On Thu, Jul 6, 2017 at 7:07 AM, Juha Manninen via Lazarus <lazarus@lists.lazarus-ide.org> wrote: > Moved from the "Release Candidate 3" thread: > > On Wed, Jul 5, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Michael Van Canneyt > <mich...@freepascal.org> wrote: >> { >> "OutOfTopic" : ["If by mature you mean 'bloated', then yes.", >> "KDE has become so bloated, it has driven me away.", >> "To linux mint and cinnamon." ] } >> >> ;) > > This is a little out of scope of the whole Lazarus list but I comment anyway. > KDE 5 is not bloated at all. It is slimmer that KDE 4. If you only use > KDE and QT applications, it is very snappy and light. >
Hello, If such comments are not unwelcome I would also suggest there are many architectural improvements in the code and invite Mr. Canneyt to peruse the Plasma 5 source (KDE 5 doesn't exist). That said there are some changes that have broken UI compatibility with KDE 4 and made the menus slightly harder to use for people with poor eyesight, but many things have similar problems. > The only bloat effect comes when you must start an application made > with other widget libs like GTK 2/3. Firefox and LibreOffice are good > examples. They start slowly and hog memory. > However that does not mean KDE is bloated. It means the "foreign" apps > and their libs are bloated. > Yes, I believe Firefox starts faster in a system built on top of GTK > libs because the shared libs are already loaded there. > > Example: > I have a 64-bit system with 4GB mem. > With a resource monitor KSysGuard open 0.4GB mem is used. > When I also have Dolphin and Qupzilla with 8 page tabs open the mem > usage goes to 0.7GB. > I have plenty of eye-candy desktop effects enabled and services like > "KDE Connect" for my Android phone etc. It is not a stripped down > system anyhow. > There are KDE specific versions of most SW: picture view and edit, PDF > view, diff view (kompare, good!), music and video players, etc. etc. > ... > When I use them, everything is snappy and around 1-1.3 GB mem is used. > Most of the memory is free and used for Linux file system buffering. > I have to start Firefox for some special web pages because Qupzilla > has problems with them. Then memory consumption jumps higher. > Still, the swap partition is almost never used. > > My 32-bit e-machines mini-laptop with 1GB mem also has KDE 5 which > then takes much less memory, less than 0.5GB. 32-bit code needs less > mem and the kernel also adjusts its usage for lower total mem. > Only if I start many big apps, things get a little sticky there. > > In real life situations KDE can be lighter and snappier than the so > called light desktop environments because there are so many apps made > with KDE/QT libs. With "light" DEs you typically get diverse widget > libs with all the diverse apps. > Gnome / Cinnamon have the same benefit as KDE with their dedicated apps. > > In general the obsession for very light window managers is useless. > Their GUI experience is more limited. They may save few MB of memory > but when a user opens all those big bloated apps hogging 2GB, who > cares about the window manager's memory? > > Modern Linux distros can still run on old computers with low memory. > KDE is very usable in a machine with 0.5GB memory. Yes! > ... but how many people really use such machines? > I have an abundant 4GB, many people have more. > When I run only KDE apps and look at the resource monitor, I feel 4GB > is too much. It could run with much less. This is the opposite of > bloat! > > Ok, when I debug Lazarus with another instance of Lazarus and have > music player and browser and other apps running, then 4GB is nice. > -- _______________________________________________ Lazarus mailing list Lazarus@lists.lazarus-ide.org https://lists.lazarus-ide.org/listinfo/lazarus