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Wikipedia

KDE

KDE is an international free software community that develops free and open-source software. As a central development hub, it provides tools and resources that allow collaborative work on this kind of software.[1] Well-known products include the Plasma Desktop (the default desktop environment on many Linux distributions), KDE Frameworks, and a range of cross-platform applications such as Amarok, digiKam, and Krita that are designed to run on Unix and Unix-like operating systems, Microsoft Windows, and Android.[2]

KDE
Founded14 October 1996; 26 years ago (1996-10-14)
FounderMatthias Ettrich
TypeCommunity
FocusFree software
ProductsKDE Plasma, KDE Frameworks, KDE Applications, Calligra Suite, Krita, KDevelop, digiKam, Amarok, Kirigami, and many more
MethodArtwork, development, documentation, promotion, and translation.
Websitekde.org

Origins

 
Matthias Ettrich, Founder of KDE

KDE (back then called the K(ool) Desktop Environment) was founded in 1996 by Matthias Ettrich, a student at the University of Tübingen.[3]

At the time, he was troubled by certain aspects of the Unix desktop. Among his concerns was that none of the applications looked or behaved alike. In his opinion, desktop applications of the time were too complicated for end users. In order to solve the issue, he proposed the creation of a desktop environment in which users could expect the applications to be consistent and easy to use. His initial Usenet post spurred significant interest, and the KDE project was born.[4]

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.[5] The K was originally suggested to stand for "Kool", but it was quickly decided that the K should stand for nothing in particular. Therefore, the KDE initialism expanded to "K Desktop Environment" before it was dropped altogether in favor of simply KDE in a rebranding effort.[citation needed]

In the beginning Matthias Ettrich chose to use Trolltech's Qt framework for the KDE project.[6] Other programmers quickly started developing KDE/Qt applications, and by early 1997, a few applications were being released. On 12 July 1998 the first version of the desktop environment, called KDE 1.0, was released. The original GPL licensed version of this toolkit only existed for platforms which used the X11 display server, but with the release of Qt 4, LGPL licensed versions are available for more platforms. This allowed KDE software based on Qt 4 or newer versions to theoretically be distributed to Microsoft Windows and OS X.[7]

The KDE Marketing Team announced a rebranding of the KDE project components on 24 November 2009. Motivated by the perceived shift in objectives, the rebranding focused on emphasizing both the community of software creators and the various tools supplied by the KDE, rather than just the desktop environment.

What was previously known as KDE 4 was split into KDE Plasma Workspaces, KDE Applications, and KDE Platform (now KDE Frameworks) bundled as KDE Software Compilation 4.[8] Since 2014, the name KDE no longer stands for K Desktop Environment, but for the community that produces the software.[9]

Software releases

 
K Desktop Environment 1.0
 
KDE Software Compilation 4
Version Date Information
14 October 1996 KDE development announced[3]
K Desktop Environment 1 12 July 1998
K Desktop Environment 2 23 October 2000
K Desktop Environment 3 3 April 2002
KDE Software Compilation 4 11 January 2008
KDE Plasma 5 15 July 2014 former KDE/KDE SC split into KDE Plasma, KDE Frameworks and KDE Applications

KDE Projects

 
KDE Plasma 5.26 showing Breeze Twilight theme
 
Krita 5.0.0 interface screenshot with Kiki

The KDE community maintains multiple free-software projects. The project formerly referred to as KDE (or KDE SC (Software Compilation)) nowadays consists of three parts:

Other projects

KDE neon

KDE neon is a software repository that uses Ubuntu LTS as a core. It aims to provide the users with rapidly updated Qt and KDE software, while updating the rest of the OS components from the Ubuntu repositories at the normal pace.[11][12] KDE maintains that it is not a "KDE distribution," but rather an up-to-date archive of KDE and Qt packages.

Subtitle Composer

Subtitle Composer is an open-source subtitle editor for the Linux and Microsoft Windows operating systems, based on Qt and KDE Frameworks. The project became part of KDE starting in December 2019.[13] It supports the most common text and bitmap-based subtitle formats, video previewing, audio waveform, speech recognition, timings synchronization, subtitle translation, OCR and Javascript macros/scripting. Subtitle Composer is free software released under the GNU General Public License.

