Mauser wrote: Mon Feb 10, 2020 1:29 pm
In my experience
I don't find them to be a trustworthy source. From what I understand if I understand correctly is the Whisker menu is built with the Gtk tool kit while LXQt & KDE are both built with
the Qt tool kit which that difference doesn't look good for the Whisker menu being added to either LXQt or KDE.
From what followed in your post, I assume you mean KDE isn't trustworthy(?). The link to Manjaro says the LXQt people were jonesing for Xfce's whisker. LXQt's community might be more welcoming of someone wanting to implement it with the Qt framework?
IMO, LXQt is kind of odd. It started out intending to be an exact recreation of LXDE. But, it seems like they're adding some newness to it. Some people were unhappy with the direction LXDE took with this, the higher resource usage (Lubuntu deprioritized being lightweight). My impression was that LXQt/Lubuntu were letting things flow where they will. That might have been a good strategy because now Xfce is getting larger. LXQt might be the lightweight desktop again (relative to others).
Another thing that seems odd to me: I've read someone remark how LXQt is essentially competing against KDE. Neon KDE isn't that large (I just installed 20 distros. I did it a year ago too. I was surprise then and now how KDE is relativlely lightweight. It has a lot of config items to disable eye candy and animations. When you do that, it's in MX's territory.). That makes me wonder why the LXQt peple didn't just create a KDE-light desktop instead of something new from scratch.
Anyway, it has seemed like LXQt is creating a new "brand" (so to speak), finding a new niche. Especially as other distros evolve. It seems to me they'd be the most welcoming of an effort to bring Whisker to Qt. (And then, I think that would be useable in KDE too.).
I personally have always liked KDE. It reminds me of OS/2 for some reason. I wasn't very fond of LXQt a year ago. But, that could just be my own aversion to change. I just booted a Lubuntu 20.04 alpha the other day, and I thought LXQt looked nicer than I remember 19.4 being.
It's interesting how these things are evolving. A year or two ago, people were upset about LXDE being replaced with Qt. Xfce was the baseline of comparison. Now the spot light's on Xfce doing something new. Maybe this is LXQt's opportunity to be the baseline. (KDE used to be synonymous with large. Now it's in the mid-range compared to Mint Cinnamon, Zorin Core
or Elementary OS.).