KDE’s Usability & Productivity initiative is now almost two years old, and I’ve been blogging weekly progress for a year and a half. So I thought it would be a good time to take stock of the situation: how far we’ve come, and what’s left to do. Let’s dive right in! Here’s a short list of some of the achievements we’ve accomplished:

Full support for configuring mice and touchpads using the Libinput driver on both X11 and Wayland

A brand new notification system with hugely improved usability for common workflows

Better default text contrast and font rendering settings

Massive, far-reaching user interface and performance improvements for Discover

Huge user interface improvements to the open/save dialogs

Many performance and reliability improvements for the Baloo file indexing service

“Open Containing Folder” actions added throughout KDE apps

A variety of usability-related bugfixes, new features, and user interface upgrades for Spectacle

Typewriter/text box annotation tool in Okular

Support for showing file creation dates

Easy support for file tagging in Dolphin, and a more useful and comprehensible Places panel

Slideshow wallpaper configuration that shows the actual images that will be a part of the slideshow

Configurable grid size/maximum label width for files and folders on the desktop

Better lock and login screens

Consistent styles (grid views and centered form layouts) for settings windows throughout KDE software

Simplified and more comprehensible user interface for many System Settings pages

Bugfixing and user interface improvements throughout the whole software stack

It’s a lot of great stuff!

There’s still more to do, of course. KIO still doesn’t mount network locations locally, though that’s being actively worked on! Touchpad scrolling behavior has improved, but is still not consistent across all KDE apps and there’s no inertial scrolling yet. Samba sharing is improving, but still rough. Okular’s annotations are becoming more full-featured, compatible, and discoverable, yet more work is still needed. More System Settings pages still need to have their user interface overhauled. But are you seeing a pattern here!? Things are happening! The trajectory is really good! It’s unbelievable how many of the rough edges have gotten smoothed out over the past two years, and I feel super upbeat about the state of KDE’s software offering!

With this kind of ongoing work, KDE’s software moves ever closer to the day when I envision that it has become humanity’s preeminent computing platform. It will take time, but open-source software is immortal as long as people care about it. And the KDE community clearly does! So slowly but surely we continue, improving year by year as competitors stagnate, drop out, or are corrupted by the lures of money and power. It will be a KDE world.

I’d like to offer a congratulations to the incredible KDE community. This all is not my work… it’s yours! The passion that people feel for this stuff is amazing, and it’s not misplaced: more and more KDE software becoming best-in-class in its product category. The future is bright, very bright. Thanks again, everyone.