WikiToLearn

WikiToLearn, abbreviated WTL, is one of KDE's newer endeavors. It is a wiki (based on MediaWiki, like Wikipedia) that provides a platform to create and share open source textbooks. The idea is to have a massive library of textbooks for anyone and everyone to use and create. Its roots lie in the University of Milan, where a group of physics majors wanted to share notes and then decided that it was for everyone and not just their internal group of friends. They have become an official KDE project with several universities backing it.

Contributors

Developing KDE software is primarily a volunteer effort, although various companies, such as Novell, Nokia,[14][failed verification] or Blue Systems employ or employed developers to work on various parts of the project.[15] Since a large number of individuals contribute to KDE in various ways (e.g. code, translation, artwork), organization of such a project is complex. A mentor program helps beginners to get started with developing and communicating within KDE projects and communities.[16][17]

Communication within the community takes place via mailing lists, IRC, blogs, forums, news announcements, wikis and conferences. The community has a Code of Conduct for acceptable behavior within the community.[18]

Development

Currently the KDE community uses the Git revision control system. The KDE GitLab Instance (named Invent) gives an overview of all projects hosted by KDE's Git repository system. Phabricator is used for task management.[19]

On 20 July 2009, KDE announced that the one millionth commit has been made to its Subversion repository.[20] On 11 October 2009, Cornelius Schumacher, a main developer within KDE,[21] 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.[22] This estimation does not include Qt, Calligra Suite, Amarok, digiKam, and other applications that are not part of KDE core.[clarification needed]

Core team

The overall direction is set by the KDE Core Team. These are developers who have made significant contributions within KDE over a long period of time. This team communicates using the kde-core-devel mailing list, which is publicly archived and readable, but joining requires approval. KDE does not have a single central leader who can veto important decisions. Instead, the KDE core team consists of several dozens of contributors who make decisions not by a formal vote, but through discussions.[23]

The developers also organize alongside topical teams.[clarification needed] For example, the KDE Edu team develops free educational software. While these teams work mostly independent and do not all follow a common release schedule. Each team has its own messaging channels, both on IRC and on the mailing lists.[24]

KDE Patrons

A KDE Patron is an individual or organization supporting the KDE community by donating at least 5000 Euro (depending on the company's size) to the KDE e.V.[25] As of October 2017, there are six such patrons: Blue Systems, Canonical Ltd., Google, Private Internet Access, SUSE, and The Qt Company.[26]

Community structure

Mascot

The KDE community's mascot is a green dragon named Konqi.[27] Konqi's appearance was officially redesigned with the coming of Plasma 5, with Tyson Tan's entry (seen on the right) winning the redesign competition on the KDE Forums.[28]

Katie is a female dragon. She was presented in 2010 and is appointed as a mascot for the KDE women's community.[29]

Other dragons with different colors and professions were added to Konqi as part of the Tyson Tan redesign concept. Each dragon has a pair of letter-shaped antlers that reflect their role in the KDE community.

 
Antlers

Kandalf the wizard was the former mascot for the KDE community during its 1.x and 2.x versions. Kandalf's similarity to the character of Gandalf led to speculation that the mascot was switched to Konqi due to copyright infringement concerns, but this has never been confirmed by KDE.[30]

KDE e.V. organization

The financial and legal matters of KDE are handled by KDE e.V., a German non-profit organization. Among others, it owns the KDE trademark and the corresponding logo. It also accepts donations on behalf of the KDE community, helps to run the servers, assists in organizing and financing conferences and meetings,[31] but does not influence software development directly.

Local communities

In many countries, KDE has local branches. These are either informal organizations (KDE India) or like the KDE e.V., given a legal form (KDE France). The local organizations host and maintain regional websites, and organize local events, such as tradeshows, contributor meetings and social community meetings.

Identity

KDE has community identity guidelines (CIG) for definitions and recommendations which help the community to establish a unique, characteristic, and appealing design.[32] 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.[33] Some local community logos are derivations of the official logo.

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, while some others prefix a commonly used word with a K, for instance KGet. However, the trend is not to have a K in the name at all, such as with Stage, Spectacle, Discover and Dolphin.

