KDE Marketing and Promo.
KDE Platform consists of libraries and services which are needed to run KDE applications. They include a number of libraries: Solid, Nepomuk, Phonon, etc. And packages include: kdelibs, kdepimlibs and kdebase-runtime. The libraries must be licensed under one of the LGPL, BSD license, MIT License and X11 license. While the Platform is mainly written in C++, it includes bindings for other programming languages.
The Plasma Workspaces provide the environment for running and managing applications. It include many components such as KWin, KDM, Plasma core libraries, Klipper, KSysguard, and System Settings. There are different available GUI environments: ''Plasma Desktop'' for desktop computers, ''Plasma Netbook'' for netbooks, ''Plasma Mobile'' for smartphones and ''Plasma Tablet'' for Tablet PCs.
KDE Applications are built on top of the KDE Platform like Okular, KTorrent, Kexi and KDE Partition Manager. KDE applications can potentially be portable between operating systems and independent of a particular workspace or desktop environment. There are a few brands which are used to identify application suites built up from several applications, such as KDE Network, KDE Graphics and KDE Utilities. Some applications are part of the regular Software Compilation releases, others are part of Extragear and release to their own schedule.
On 23 June 2005, chairman of the Wikimedia Foundation announced that the KDE community and the Wikimedia Foundation have begun efforts towards cooperation. Fruits of that cooperation are MediaWiki syntax highlighting in Kate and accessing Wikipedia content within KDE applications, such as Amarok and Marble.
On 4 April 2008, the KDE e.V. and Wikimedia Deutschland have opened shared offices in Frankfurt. In September 2009 KDE e.V. moved to shared offices with Free Software Foundation Europe in Berlin, so Wikimedia Foundation now uses the Frankfurt offices for themselves.
On 22 August 2008, KDE e.V. and FSFE announced that after working with FSFE’s ''Freedom Task Force'' one and a half years KDE adopts FSFE’s ''Fiduciary Licence Agreement''. Using that, KDE developers can – on a voluntary basis – assign their copyrights to KDE e.V.
In September 2009, KDE e.V. and FSFE moved into shared offices in Berlin.
Nokia use Calligra Suite as base for their ''Office Viewer'' application for Maemo/MeeGo. They have also been contracting KO GmbH to bring MS Office 2007 file format filters to Calligra. Nokia also employs several KDE developers directly – either to use KDE software for MeeGo (e.g. ''KCal'') or as sponsorship.
The software development and consulting companies Intevation GmbH of Germany and the Swedish KDAB use Qt and KDE software – especially Kontact and Akonadi for Kolab – for their services and products, therefore both employ KDE developers.
Since 2009, GNOME and KDE co-host their conferences Akademy and GUADEC every two years under the ''Desktop Summit'' label.
In December 2010 KDE e.V. became a licensee of the Open Invention Network.
Many Linux distributions and other free operating systems are involved in the development and distribution of the software, and are therefore also active in the KDE community. These include commercial distributors such as Novell, Mandriva, Red Hat, or Canonical, but also government-funded non-commercial organizations such as the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey with its Linux distribution Pardus.
Category:Community Category:Free software projects Category:Free and open source software organizations
af:KDE als:KDE ar:كدي ast:KDE bn:কেডিই bar:K Desktop Environment bs:KDE bg:KDE ca:KDE cs:KDE da:KDE de:KDE et:KDE el:KDE es:KDE eo:KDE eu:KDE fa:کیدیای fr:KDE fy:KDE gl:KDE Software Compilation ko:KDE hi:केडीई hr:KDE id:KDE is:KDE it:KDE he:KDE ku:KDE lv:KDE lb:K Desktop Environment lt:KDE hu:KDE mk:KDE ml:കെ.ഡി.ഇ. ms:KDE nl:KDE ja:KDE no:K Desktop Environment nn:KDE km:Kde nds:K Desktop Environment pl:K Desktop Environment pt:KDE ro:KDE ru:KDE se:KDE simple:KDE sk:KDE sl:KDE sr:KDE fi:KDE sv:KDE te:KDE th:KDE tr:KDE uk:KDE vec:KDE vi:KDE zh:KDEThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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