QUOTE(DarkCarnival @ Jul 15 2008, 04:02 PM)

Meh. One thing is broken and bloated code. On that note, if the devs claim it's there I think we should either get into the project or at least trust their judgement, after all, it's their work, they should know best

I never said it wasn't true. However, what is better, fixing some buggy code or spending years to write something entirely new? It is a matter of opinion.
QUOTE
Secondly, the major shift which started this rewrite was that QT changed from 3.X to 4.X and with that came a lot of architectural changes that requires a lot of work to the KDE codebase.
See, the KDE team relies heavily on QT and they simply don't have the people to maintain the 3.X line indefinitely so the switch is bound to happen. In that light, I think it's wise of them to throw in almost all of their development power on getting KDE QT4 ready.
While doing that, they reviewed QT4 and looked at what they could do with these new features as well as trying different approaches to the solutions used for KDE3 which might be kind of dated.
Suffice it to say, KDE4 is the result of a rewrite which HAD to happen sooner or later. The road might be a little bumpy, but not everything can be handled incrementally.
Yes, I know all that, but so many people believe that they didn't look at things from the end-user point of view. KDE 3xx was so damn easy to learn and use. I have tons of examples of people who never used Linux before and found themselves immediately at ease with KDE 3. KDE 4 is definitely not.
There is so much on the internet about it now.
Except for the famous call for a fork by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols:
http://practical-tech.com/operating-system...ime-for-a-fork/For instance DistroWatch Weekly is suggesting that people change DE altogether:
http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20080714#featureNot such a bad idea. I don't love GNOME, but I can stand it. Not so with KDE 4, I can't stand it.
Gnome has already overtaken KDE because of Ubuntu. KDE 4 is the last straw.
Now some KDE developers have said that they don't need users. That is of course utter BS.
If your users go away, you lose motivation, feedback, fresh blood (new developers) and
money. In the end your project dies. It has
always happened to arrogant developers.