Collaborations with other organizations

Wikimedia

 
Amarok with information retrieved from Wikipedia

On 23 June 2005, chairman of the Wikimedia Foundation announced that the KDE community and the Wikimedia Foundation have begun efforts towards cooperation.[34] 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 opened shared offices in Frankfurt.[35] In September 2009 KDE e.V. moved to shared offices with Free Software Foundation Europe in Berlin.[36]

Free Software Foundation Europe

In May 2006, KDE e.V. became an Associate Member of the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE).[36]

On 22 August 2008, KDE e.V. and FSFE jointly announced that after working with FSFE's Freedom Task Force for 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.[37]

In September 2009, KDE e.V. and FSFE moved into shared offices in Berlin.[38]

Commercial enterprises

Several companies actively contribute to KDE, like Collabora, Erfrakon, Intevation GmbH, Kolab Konsortium, Klarälvdalens Datakonsult AB (KDAB), Blue Systems, and KO GmbH.

Nokia used Calligra Suite as base for their Office Viewer application for Maemo/MeeGo.[39] They have also been contracting KO GmbH to bring MS Office 2007 file format filters to Calligra.[40] Nokia also employed several KDE developers directly – either to use KDE software for MeeGo (e.g. KCal)[41] 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.

Others

KDE participates in freedesktop.org, an effort to standardize Unix desktop interoperability.

In 2009 and 2011, GNOME and KDE co-hosted their conferences Akademy and GUADEC under the Desktop Summit label.

In December 2010 KDE e.V. became a licensee of the Open Invention Network.[42]

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 SUSE/Novell[43] or Red Hat[44] but also government-funded non-commercial organizations such as the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey with its Linux distribution Pardus.

In October 2018, Red Hat declared that KDE Plasma was no longer supported in future updates of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, though it continues to be part of Fedora. The announcement came shortly after the announcement of the business acquisition of Red Hat by IBM for close to US$43 billion.[45] As a result, Fedora now makes KDE Plasma and other KDE software available also to Red Hat Enterprise Linux users through their Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL) project.[46][47]

Activities

The two most important conferences of KDE are Akademy and Camp KDE. Each event is on a large scale, both thematically and geographically. Akademy-BR and Akademy-es are local community events.

Akademy

 
Akademy 2008 logo

Akademy is the annual world summit, held each summer at varying venues in Europe.[48] 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 meet to discuss specific sub-projects or issues.[49]

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 held. Since 2003 the conferences were held once 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.[50] First winners received a framed picture of Konqi signed by all attending KDE developers.[51]

Camp KDE

Year Venue Date
2009 Negril, Jamaica 17–18 January
2010 La Jolla, US 15–22 January
2011 San Francisco, US 4–5 April

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 is 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, US, 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, Intel, iXsystem, KDE e.V. and Kitware. The event included 1–2 days of presentations, BoF meetings and hackathon sessions.[52] Camp KDE 2010 took place at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) in La Jolla, US. 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.[53] Camp KDE 2011 was held at Hotel Kabuki in San Francisco, US, was co-located with the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit. The schedule included presentations, hackathons and a party at Noisebridge. The conference opened with an introduction spoken by Celeste Lyn Paul.[54]

SoK (Season of KDE)

Season of KDE is an outreach program hosted by the KDE community. Students are appointed mentors from the KDE community that help bring their project to fruition.[55]

Other community events

conf.KDE.in
Year Venue Date
2011 Bangalore 9–13 March

conf.kde.in was the first KDE and Qt conference in India. The conference, organized by KDE India, was held at R.V. College of Engineering in Bangalore, India. The first three days of the event had talks, tutorials, and interactive sessions. The last two days were a focused code sprint.[56] The conference was opened by its main organizer, 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 spoke on "So much to do – so little time". At the event, the return of Project Neon was announced on March 11, 2011, with the project providing nightly builds of the KDE Software Compilation.[57] Closing the conference was keynote speaker and old-time KDE developer Sirtaj.

Día KDE
Year Venue Date
2011 Rosario 27 August

Día KDE (KDE Day) is an Argentinian event focused on KDE. It gives talks and workshops. The purposes of the event are to: spread the free software movement among the population of Argentina, bringing to it the KDE community and environment developed by it; know and strengthen KDE-AR; and generally bring the community together to have fun. The event is free.[58]

A Release party is a party, which celebrates the release of a new version of the KDE SC (twice a year).[59] KDE also participates in other conferences that revolve around free software.

