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Originally Posted by bigtomrodney As someone who is responsible for developing processes relating to information quality and transfers I can say that almost every change I have ever introduced has been met with scepticism and resistance.
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I think change is something that scares people. I really think the only sin committed here was the release being too early. |
I respectfully disagree. There are those who want to dismiss the people who object to KDE 4 as simply emotional reactionaries, and that's simply not true. I can't speak for everyone, but my objections to KDE 4 have nothing at all to do with the choice to change things. I actually agree that KDE was in need of an overhaul. What I disagree with is the changes the developers made in response.
Yes, KDE needed to be rewritten. However did it *need* Plasma? Did it *need* widgets? Did it *need* to make simple, everyday tasks more difficult for the users? No.
As someone who does this kind of work you will understand when I say the most well-thought-out designs can absolutely flop when given to real-world people. Human factors are very important when considering a sweeping change in the way a product operates. The developers of KDE 4 completely disregarded this, and have paid the price in bad press and user protests.