Today the KDE Community is announcing a new najor release of Plasma 6.0, and Gear 24.02. KDE Plasma is a modern, feature-rich desktop environment for Linux-based operating systems. Known for its sleek design, customizable interface, and extensive set of applications, it is also open source, devoid of ads, and makes protecting your privacy and personal data a priority.

With Plasma 6, the technology stack has undergone two major upgrades: a transition to the latest version of the application framework, Qt 6, and a migration to the modern Linux graphics platform, Wayland. They will continue providing support for the legacy X11 session for users who prefer to stick with it for now. The new version brings the new windows and desktop overview, improved colour management, a cleaner theme, more effects, better overall performance, and much more.

96 points

All that matters is… THE CUBE IS BACK BABY!

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52 points

THE CUBE IS PROOF KDE IS RUN BY THE PEOPLE

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21 points

All hail the CUBE.

… now we wait for … the jiggly cube!! :D

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3 points

No no, solid cube, jiggly windows. We’re not anarchists.

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3 points

… jiggly windows (all of them) as you rotate the solid cube?

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17 points

PRAISE THE CUBE

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16 points

The KUBE

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13 points

Had to look up what exactly the cube is and it looks awesome!

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17 points

A new cube user in 2024. Checkmate, atheists.

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0 points

Just like the rest of the theists, this one make no sense either!

@pelotron @AceFuzzLord

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6 points

Resistance is futile!

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6 points

What’s the cube?

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6 points
4 points

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

https://www.piped.video/watch?v=Be6YSwN8pX0

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

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42 points

HELL YEAH

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38 points

How long until this trickles down into the major distros?

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41 points

It will reach Slackware about 6 months before the heat death of the universe.

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40 points

Fedora 40 (April) should have it I think

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31 points

It’s currently in Arch Testing.

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4 points

It’s not hard to install from testing actually, may give it a shot…

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29 points

However, one should first read through https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/official_repositories#Testing_repositories and consider whether it is really worth the risk.

For my part, I will simply wait until Plasma 6 arrives in the official package sources.

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23 points

It’s just been merged to master for NixOS. Next stable would be 24.05

https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/286522
https://nixpk.gs/pr-tracker.html?pr=286522

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2 points

Fedora at the end of April with fedora 40

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34 points

I love KDE. Been using it for 10 years

One question i’ve always had though… Does anyone actually use the default KDE software like konqueror, kmail, kontacts, etc? Why not just focus on the desktop environment?

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34 points

That software played a much bigger role back in the day (i.e Konqueror’s. KHTML was forked by both Apple and later Google for Safari and Chrome), so it’s kind of a proud legacy. Konqueror is deprecated though. The other apps are useful for KDE mobile.

But the real reason people work on them is “cause they wanna”

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33 points

Konsole is fantastic.

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22 points

KDE’s weakness to GNOME is definitely the range and quality of its homegrown apps, but the ‘core’ apps like Kate, Kalculator, Konsole are really solid.

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16 points

A bunch of them: Kate, Konsole, Dolphin, KCalc, Kdenlive, Okular, Gwenview, Ark, Spectacle, KDEconnect, Elisa and probably a couple more I missed.

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5 points

I used okular and loved Kate

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9 points

Yeah I use a lot of KDE software, main reason because it fits so nicely with the desktop and it also integrates functions with Plasma so usage is even smoother. One of the main applications I do not use from KDE are browser, I use LibreWolf (the desktop integration package+plugin does quite a nice job for integration here), and LibreOffice,

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3 points

Yes, using them is probably the closest one can get to the macos ecosystem on Linux.

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2 points

I’d argue GNOME has a better native app ecosystem. they have the resources to maintain a massive selection of “official” apps

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5 points

I don’t know, I used gnome for a while and I just felt like I was using toy apps. But I think that comes down to personal preference. KDE definitly has the bigger apps like Kdenlive and Krita.

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1 point

The default software was one of the main reasons KDE was created. The original creator didn’t like that every app on their system seemed to use a different UI toolkit, and wanted a consistent appearance across everything.

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33 points
*

Nice. I’ve kept coming back to try Plasma for years and years, but there’s always been some jank, bug, complete lack of polish, or random annoyance that forced me off it again.

Much of these have been improved with Plasma 6, and I’m glad that they took extra time to release rather than quickly shoving it out, a la Plasma 4 and early Plasma 5. To be blunt, those two were an absolute mess. It was only around 5.15 where it started getting stable enough to really use.

The only big showstopper in Plasma 5.27 for me was the lack of proper session restore - if Kwin crashes, it takes all my work down with it. Plasma 6 will be fixing that.

I think I’m going to try this on my laptop once Fedora 40 releases

Compliments to the devs, it’s a thankless job sometimes

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27 points

Well yeah, about session restore. In X11 mode it is better. But on Wayland, well it is missing completely, since Wayland does not support it just yet. KDE developers are pushing hard to make it happen in Wayland and in the meantime they are also working on workarounds.

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1 point

Excellent, thanks for this info.

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7 points

and I’m glad that they took extra time to release rather than quickly shoving it out, a la Plasma 4 and early Plasma 5.

As far as I can remember, this was also the fault of some distributions that wanted to release Plasma 5 quickly, even though the developers of Plasma pointed out existing bugs.

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