Notable uses

Brazil's primary school education system operates computers running KDE software, with more than 42,000 schools in 4,000 cities, thus serving nearly 52 million children. The base distribution is called Educational Linux, which is based on Kubuntu.[60] Besides this, thousands more students in Brazil use KDE products in their universities. KDE software is also running on computers in Portuguese and Venezuelan schools, with respectively 700,000 and one million systems reached.[61]

Through Pardus, a local Linux distribution, many sections of the Turkish government make use of KDE software, including the Turkish Armed Forces,[62] Ministry of Foreign Affairs,[62] Ministry of National Defence,[63] Turkish Police,[62] and the SGK (Social Security Institution of Turkey),[62][64] although these departments often do not exclusively use Pardus as their operating system.

CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research) is using KDE software.[65]

Germany uses KDE software in its embassies around the world, representing around 11,000 systems.

NASA used the Plasma Desktop during the Mars Mission.[66][non-primary source needed]

Valve Corporation's handheld gaming computer, the Steam Deck, uses the KDE Plasma desktop environment when in desktop mode.[67]

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website
  • KDE.News, news announcements
  • KDE Wikis

this, article, about, free, software, community, other, uses, disambiguation, international, free, software, community, that, develops, free, open, source, software, central, development, provides, tools, resources, that, allow, collaborative, work, this, kind. This article is about the free software community For other uses see KDE disambiguation KDE is an international free software community that develops free and open source software As a central development hub it provides tools and resources that allow collaborative work on this kind of software 1 Well known products include the Plasma Desktop the default desktop environment on many Linux distributions KDE Frameworks and a range of cross platform applications such as Amarok digiKam and Krita that are designed to run on Unix and Unix like operating systems Microsoft Windows and Android 2 KDEFounded14 October 1996 26 years ago 1996 10 14 FounderMatthias EttrichTypeCommunityFocusFree softwareProductsKDE Plasma KDE Frameworks KDE Applications Calligra Suite Krita KDevelop digiKam Amarok Kirigami and many moreMethodArtwork development documentation promotion and translation Websitekde wbr org Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Software releases 2 KDE Projects 2 1 Other projects 2 1 1 KDE neon 2 1 2 Subtitle Composer 2 1 3 WikiToLearn 3 Contributors 3 1 Development 3 2 Core team 3 3 KDE Patrons 4 Community structure 4 1 Mascot 4 2 KDE e V organization 4 3 Local communities 4 4 Identity 5 Collaborations with other organizations 5 1 Wikimedia 5 2 Free Software Foundation Europe 5 3 Commercial enterprises 5 4 Others 6 Activities 6 1 Akademy 6 2 Camp KDE 6 3 SoK Season of KDE 6 4 Other community events 7 Notable uses 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOrigins Edit Matthias Ettrich Founder of KDE KDE back then called the K ool Desktop Environment was founded in 1996 by Matthias Ettrich a student at the University of Tubingen 3 At the time he was troubled by certain aspects of the Unix desktop Among his concerns was that none of the applications looked or behaved alike In his opinion desktop applications of the time were too complicated for end users In order to solve the issue he proposed the creation of a desktop environment in which users could expect the applications to be consistent and easy to use His initial Usenet post spurred significant interest and the KDE project was born 4 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 5 The K was originally suggested to stand for Kool but it was quickly decided that the K should stand for nothing in particular Therefore the KDE initialism expanded to K Desktop Environment before it was dropped altogether in favor of simply KDE in a rebranding effort citation needed In the beginning Matthias Ettrich chose to use Trolltech s Qt framework for the KDE project 6 Other programmers quickly started developing KDE Qt applications and by early 1997 a few applications were being released On 12 July 1998 the first version of the desktop environment called KDE 1 0 was released The original GPL licensed version of this toolkit only existed for platforms which used the X11 display server but with the release of Qt 4 LGPL licensed versions are available for more platforms This allowed KDE software based on Qt 4 or newer versions to theoretically be distributed to Microsoft Windows and OS X 7 The KDE Marketing Team announced a rebranding of the KDE project components on 24 November 2009 Motivated by the perceived shift in objectives the rebranding focused on emphasizing both the community of software creators and the various tools supplied by the KDE rather than just the desktop environment What was previously known