Kubuntu Jaunty Jackalope alpha 3 review

I’ve installed the Kubuntu Jaunty Jackalope alpha 3 on my normal laptop, I didn’t try anything like VirtualBox since I wanted to see how it performs compared to my normal Intrepid install. So I downloaded the iso, burned the CD, shrank my 8.10 system partition and installed 9.04-3.
Installation
The partition shrinking and installation ran as smooth as possible: No reboots required until the install is complete and no useless questions. Resizing the partition took a while, but after that the installer finished within 15 minutes. I was rather surprised that I had so little problems since it’s an alpha release, maybe that’s because the installer is not under development yet.
First impression
Booting 9.04 is fast. I’ve used the new ext4 filesystem and that’s worth it: My full startup from power on until password entry is about 40 seconds, from there until the KDE desktop is working is about 20 seconds. For comparison: my current 8.10 Gnome takes 60 seconds until password entry and then 40 seconds until a working Gnome desktop. That’s a good start for the rabbit.
The KDE 4.2 is now a release candidate, but I think it still requies quite some work. Although I must admit that my knowledge of KDE is limited, maybe some of the stuff I found is normal in KDE.
First of all my laptop screen is 1366 pixels wide and that’s too much for KDM. The screen where it requests the password leaves a space on the left and right of the monitor where is shows garbage, the middle 1024 (I guess) pixels are rendered correctly. I’ve seen this problem before: KDE 4 doesn’t like widescreen resolutions.
Visuals
After logging in it uses the full width of the screen and I was confronted with the beautiful KDE4 plasma desktop. A small glitch: the KDE panel was too small for the screen, but that was easily fixed. The screenshot shows the desktop after I played around with it for a while. I really like it, the plasmoids work smoothly and integrate with the desktop instead of, like screenlets and Google gadgets, which are windows. The design can be easily adapted to your wishes, but the default design is already very good.
The panel takes a bit getting used to when you get here from Gnome. It behaves like a crossing between the Windows taskbar and a Gnome panel. It has a Vista start menu like feature in the lower left corner, the windows list in the middle and the notification tray and clock on the right. When you right click the panel you can configure the height and width, and some other settings. Here also: everything looks nice and smooth.
Then I opened my first window. How can they deliver such a beautiful desktop with such a horrible windows and widget (or style in KDE speak) manager? The windows don’t fit in the slick and smooth plasma desktop at all. They stand out like somebody drew a stick figure on the Nachtwacht. I tried other styles and window decorators, but they never fit within the plasma desktop.
So I started looking for a style that did fit in, kde-looks should provide a solution there, shouldn’t it? Indeed there are some quite good looking styles and decorators there. So I downloaded , but how to get this into KDE? There is no “Get” or “Import” button with the styles and windows. Which is strange since there is one for colors, plasma styles, etc. Google helped: you need to build them! I won’t bother you with the trouble I had getting the QtCurve style to build, but it takes some skill and time. The result was disappointing. It looks like the KDE 4 desktop still needs to update their style and windows rendering since the current one limits designers way too much. Even Gnome offer more (!)
Functional
The desktop feels good, everything responds well and most of the buttons are in logical places. The working and categorization of the KDE menu takes some getting used to, but I guess that’s just time. One thing that does annoy me is that there a so many ways of configuring stuff and there are so many configurations that it hard to find what you need. For example: Konqueror downloads to the Documents folder by default. I don’t like that, I prefer a separate Downloads folder. So I set of to change that. There are a lot of configuration entries in the Konqueror menu, and each display a load of options, but mine wasn’t there.
There more in that direction: how do I switch off the tap-click of my touchpad? I really had to search to switch of the system sounds, and when I found them I had to switch them off for each action one by one. Why does KWallet ask me for my password each time I login? These are not essential things, but they shouldn’t be present in an OS in 2009.
Kubuntu comes with OpenOffice 3 comes pre-installed and works as expected, so do the address book and the organizer. Gimp is not there since it’s very Gnome. Amarok showed some problems, or: it’s not there. That’s an alpha bug, I guess. The pre-installed applications offer sufficient functionality to start working without immediately starting Adept. When you need to install anything, Adept helps you and finishes the installation nicely: I installed Skype and that didn’t give any problems.
