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Hey,
I thought about taking the plunge, and trying out KDE4.
Its kinda annoying switching back and forth KDE4 and KDE3.5 (I have to use KDE3.5 for
productive reasons), and I'd like to know if its at all possible to have KDE4 on one of my
four desktops, and KDE3.5 on another, allowing me to "switch" them simply by moving
to the other desktop.
I guess my question is simply if its possible to run 2 DE simoultanously under X.
Thanks
Fiod
Last edited by fiod (2008-08-02 18:16:38)
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My rather limited knowledge says "no". You can't run two window managers simultaneously, and I think that you could run into trouble from duplicating some of the basic KDE services.
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
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You can run xmonad or openbox intergrated to any desktop environment though
There shouldn't be any reason to learn more editor types than emacs or vi -- mg (1)
[You learn that sarcasm does not often work well in international forums. That is why we avoid it. -- ewaller (arch linux forum moderator)
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Hey,
I though about taking the plunge, and trying out KDE4.
Its kinda annoying switching back and forth KDE4 and KDE3.5 (I have to use KDE3.5 for
productive reasons), and I'd like to know if its at all possible to have KDE4 on one of my
four desktops, and KDE3.5 on another, allowing me to "switch" them simply by moving
to the other desktop.I guess my question is simply if its possible to run 2 DE simoultanously under X.
Thanks
Fiod
I don't use KDE (I just tried the kde4 release) but I had read you can use kde3 applications in kde4 (not sure it's ok on opposite way).
But if you use KDE for productive reasons, I think it's better to stick with the kde3 version for now. I don't understand why you switch from one to the other ?
Edit : wrong answer.
Last edited by chromatic (2008-08-02 18:49:35)
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Actually, you can.
Basically, you have to start two seperate X sessions. I did this with KDE 3.5 and KDE 4.1 SVN before.
Graphically, start one (say KDE 3.5), and then select switch user and log in as the same user but this time select KDE 4.1 in KDM.
I don't remember how to do this in the terminal...
Anyway, once that's done, you can do Ctrl+Alt F7 or F8 to switch between them...
There's no way to do that with virtual desktops as far as I know... However, I have run kde3.5 on top of kde 4... it was... interesting...
But if you use KDE for productive reasons, I think it's better to stick with the kde3 version for now. I don't understand why you switch from one to the other ?
Well if you're like me, you might love experimenting with things... I usually have a few desktop environments installed, and an assortment of applications I don't ever really need to use but they're fun to experiment with...
Last edited by ssbfalcon (2008-08-02 18:45:54)
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...
I didn't know that, I edited my last post to remove the "no you can't" and did some research and found this article explaining how to run two DE at the same time.
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ssbfalcon wrote:...
I didn't know that, I edited my last post to remove the "no you can't" and did some research and found this article explaining how to run two DE at the same time.
Nice article... I never knew about making a program appear in another session...
I wonder if that can be done over a network...
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Tnx a lot.
The article seems great..
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how did you get kde4 and kde3 running along side each other? I did find an article about it last week but now i'm about to set my laptop up i can't find the damn article
Last edited by laumars (2008-08-08 23:00:07)
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I wonder if that can be done over a network...
X can listen to TCP connections and you export the DISPLAY to an IP/hostname, you also want to read man xhost. Then there is SSH X11 forwarding, which does mostly everything for you... and so on (there are more ways to do it).
Since we're talking about these things you could also be interested in xpra, it can be described as "screen for X", and it can also run applications remotely...
You need to install an RTFM interface.
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Friggin' crazy. I had no idea you could do that.
i don't know you that well.
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Or just use qingy. It will do the trick for you.
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You can't do this currently with Arch because there is a conflict between the kde3mod packages and kde4 packages.
SuSe is supposed to have had to make massive changes in the packages to be able to accomplish this feat and our devs for kde4 didn't want to take the time.
At least that's my understanding
Running GNU/Linux Arch (Core Dump) x86_64 on System Dell-a-zoid
on Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E6550 @ 2.33GHz
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If you wanted to with KDE4, you could download the ABS packages and change the PKGBUILDS so that they install into /opt/kde4 instead of /opt/kde, I plan to do this at some point so that I can test KDE4, it would also mean you could run KDE4 and KDE3 applications side by side. Of course it would take a little bit of testing to get right.
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Oh ok then. I decided to bite the bullet and upgraded to KDE4.
So far so good. Compiz still runs smoothly and aside a few sporadic crashes with Konqueror, the system seems to run as smoothly as it did with KDE3.5.
Though it's still early days, So far so good
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