as KDE 4 was split into KDE Plasma Workspaces KDE Applications and KDE Platform now KDE Frameworks bundled as KDE Software Compilation 4 8 Since 2014 the name KDE no longer stands for K Desktop Environment but for the community that produces the software 9 Software releases Edit K Desktop Environment 1 0 KDE Software Compilation 4 Version Date Information14 October 1996 KDE development announced 3 K Desktop Environment 1 12 July 1998K Desktop Environment 2 23 October 2000K Desktop Environment 3 3 April 2002KDE Software Compilation 4 11 January 2008KDE Plasma 5 15 July 2014 former KDE KDE SC split into KDE Plasma KDE Frameworks and KDE ApplicationsKDE Projects EditMain article KDE Projects KDE Plasma 5 26 showing Breeze Twilight theme Krita 5 0 0 interface screenshot with KikiThe KDE community maintains multiple free software projects The project formerly referred to as KDE or KDE SC Software Compilation nowadays consists of three parts KDE Plasma a graphical desktop environment with customizable layouts and panels supporting virtual desktops and widgets Written with Qt 5 and KDE Frameworks 5 KDE Frameworks a collection of libraries and software frameworks built on top of Qt formerly known as kdelibs or KDE Platform 10 KDE Gear utility applications like Kdenlive or Krita mostly built on KDE Frameworks and which are often part of the official KDE Applications release Other projects Edit KDE neon Edit KDE neon is a software repository that uses Ubuntu LTS as a core It aims to provide the users with rapidly updated Qt and KDE software while updating the rest of the OS components from the Ubuntu repositories at the normal pace 11 12 KDE maintains that it is not a KDE distribution but rather an up to date archive of KDE and Qt packages Subtitle Composer Edit Subtitle Composer is an open source subtitle editor for the Linux and Microsoft Windows operating systems based on Qt and KDE Frameworks The project became part of KDE starting in December 2019 13 It supports the most common text and bitmap based subtitle formats video previewing audio waveform speech recognition timings synchronization subtitle translation OCR and Javascript macros scripting Subtitle Composer is free software released under the GNU General Public License WikiToLearn Edit WikiToLearn abbreviated WTL is one of KDE s newer endeavors It is a wiki based on MediaWiki like Wikipedia that provides a platform to create and share open source textbooks The idea is to have a massive library of textbooks for anyone and everyone to use and create Its roots lie in the University of Milan where a group of physics majors wanted to share notes and then decided that it was for everyone and not just their internal group of friends They have become an official KDE project with several universities backing it Contributors EditDeveloping KDE software is primarily a volunteer effort although various companies such as Novell Nokia 14 failed verification or Blue Systems employ or employed developers to work on various parts of the project 15 Since a large number of individuals contribute to KDE in various ways e g code translation artwork organization of such a project is complex A mentor program helps beginners to get started with developing and communicating within KDE projects and communities 16 17 Communication within the community takes place via mailing lists IRC blogs forums news announcements wikis and conferences The community has a Code of Conduct for acceptable behavior within the community 18 Development Edit Currently the KDE community uses the Git revision control system The KDE GitLab Instance named Invent gives an overview of all projects hosted by KDE s Git repository system Phabricator is used for task management 19 On 20 July 2009 KDE announced that the one millionth commit has been made to its Subversion repository 20 On 11 October 2009 Cornelius Schumacher a main developer within KDE 21 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 22 This estimation does not include Qt Calligra Suite Amarok digiKam and other applications that are not part of KDE core clarification needed Core team Edit The overall direction is set by the KDE Core Team These are developers who have made significant contributions within KDE over a long period of time This team communicates using the kde core devel mailing list which is publicly archived and readable but joining requires approval KDE does not have a single central leader who can veto important decisions Instead the KDE core team consists of several dozens of contributors who make decisions not by a formal vote but through discussions 23 The developers also organize alongside topical teams clarification needed For example the KDE Edu team develops free educational software While these teams work mostly independent and do not all follow a common release schedule Each team has its own messaging channels both on IRC and on the mailing lists 24 KDE Patrons Edit A KDE Patron is an individual or organization supporting the KDE community by donating at least 5000 Euro depending on the company s size to the KDE e V 25 