Talk:Installing third party softwares in terminal/Build/KDE4/Windows: Difference between revisions
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#*this makes mirroring possible | #*this makes mirroring possible | ||
#having two or more main directories on the server: one for current stable release, one for 'unstable/testing' one | #having two or more main directories on the server: one for current stable release, one for 'unstable/testing' one | ||
#*we need unstable releases to get people test software early and often and on Windows | |||
#development installation requires tools having own installers | #development installation requires tools having own installers | ||
#*ideally this should not be the case for end-user installation, otherwise updating would be hard (user would be forced to uninstall prev. version of an external app and install a new one in the same place...) | #*ideally this should not be the case for end-user installation, otherwise updating would be hard (user would be forced to uninstall prev. version of an external app and install a new one in the same place...) |
Revision as of 11:35, 15 September 2007
KDE-Windows Meeting: Notes
Started: jstaniek 11:40, 15 September 2007 (CEST)
Topics:
- reducing distribution of the file by keeping a snapshot of files on our server(s)
- this makes mirroring possible
- having two or more main directories on the server: one for current stable release, one for 'unstable/testing' one
- we need unstable releases to get people test software early and often and on Windows
- development installation requires tools having own installers
- ideally this should not be the case for end-user installation, otherwise updating would be hard (user would be forced to uninstall prev. version of an external app and install a new one in the same place...)
- We need someone using Vista on daily basis to test kdeinstaller. Until then Vista is not supported?
- USB memory sticks/CDs: it would be possible to run kde apps/infrastructure installed on the stick/CD in two ways:
- If the user's machine already contains KDE 4 runtime installed, it could be reused to run apps from the stick, and settings placed on the host conuter could be reused
- If the user's computer contains no KDE-related stuff at all, default settings and .kde directory is used
- In either case the default user expectation is that after plugging off the stick, no settings or files remain on the machine's filesystem <-really like that???
- format of the kde mirrors: