Felix Miata <mrma...@earthlink.net> on 2018-09-15T10:43 (CEST): > KDE3 was stable and efficient, didn't need to be abandoned to > (re)create KDE4 from scratch. In openSUSE, KDE3 remains > available, though a little lighter for having lost most > maintainers and a few packages. TDE, the KDE3 fork, hasn't > lost any of what made KDE3 nice and stable, while acquiring a > few improvements to match morphing technology, keeping > stability, avoiding useless bloat, and not dumbing down its > UI.
I must acknowledge the qualities of KDE3, and most probably TDE, My first GNU/Linux computer ran a Mandriva 2007 (released late 2006) operating system, shipping by default with KDE 3.5. The box itself was some junk from early 2000 with average hardware even from these days standards. It is cool having seen that kind of user interface run on a AMD K6, 256 MiB RAM and 4 GiB of disk space for /, /home and the swap: https://wiki.trinitydesktop.org/images/a/ac/Screenshot2-1.jpg Since then, I left more room for wallpapers and xter^H^H^H^H st terminal emulators... Perhaps I should give a try to TDE one of these days, to bring back memory from my childhood. :-) Kind Regards, -- Étienne Mollier <etienne.moll...@mailoo.org>