As of October 2017 there are six such patrons Blue Systems Canonical Ltd Google Private Internet Access SUSE and The Qt Company 26 Community structure EditMascot Edit The KDE community s mascot is a green dragon named Konqi 27 Konqi s appearance was officially redesigned with the coming of Plasma 5 with Tyson Tan s entry seen on the right winning the redesign competition on the KDE Forums 28 Katie is a female dragon She was presented in 2010 and is appointed as a mascot for the KDE women s community 29 KDE community mascots Konqi Katie Konqi and other mascotsOther dragons with different colors and professions were added to Konqi as part of the Tyson Tan redesign concept Each dragon has a pair of letter shaped antlers that reflect their role in the KDE community AntlersKandalf the wizard was the former mascot for the KDE community during its 1 x and 2 x versions Kandalf s similarity to the character of Gandalf led to speculation that the mascot was switched to Konqi due to copyright infringement concerns but this has never been confirmed by KDE 30 KDE e V organization Edit The financial and legal matters of KDE are handled by KDE e V a German non profit organization Among others it owns the KDE trademark and the corresponding logo It also accepts donations on behalf of the KDE community helps to run the servers assists in organizing and financing conferences and meetings 31 but does not influence software development directly Local communities Edit In many countries KDE has local branches These are either informal organizations KDE India or like the KDE e V given a legal form KDE France The local organizations host and maintain regional websites and organize local events such as tradeshows contributor meetings and social community meetings Identity Edit KDE has community identity guidelines CIG for definitions and recommendations which help the community to establish a unique characteristic and appealing design 32 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 33 Some local community logos are derivations of the official logo 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 while some others prefix a commonly used word with a K for instance KGet However the trend is not to have a K in the name at all such as with Stage Spectacle Discover and Dolphin Collaborations with other organizations EditWikimedia Edit Amarok with information retrieved from Wikipedia On 23 June 2005 chairman of the Wikimedia Foundation announced that the KDE community and the Wikimedia Foundation have begun efforts towards cooperation 34 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 opened shared offices in Frankfurt 35 In September 2009 KDE e V moved to shared offices with Free Software Foundation Europe in Berlin 36 Free Software Foundation Europe Edit In May 2006 KDE e V became an Associate Member of the Free Software Foundation Europe FSFE 36 On 22 August 2008 KDE e V and FSFE jointly announced that after working with FSFE s Freedom Task Force for 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 37 In September 2009 KDE e V and FSFE moved into shared offices in Berlin 38 Commercial enterprises Edit Several companies actively contribute to KDE like Collabora Erfrakon Intevation GmbH Kolab Konsortium Klaralvdalens Datakonsult AB KDAB Blue Systems and KO GmbH Nokia used Calligra Suite as base for their Office Viewer application for Maemo MeeGo 39 They have also been contracting KO GmbH to bring MS Office 2007 file format filters to Calligra 40 Nokia also employed several KDE developers directly either to use KDE software for MeeGo e g KCal 41 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 Others Edit KDE participates in freedesktop org an effort to standardize Unix desktop interoperability In 2009 and 2011 GNOME and KDE co hosted their conferences Akademy and GUADEC under the Desktop Summit label In December 2010 KDE e V became a licensee of the Open Invention Network 42 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 SUSE Novell 43 or Red Hat 44 but also government funded non commercial organizations such as the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey with its Linux distribution Pardus In October 2018 Red Hat declared that KDE Plasma was no longer supported in future updates of Red Hat Enterprise Linux though it continues to be part of Fedora The announcement came shortly after the announcement of the business acquisition of Red Hat by IBM for close to US 43 billion 45 As a result Fedora now makes KDE Plasma and other KDE software available also to Red Hat Enterprise Linux users through their Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux EPEL project 46 47 Activities EditThe two most important conferences of KDE are Akademy and Camp KDE Each event is on a large scale both thematically and geographically Akademy BR and Akademy es are local community events Akademy Edit Akademy 2008 logo Akademy is the annual world summit held each summer at varying venues in Europe 48 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 meet to discuss specific sub projects or issues 49 