Hi Aaron,

Mostly just a user here but I'm glad to hear your stance on Trinity. As you must imagine, probably everyone here is very grateful to you and other contributors who built what eventually became our beloved KDE 3.5. Still, you must understand that the reference to performance is obvious to anyone who bothers to check it. While KDE 4 does new stuff and in a more modern way, there's not denying that it takes up a bigger amount of the system's resources, especially memory. I've measured KDE 3.5.10 at ~80MB including other system dependencies and never less than 400 for a stripped down KDE 4, which is a very heavy weight for people with 512MB and 1GB of RAM in their computers.

I agree with you that positioning Trinity as a competitor to KDE 3.5.10 is not correct but I think no one here has a wrong attitude against KDE 3.5 or KDE 4. When people complain - from what I've gathered - it's mostly that it is too slow compared to what they are used to and they don't want or need extra functionality or "bling". That is also my opinion about KDE 4, although I have noticed improvements in more recent versions.

I'm personally hoping that the developers on both sides can work towards common goals (where attainable) and that both DEs can coexist for years to come, allowing people to use old apps that have been phased out and new ones that are part of KDE 4, 5 or whatever KDE's development team has in store.

Best regards,
Tiago Marques

On Wed, Nov 2, 2011 at 10:26 PM, Aaron J. Seigo <aseigo@kde.org> wrote:
hi everyone ...

first off, congratulations on a new release!

the way i see Trinity, it is the continuation of work on the 3.5 codebase.
nobody else is doing it, nobody else seems willing to do it outside of Trinity
and there are people who want to use it. these are all great things and a
strength of free and open source software.

as such, i see Trinity doing a service by giving those who wish to continue
using KDE 3.x the ability to do so without facing software obsolence through
bit rot. this makes those folks happier, and prevents them from feeling like
their only remaining response is to behave poorly towards those working on the
4.x codebases. it's win-win in the truest sense of the word.

but i'm not going to whitewash things either: there are those who use Trinity
who really dislike 4.x and those in the KDE community who see Trinity as a
safe haven for people who have (or continue to) behave poorly. this is beyond
unfortunate since Trinity and the KDE Platform and Workspaces 4.x both provide
good things to the same group of people: those who use KDE software. so i'd
like to see the remaining negativity put behind us so all of us working on KDE
code can co-exist in good spirit, happy in the knowledge that everyone is
getting what they want and doing so in the spirit of true freedom. i hope you
feel similarly.

this was the spirit in which we encouraged people to work on the 3.x code if
they wanted to and, unlike some other communities who have in recent times
openly berated and made fun of people who wanted to do similar things for
their software, have been supporters and agreed with the goals you have.

so when i see the announcements on sites starting with quotes like this:

"Disappointed with KDE 4's performance and other shortcomings, Timothy Pearson
continued KDE 3.5 development under the name Trinity."

i cringe a little inside because that does nothing but stir up hornets' nests.

when i read this in the announcement to the mailing list:

"Why upgrade from KDE3.5.10, the latest release available from KDE e.V.?
Simply put, Trinity is faster, more secure, and far more feature rich than
3.5.10 ever was!" (http://trinity-devel.pearsoncomputing.net/?0::3271)

i feel sad because Trinity should really not be trying to stand out as a
_competitor_ to 3.5.10 but as the continuation of that code base. (btw, KDE
e.V. never puts out KDE releases; the community of participants and
contirbutors does that.)

by positioning Trinity as a competitor when no such competition exists only
serves to strengthen us/them lines that simply do not exist in reality.

personally, i'm tired of the needless divisions in F/OSS that arise because
people can not simply live and let live, because we for some reason feel the
need to constantly tear each other down in an attempt to make our own efforts
seem more presentable and respectable. what rubbish. Trinity, as the
continuation of the 3.5 codebase, stands on its own feet alongside Plasma
Desktop and the rest of the 4.x products. we should therefore also stand as
allies and friends. we should also stand for what we are, not for what (or
who) we are not.

as the developers, and therefore leaders of the Trinity project, please
consider this when working on and then publicizing your next release.

i appreciate your time and patience if you've read this far :)

--
Aaron J. Seigo
humru othro a kohnu se
GPG Fingerprint: 8B8B 2209 0C6F 7C47 B1EA  EE75 D6B7 2EB1 A7F1 DB43

KDE core developer sponsored by Qt Development Frameworks