[Fsf-friends] KDE has tea with Stallman... one view

Frederick Noronha (FN) fred@bytesforall.org
Wed May 7 02:59:12 IST 2003


URL :  http://phil.freehackers.org/writings/tea-with-stallman.html

                         KDE has tea with Stallman

                                                        [1]Philippe Fremy

                             Tea with Stallman

   For Linux Solutions 2003 (see my [2]report) , the french KDE team
   thought that we could take the oppurtunity to improve our relationship
   with RMS. He seems to accepts KDE as fully free software now. So we
   invited him for a tea, to show him the latest KDE and discuss. He
   accepted.

   As promised, RMS came to visit us and see KDE after his conference. We
   thought he would just had a quick look but it turns out that he stayed
   for an hour! We had tea, we had biscuits, we had chairs, knoppix with
   KDE 3.1 and a laptop for demonstration.

   One question I wanted to ask him for a long time is how often he runs
   X . The answer was the one I had forcast: "sometimes". Most of the
   time, he is using emacs in terminal mode for more or less everything.

   He asked me what I was doing and I talk about [3]KVim. He said
   something like: "I can't tell if I am more sorry for vim or for KDE".
   We then talked a bit about emacs and if an embeddable version could be
   made for KDE, like for the vimpart.

   Gerard ask him if emacs was using gettext and could be translated. It
   turns out emacs is not using gettext, which is a reason why it can not
   be translated. There are incompatible API for this but someone can
   tackle the problem.

   He asked whether KDE people were saying "Gnu/Linux" or just "Linux",
   and Open Source or Free Software. I told him some of us are using
   KDE/Gnu/Linux which pleased him as an answer.

   We told him quickly what was in KDE 3.1 and gave him a Knoppix with
   KDE 3.1 and OpenOffice, all in french. We thought he would then leave
   but he was willing to see KDE running. So Sebastien started
   demonstrating him Konqueror and other stuff. Sebastien was willing to
   make a quick overview of everything but Richard quickly stopped him,
   asking him to go very slowly, explaining each key he types and what
   exactly happens on the screen.

   He spotted a bookmark named Linux and asked immediately what was in
   it, Linux or Gnu software ("Should not that be Gnu/Linux) ? It turns
   out it was just a list of bookmark related to Free Software
   (freshmeat, linuxfr, dot.kde.org, ...).

   While discussing, we discovered that he was not subscribed to the
   linux kernel mailing list, he just receives cc: sometimes. He did not
   know about Kernel Traffic so we showed him (with konqueror of course).
   He was disappointed not to see his recent thread about Linux and
   Gnu/Linux mentionned. He receives something like 300 mails every day,
   and one third of that is spam.

   We showed him the konsole embedded into Konqueror. The first thing he
   did was to run emacs in text mode, which was successful. So we had
   emacs inside konsole inside konqueror. Fun!

   After that, he took the mouse and start wandering throught the control
   center. He checked a few things and seeemed to find it interesting. He
   had problems with the french keyboard, so we enabled a dual
   french/english keyboard.

   Since he was mainly a terminal user, I showed him the multi-terminal
   capability of konsole. This highlighted a bugs in emacs: it does not
   notice that the konsole window is resized. I told him vim could do
   that but he did not let the flamewar start :-) . I told him there is a
   kind of signal emitted by the terminal when it resizes (I don't
   remember exactly) and he wants me to send him more information on
   that.

   He asked for a C binding that would be used equally with Gnome/Gtk or
   KDE/Qt. I told him that this was more or less what WxWindows does, and
   that apart from that, this is not a good idea. First, both toolkits,
   although they have the same api, are internally very different.
   Second, it would prevent people from using the real interesting
   features of KDE or Gnome. He insisted quite a lot on that. This allow
   him to remind us that KDE is C++ and C++ is still not recommended for
   Gnu Software. I asked if C was still the recommended language and he
   answered negatively. He just points out that the FSF actually does not
   recommend C but recommands against C++!

   After one hour, he had to leave to visit other booth. All in all, this
   was a very nice and interesting meeting. He consider now KDE as a
   fully free desktop and we even discussed the possibility of getting
   into the Gnu project. He did not oppose the idea although many KDE
   hackers would probably not accept.

   Philippe Fremy







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