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 held Since 2003 the conferences were held once 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 50 First winners received a framed picture of Konqi signed by all attending KDE developers 51 Camp KDE Edit Year Venue Date2009 Negril Jamaica 17 18 January2010 La Jolla US 15 22 January2011 San Francisco US 4 5 AprilCamp 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 is 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 US 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 Intel iXsystem KDE e V and Kitware The event included 1 2 days of presentations BoF meetings and hackathon sessions 52 Camp KDE 2010 took place at the University of California San Diego UCSD in La Jolla US 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 53 Camp KDE 2011 was held at Hotel Kabuki in San Francisco US was co located with the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit The schedule included presentations hackathons and a party at Noisebridge The conference opened with an introduction spoken by Celeste Lyn Paul 54 SoK Season of KDE Edit Season of KDE is an outreach program hosted by the KDE community Students are appointed mentors from the KDE community that help bring their project to fruition 55 Other community events Edit conf KDE inYear Venue Date2011 Bangalore 9 13 Marchconf kde in was the first KDE and Qt conference in India The conference organized by KDE India was held at R V College of Engineering in Bangalore India The first three days of the event had talks tutorials and interactive sessions The last two days were a focused code sprint 56 The conference was opened by its main organizer 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 spoke on So much to do so little time At the event the return of Project Neon was announced on March 11 2011 with the project providing nightly builds of the KDE Software Compilation 57 Closing the conference was keynote speaker and old time KDE developer Sirtaj Dia KDEYear Venue Date2011 Rosario 27 AugustDia KDE KDE Day is an Argentinian event focused on KDE It gives talks and workshops The purposes of the event are to spread the free software movement among the population of Argentina bringing to it the KDE community and environment developed by it know and strengthen KDE AR and generally bring the community together to have fun The event is free 58 A Release party is a party which celebrates the release of a new version of the KDE SC twice a year 59 KDE also participates in other conferences that revolve around free software Notable uses EditBrazil s primary school education system operates computers running KDE software with more than 42 000 schools in 4 000 cities thus serving nearly 52 million children The base distribution is called Educational Linux which is based on Kubuntu 60 Besides this thousands more students in Brazil use KDE products in their universities KDE software is also running on computers in Portuguese and Venezuelan schools with respectively 700 000 and one million systems reached 61 Through Pardus a local Linux distribution many sections of the Turkish government make use of KDE software including the Turkish Armed Forces 62 Ministry of Foreign Affairs 62 Ministry of National Defence 63 Turkish Police 62 and the SGK Social Security Institution of Turkey 62 64 although these departments often do not exclusively use Pardus as their operating system CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research is using KDE software 65 Germany uses KDE software in its embassies around the world representing around 11 000 systems NASA used the Plasma Desktop during the Mars Mission 66 non primary source needed Valve Corporation s handheld gaming computer the Steam Deck uses the KDE Plasma desktop environment when in desktop mode 67 See also Edit Free and open source software portalKDE Projects List of KDE applications Free software community Trinity Desktop Environment GNOMEReferences Edit About KDE kde org Archived from the original on 26 December 2020 Retrieved 28 December 2020 KDE Kirigami KDE Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 25 November 2018 a b New Project Kool Desktop Environment Programmers wanted groups google com Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 21 January 2022 Ettrich Matthias 14 October 1996 New Project Kool Desktop Environment KDE Newsgroup de comp os linux misc Usenet 53tkvv b4j newsserv zdv uni tuebingen de Archived from the original on 30 May 2013 Retrieved 4 December 2010 COSE Update FYI Archived from the original on 7 February 2012 Retrieved 6 November 2010 history of the KDE project August 2003 Archived from the original on 31 October 2010 Retrieved 2 December 2010 Ryan Paul 23 January 2008 KDE goes cross platform with Windows Mac OS X support Ars Technica Archived from the original on 21 January 2009 Retrieved 4 December 2010 Stuart Jarvis 24 November 2009 Repositioning the KDE Brand KDE KDE NEWS Archived from the original on 3 December 2020 Retrieved 13 November 2010 Jos 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