hello all
- From: Sam Halliday <sam neutrino phy uct ac za>
- To: gnome-list gnome org
- Subject: hello all
- Date: Fri, 17 May 2002 13:10:22 +0200
hello everybody,
i must admit that i am a long time KDE user, and after recently upgrading to
KDE3, i realised (finally)... i need to switch, its getting to damn bloated,
and well, lets just say the spinning of my hard drive still 20 seconds after
startup and the incessant crashes have reminded me somewhat of why i left M$
in the first place.....
to cut a long story short, I'm looking to switch to GNOME, but i need a few
applications first of all, and i was wondering what the GNOME equivalents
were....
1 - and most important, i use KMatplot for scientific 3d plotting and pixmap
plotting, this is an essential program and i would require a good
replacement... i seen a program who's name escapes me which did almost the
same thing (Ive never tried it though) but i felt, after seeing the
dependency list that it was also bloated. i don't have python, and i would
like to avoid installing as i already have too many languages on my system...
but i suspect i may need it anyway for GNOME and scientific stuff.
2 - i use Kmail for my mail, it is very nice i must admit, it allows me to run
scripts before mail checks and has GPG integration... is there such a mailer
for GNOME?
3 - I am a M$ passport holder on M$N Messenger, simply because thats all my
uneducated friends know about when it comes to messenger clients... KDE has a
nice KMerlin program for that, is there a GNOME equivalent?
4 - The is integrated spell checking with aspell on KDE, is this a feature of
GNOME?
5 - i like CPU and network device monitors on my task bar? can i get this in
GNOME?
6 - there is a nice floppy formatter under KDE, does GNOME have an equivalent?
I am not prepared to keep any old KDE libs around at all... so running KDE
apps under GNOME is out of the question, I'm looking for a full switch over
thanks in advance to anyone willing to help out!!
cheers,
Sam
--
handshaking protocol, n:
A process employed by hostile hardware devices to initate a
terse but civil dialogue, which, in turn, is characterised by
occasional misunderstanding, sulking, and name-calling.
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