@Aaron,
I used KDE 4 from beta up to 4.6. I can't say anything about 4.7 or 4.8, but from what
I've seen, KDE 4 was very unstable, and it was such a sudden and huge change that even
now, when people tell me, "Oh, it's improving now," I can't get myself
to go back. It would be one thing if all the changes were more gradual, but such a sudden
change is a good way to drive away existing users and will give way to projects like TDE.
If KDE 4's stability is actually improving, you might attract new users, or existing
users who liked the changes (from what I personally have seen, not many existing users do
like the changes, regardless of stability).
From our perspective (or at least from my own), the sudden changes and instability make it
seem as though the KDE 4 devs don't care about the users anymore. However, since
I'm not a KDE 4 dev, I can't say whether or not my "KDE devs don't
care" view is true. It could very well be that they do care. But it certainly would
have made sense to delay the 4.0 release, regardless of what changes took place. In fact,
when making such immense changes, a release date isn't a good idea until the devs know
for sure that they can make a stable release.
I personally have not been as satisfied with TDE as I was with KDE 3.5.10, new glitches
have popped up that I don't remember being there. I haven't noticed any issues
with Kicker, though. The issues I have noticed are already in the bug tracker, and there
seems to be a concensus that a more stringent QA cycle is needed, hence why I am still
with TDE: I am willing to sit it out, and see if things improve, and I am certainly not
the impatient type when it comes to projects run by a small dev team.
So now that you know the perspective of one lone user, perhaps you can try to understand
that perspective and the perspectives of the others posting to this thread?
--
Kris Gamrat
Ark Linux webmaster
http://www.arklinux.org/