On Sun, Feb 12, 2012 at 2:09 AM, Abhishek Sood A wrote:
> Hii I was just thinking if its possible to categorize the downloads in
> konqueror depending on file types and target it to respective folders which
> would make it easier to access.
It's probably not enough for a full GSoC. Once you found
> By the way, if you want to sort downloads by file types, using Nepomuk
> is the obvious solution.
I like this idea but please consider there are some people, for which Nepomuk
is disabled. This can be because Nepomuk impacts the performance of their
desktop in some way, or simply because the b
I was not thinking of using Nepomuk. I was thinking of sorting based on
file types and directing the downloads to different pre-set subfolders in
Downloads(like Downloads\Music or Downloads\Documents). The downloading
application identifies the file types and the application that open the
file but
Hi Abhishek,
>@Andrew: I would like to get your feedback on this and it would be great if
>you could let me know on how should I proceed with this. Also your thoughts
>on this from GSoC perspective
I think it's a great idea, however I'm not a core developer so from a mentor
perspective you wou
Am 14.02.2012, 01:22 Uhr, schrieb Abhishek Sood A :
I think this involves significant amount of work in terms of adding a UI
to set the target folders for
different file types and creating download filters.
Like adding a KUrlRequester to the File association kcm ...?
The problem should rath
On 2012-02-13, Andrew Mason wrote:
>> By the way, if you want to sort downloads by file types, using Nepomuk
>> is the obvious solution.
>
> I like this idea but please consider there are some people, for which Nepomuk
> is disabled. This can be because Nepomuk impacts the performance of their
>
>
> I don't think these people should be our main target audience.
We all have intel core-i5's at work and were forced turn Nepomuk off for
performance issues with kde 4.7.4 / 4.8. That is not new hardware but there
would still be a reasonable portion of people with lesser hardware using KDE.