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  Kubuntu 14.04 LTS Schedule, Plans,...
								Last edited by Rog132; Feb 06, 2014, 03:45 AM.A good place to start: Topic: Top 20 Kubuntu FAQs & Answers Kubuntu 14.04 LTS Schedule, Plans,...
								Last edited by Rog132; Feb 06, 2014, 03:45 AM.A good place to start: Topic: Top 20 Kubuntu FAQs & Answers
 Searching FAQ's: Google Search 'FAQ from Kubuntuforums'
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	Pan-Galactic Quordlepleen
 So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish   - Jul 2011
- 9625
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 My (limited) understanding is that Firefox from Blue Shell is better integrated with KDE.Windows no longer obstruct my view.
 Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
 "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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 There is no point making it the default browser if the blue shell KDE integrated version isn't used. It establishes proper MIME types to be used with the system and also knows to use the kde file browser when viewing/opening/saving files. Everytime you click on an attachment or open something from the internet becomes a hassle and lame. Who cares if your browser takes a few days to update it is better than having a browser that doesn't know how to function with the system.
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	Pan-Galactic Quordlepleen
 So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish   - Jul 2011
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 There is very little choice right now.
 
 Rekonq is too unstable right now. It relies on the Qt 4.x version of QtWebKit, which is unmaintained. The Qt 5 version isn't really any better. The Qt 5 WebKit library based on webkit2 will be discontinued after Qt 5.2. The future is QtWebEngine, based on Blink (Chromium), but won't be ready until Qt 5.4. So, unfortunately, the state of KDE-native web browsers is rather flat at the moment. (More info.)
 
 Konqueror is unmaintained (sadly).
 
 You would care if a zero-day vulnerability were discovered and the main repository is immediately updated, while Blue Shell's PPA may not compile for a few days.Originally posted by wrender View PostWho cares if your browser takes a few days to update it is better than having a browser that doesn't know how to function with the system.
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 As we can't really have 2 Firefox packages in the Ubuntu repos, I wonder if just the mime types could be integrated into a Kubuntu-specific package, say kubuntu-default-settings or similar. I don't think that itself would require a separate compilation of Firefox, like the KDE integration does. Or would it?
 
 Sent from my DNA using Tapatalk, like that really matters   
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	Pan-Galactic Quordlepleen
 So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish   - Jul 2011
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 Not sure. Rohan seems to be the caretaker of the PPA, he might have some ideas.
 
 Interestingly, Chromium -- without any modifications -- uses the KDE dialogs. I suppose it also sets the MIME types appropriately; I haven't checked. I wonder if it might make more sense for this to be Kubuntu's default rather than Firefox? I wonder what ScottK would think about that...
 
 Edit: on my machine, Chromium uses the KDE dialogs. Elsewhere on the forum, we have a report of Chromium using the Gtk+ file picker. Not sure what to think about that.Last edited by SteveRiley; Jan 10, 2014, 07:01 PM.
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 Hah!Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostNot sure. Rohan seems to be the caretaker of the PPA, he might have some ideas.
 
 Interestingly, Chromium -- without any modifications -- uses the KDE dialogs. I suppose it also sets the MIME types appropriately; I haven't checked. I wonder if it might make more sense for this to be Kubuntu's default rather than Firefox? I wonder what ScottK would think about that...
 
 I think Chromium would have to be better or rather more regularly maintained in Ubuntu (if it isn't nowadays) 
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	Pan-Galactic Quordlepleen
 So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish   - Jul 2011
- 9625
- Seattle, WA, USA
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 Fully updated Saucy:
 Chromium calendar: http://www.chromium.org/developers/calendarCode:steve@t520:~$ [B]apt-cache policy chromium-browser[/B] chromium-browser: Installed: 31.0.1650.63-0ubuntu0.13.10.1~20131204.1 Candidate: 31.0.1650.63-0ubuntu0.13.10.1~20131204.1 Version table: *** 31.0.1650.63-0ubuntu0.13.10.1~20131204.1 0 500 http://mirror.pnl.gov/ubuntu/ saucy-updates/universe amd64 Packages 500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ saucy-security/universe amd64 Packages 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status 29.0.1547.65-0ubuntu2 0 500 http://mirror.pnl.gov/ubuntu/ saucy/universe amd64 Packages
 Looks like v.32 has been out for nearly two months and it hasn't made its way into *buntu yet.
 
 Meanwhile, v.33 and v.34 have been tagged and can be built right now, if you want:
 http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/releases/
 
 Curiously, even Arch is still only at v.31:
 https://www.archlinux.org/packages/?sort=&q=chromium
 
 Gentoo, meanwhile, has ebuilds for v.32 and v.33, but they're masked:
 http://packages.gentoo.org/package/www-client/chromium
 
 I wonder if maybe it isn't so much that *buntu is behind, but instead there's something wonky with v.32 and v.33?
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