1. KDE at Linux Expo 2003

See ["DebianExpoList2003"] for dates, links, Debian-people, .org section layout, LPI registration, reminder to bring GPG keys and a passport, suggestions of places to stay.

2. People

Name (Email)

Mobile

Tue 7th - setup day

Wed 8th

Thu 9th

Notes

[http://jriddell.org/ Jonathan Riddell] (debian-wiki@jriddell.org)

07941-938-912

Prob.

Yes

Yes

I have merchandise

David Pashley (debian-wiki@davidpashley.com)

07980-752-297

Prob.

Yes

Yes

One of us (don't let the Debians steal him)

Jono Bacon (jono@kde.org)

Nope

Yep

Yep

Might give a talk, also hanging around with LUG

Paul Cupis (paul@cupis.co.uk)

07762 821809

Probably not

Yes

Yes

May drift between Debian and KDE stands

Chris Howells (howells@kde.org)

07816 528475

No

Yes

No

Bringing laptop with CVS HEAD

Lee Jordan (lee@leejordan.org.uk)

Nope

Yus

Yus

Printing T-Shirts for stall runners, also hanging around with LUG

Ben Lamb (kde@zurgy.org)

07940 538948

No

Yes

Yes

Can bring desktop PC + laptop both running KDE CVS. Need external monitor for desktop or someone to help carry a 15" montior from Brixton.

3. Things on the stall

Also:

4. Other things

5. Timetable

6. KDE dot news article draft

The users have decreed, KDE 3.2 looks "beautiful." Our demo machine was using the Plastik theme with the Crystal icons. Several KDE developers including, Jono Bacon, Chris Howells and Jonathan Riddell, were on hand at LinuxExpo in London last week to demonstrate the forthcoming KDE 3.2 release and solicit feedback from existing users. We met several companies looking wanting to deploy UNIX on the desktop and talked to journalists from all the major UK Linux magazines. Besides the beautiful new look visitors were very impressed with Kontact; for people who knew about KDE 3.2 it was the first thing they asked to see. However, confusion abounded about it only working with Kroupware/Kolab. We emphasized that even when running it as a standalone application you can exchange appointments via email and publish calendars to the web. Everyone had their own wishes, some needed LDAP connectivity, and another was very pleased to discover KGpg had all the functionality he needed. Smaller features such as the new system tray applet for changing the screen resolution and TrueType font previews were universally appaulded. Almost everyone wanted to know if/when their distribution would be shipping KDE 3.2, how they could upgrade and whether we had the code available on CD. It’s clear that many users cannot easily upgrade to the latest release and some are still running KDE 2. The corporate users have similar problems and are crying out for a way to reliably deploy updates. If the distributions have tackled this problem they need to publicize the fact. KOffice 1.3 was also demonstrated although most of the people were already using OpenOffice. Several people were unaware of KOffice altogether and many did not realize that the applications have improved considerably since its first release. Kexi is generating a lot of interest. Sadly we weren't able to demo it. Criticism flowed as well, ranging from “the application names are confusing” to the logo’s rubbish. More constructively a plea, from a large corporate, for better documentation about locking down KDE desktops and possibly a GUI front-end. It’s a shame when KDE has the features but they go unused for lack of documentation or publicity. Unfortunately, this was a recurring theme. An almost continuous stream of people visited the stand on both days. Mostly existing KDE users and by my guess at least a quarter had been following the progress of KDE 3.2 and would have upgraded anyway. After seeing a demo nearly everyone was convinced that it would be a worthwhile upgrade. Our entire stock of T-shirts and polo shirts sold out and almost 500 flyers were handed out. Next year we will take more.