What I found surprising is that I couldn’t find Firefox in Adept. Actually I expected it to be pre-installed, but when it wasn’t I expected it to be easily installable. I hope this is an alpha bug because Konqueror is nice, but I can’t live without FIrefox.
Overall the KDE 4.2 and the underlying Kubuntu is working nicely. There are very little bugs and nearly everything runs smooth and with problems. Of course there are things that require some attention: changing the icon set doesn’t work and scrolling is sometimes a bit jumpy. Although these don’t break the usability of the system. It’s stable, fast and modern.
Conclusion
Aside from the usual alpha problems the Kubuntu 9.04 alpha 3 is pretty good. I might even become a KDE fan when they fix the visual problems with the styles and windows. The best feature so far is the speed of the system, it boots faster and feels much more responsive then 8.10. I’m looking forward to the release.

What a pathetic state of affair….
People are down to reviewing ALPHA releases….
Get some dignity/life man….
The only thing that one should do with ALPHA is TESTING…
Chill man, I’m only sharing what the current state of development is. Maybe review is not the best word, but that doesn’t mean I shouldn’t publish it.
@otherneo
otherneo, some of us are looking specifically for reviews of alpha releases. I’m a long-time Gnome user who just checked out this alpha and I wanted to see some other opinions.
Martin, thanks for the review! I’m looking forward to future ones.
Good Review – i was glad to hear your impressions of the new boot times. That could be my biggest pet peeve when compared to XP (4 or 5 seconds) on my dual-boot machines.
Obvious otherneo has a certain amount of dignity/life to make those kinda comments on other peoples work…
I also thought this was a good review. I installed Kubuntu 8.10 on my son’s laptop after many years as a strict GNOME desktop user. I’ve been following the development of 4.2 somewhat closely and this review was very helpful to me at this point in time.
I don’t remember coming with firefox installed. They have always gone with Konqueror. Adept not finding firefox is curious though.
FireFox has never been in Kubuntu. Probably because it’s so GTK again (and it definitely is an eyesore compared to Konqueror when run in KDE).
And I think Adept has quite often, varies by the version, been in a turmoil of opinions, for and against. And the new version (Adept 3) promised great things and fixing all gaps, but failed to deliver all of those promises. That’s why we got the regression in the search…
I’ve heard that for Jaunty, Kubuntu will use KPackageKit. So Kubuntu no longer needs to maintain its own package handler. This will be the end of Adept… It’s a good thing (though I admit I’ve never used KPackageKit) since I think it will bring some improvements (many developers and user –> better software)…
Adept will not take part of Kubuntu 9.04, replaced by KPackageKit.
Martin, thanks for review. Glad to know booting is a bit faster now.
Thanks for the review, if someone didn’t do one, we wouldn’t know how this release was progressing. Sure it’s early, but it gives us an idea of what they are working on. Thanks again, ignore the “haters”.
AceMan
Good to know how things are coming along. I’m excited about KDE4 but dissapointed that it’s taking so long to get to a point where I can use it. GIMP and Firefox are essential to me. Thanks for the review, dunno what the first guy’s problem was – must be a troll. Ext4 sounds cool.
Hey Martian, nice review. I agree about the poor windows design but what are ya gonna do? Hope they release the final soon, i’m pretty excited.
Thanks for taking time to write this. It’s always nice to know how things are getting along. Roll on April
Hey, don’t curse at the oxygen theme. I use OpenSuse and really like it. To me it’s the most eye-friendly theme and looks pretty modern. The default gray colorscheme is kinda boring, but that’s a matter of taste, too.
But besides that: nice review! I’ll give 9.04 a trial and see how boot speed and responsiveness have improved (in comparison with OpenSuse 11.1).
Nice review!
I agree with about the widget theme and you actually wrote what’s exactly in my mind. How do they manage to make a beautiful Desktop/Plasma along with a horrible Widget-theme? I don’t have to say anything to pen point what’s wrong with it. Even by just comparing Nuatilus(dressed with Dust theme) with Dolphin(dressed with Oxygen theme), you can tell the big difference. Dolphin with Oxygen is downright ugly… Sorry to be rude, but that’s just how I look at it…