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KDE Software Ubuntu

Muon Suite To Be Kubuntu's Software Center 84

mukt77 writes "The Muon Suite has been chosen to be the default package manager for Kubuntu 11.10, the Oneiric Ocelot. By the time Kubuntu 11.10 is released the Muon Suite will have had its first birthday. In this year I believe that the Muon Suite has vetted itself, proving to be a robust package manager as well as a stable set of applications. With my Kubuntu developer hat on, I believe that it was a good move to wait a bit before jumping on the 'latest and greatest' for its shininess value, though I can't deny that it would have been neat to have the Muon Suite included a bit sooner."
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Muon Suite To Be Kubuntu's Software Center

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  • Not much to see. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by w0mprat ( 1317953 ) on Monday May 23, 2011 @09:51PM (#36224156)
    Still a feature-starved sparse looking uninspired clone of USC (which still has a kludgey unfinished feel), copying the abysmal rating system. Desktop linux could benefit greatly from a decent App Store.

    I really wish developers would actually take a look at competitors are doing and get some inspiration.

    Taking a look at, for example: Mac App Store, Android Market web store, Intel's App-up, Chrome Web App store, even AllMyApps for windows is a good one to look at. Even Linux Mint's App portal is a good effort.

    Linux has had good package management and delivery for a long long time, all it's been missing is a good, navigable and appealing front end for it.
  • by Ensign Nemo ( 19284 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2011 @01:08AM (#36225022)

    Good lord! Enough with package managers/packaging systems/new frontends.. They're like paint programs in Linux. 15 half-assed ones but not one single great one, because every developer with NIH feels like he has to create another one because 'nobody else has these features.' ENOUGH ALREADY! at this point, it has nothing to do with choice and everything to do with developer ego and NIH.

    It's just a frigging package manager/frontend/system. Can we get past this already?!?!?!?!

    Seriously, this is why Vista's failure didn't hurt Microsoft. Linux devs are too busy reinventing the wheel every 6 months. Devs will get 80% there and then stop and then all the other devs decide they know a better way to do it, and they get (if they're lucky) 80% there and stop. rinse and repeat.

    And don't give me that "If you don't like it, you don't have to use it." Now instead of 15 half-assed ones, we have 16 half-assed ones. Kubuntu will use it, no one else will, and users have to learn yet another interface.

    Ugh, I need a drink.

  • by nut ( 19435 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2011 @01:28AM (#36225094)

    KDE seems to suffer terribly from re-writer's disease. They'll write a good piece of software, possibly lacking a few features and a bit buggy in places. Rather than polish it and fill in the gaps, they nearly always decider to write something Newer and Better.

    Almost invariably the new application won't be the latter, because immature software tends to lack a few features and be a bit buggy in places.

    I still prefer KDE to Gnome, and Kubuntu is my main desktop, but I really wish the developers would settle down and get a bit less skittish.

  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2011 @02:22AM (#36225292) Homepage

    I've always been a little curious - what do all these package management front-ends actually do?

    When I want to install a package, I do: apt-get install <name-of-package-i-want>

    Help you find name-of-package-i-want, if you already know that then no front end is going to make it easier. Categories, ratings, descriptions, searches... yes, it's pretty much all possible with the command line and clever use of grep but it's supposed to be the easy and intuitive way to get from "I have some vague notion of what I want" to "I'll try installing name-of-package-i-probably-want".

If you have a procedure with 10 parameters, you probably missed some.

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