On 12/5/06, Jon M. Hanson <jon@the-hansons-az.net> wrote:
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 15:34, Dazed_75 wrote:
> I prefer Gnome to KDE generally, but there are some KDE apps that are
> really nice so I install and run them on my gnome desktop.  I know that
> means some library duplication and probably various kinds of overhead,  But
> that is the extent of my knowledge.  I don't see any obvious negatives so
> far though this is a 3.0 GHz P4 with HT on 1 GB ram so should have plenty
> of horsepower for such things.  But ...
>
> 1) Might I lose any functionality running the KDE apps under Gnome?
> 2) Are there definitive caveats or known problems doing so (or a list
> somewhere)?
> 3) Is there any way to get an idea of how badly resources are being wasted?
>
> Specific example: Comparing AmaroK to Sound Juicer is like comparing a 67
> Corvette to a Model T.  But when I was looking through preferences I got a
> report that there had been an error running/accessing/??? aRTs (sic) for
> AmaroK.  I ended up turning it aff and I can't even find out what it is.

        Arts (it has weird capitalization that I won't try to duplicate here) is
KDE's sound server. If you just installed the QT libraries to get the KDE
application working under Gnome then you wouldn't get Arts. Without Arts KDE
applications probably won't have any sound output.


--
Jon M. Hanson (N7ZVJ)

I used Synaptic to install AmaroK and whatever dependencies it requested (which did not include aRTs) and it plays fine. 

In fact, I had seen it was caplable of displaying lyrics as well but did not see how to do it.  A web search forund a package at http://www.kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=39724 so I downloaded it, put it in a directory and unpacked it.  After reading the README, I went to AmaroK to run some manager to install it but found a lyrics package already there but on a tab I had not noticed.  It is NOT the package I downloaded since the UI is different, Sure is cool though.

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