KF 5.58 was just released. Strictly speaking 5.59 is the 5-years release (due to 5.0 being the first one).
Is it still on the agenda to have some news for 5.59 or 5.60? The task is still pretty empty: https://phabricator.kde.org/T10607 Best regards Dominik Ivana Isadora Devcic <[email protected]> schrieb am Mi., 13. März 2019, 03:30: > Hi Dominik, > > thank you for sharing this information! > > A Dot story sounds like a great idea. Maybe we can come up with something > even more exciting - there's still enough time until July. For example, the > Onboarding goal could nicely fit into the picture, if we can highlight all > the opportunities and benefits that Frameworks can provide to new > contributors (basically, if we can show how Frameworks make it easier to > start contributing or developing your own apps). > > I've created a ticket for this on the Promo board: > https://phabricator.kde.org/T10607 > > This should help us keep track of the task. We can also use the ticket to > collect more ideas for promoting the Frameworks anniversary. > > Please feel free to add your comments and suggestions to the ticket. > > Thanks! > > Best regards, > Ivana Isadora > KDE Promo > > Den sön 10 mars 2019 kl 22:11 skrev Dominik Haumann <[email protected]>: > >> Hi everyone, >> >> the first release of KDE Frameworks was version 5.0, released on 7th of >> July, 2014 [0], [1]. Since then, the KDE Frameworks libraries were released >> every month as scheduled on time [2], growing from initially ~60 libraries >> to over 70 well maintained libraries. >> >> Soon, KDE Frameworks will turn 5 years old with its 5.60th release, >> likely happening in July 2019 (will be the 61th release). >> >> Is there anyone who wants to prepare a .dot story and maybe even get in >> contact with the Qt marketing to celebrate this a bit? >> >> What comes to my mind: >> - KDE Frameworks is a set of well-maintained crossplatform C++ libraries >> that extend Qt >> - KDE Frameworks libraries can often be used standalone without any (or >> only a few) dependencies, such as KArchive or KSyntaxHighlighting >> - KDE Frameworks are well-tested [3] and documented [4] >> - Transparent licensing >> - KSyntaxHighlighting is used in Qt Creator [5] >> >> What I wrote here is obviously not yet a nice dot story :-) >> Any takers? >> >> Best regards >> Dominik >> >> [0] >> https://dot.kde.org/2014/07/07/kde-frameworks-5-makes-kde-software-more-accessible-all-qt-developers >> [1] https://kde.org/announcements/kde-frameworks-5.0.php >> [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KDE_Frameworks#Release_history >> [3] https://build.kde.org/job/Frameworks/ >> [4] https://api.kde.org/frameworks/index.html >> [5] https://blog.qt.io/blog/2019/02/21/qt-creator-4-9-beta-released/ >> >
