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KDE Plasma 6.3 Officially Released

Nomad76

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One year on, with the teething problems a major new release inevitably brings firmly behind us, Plasma's developers have worked on fine-tuning, squashing bugs and adding features to Plasma 6—turning it into the best desktop environment for everyone! Read on to discover all the exciting new changes landing in this release…

Digital Art
We want to make Plasma the best platform for creativity, and Plasma 6.3 takes the next step in that direction by providing features that help artists optimize and customize their graphics tablets to their liking.



The System Settings' Drawing Tablet page has been overhauled and split into multiple tabs to improve how things are organized, and new configuration options have been added to each section:
  • You can map an area of a drawing tablet's surface to the entire screen area
  • We have refined the tablet calibration feature so that it produces more accurate calibrations
  • The stylus testing feature shows information about tilt and pressure
  • You can customize the pressure curve and range of a stylus to chop off the high and/or low parts
  • You can also re-map or swap the functions of the stylus's buttons

After finishing configuring your tablet, you'll be able to see what changed thanks to System Settings' "Highlight changed settings" feature, which works for most of the Drawing Tablet page.



Graphics
The most important news regarding graphics is a huge overhaul of how fractional scaling works. In Plasma 6.3, KWin makes a stronger effort to snap things to the screen's pixel grid, greatly reducing blurriness and visual gaps everywhere and producing sharper and crisper images.

This works at very high zoom levels as well, as KWin's Zoom effect switches to a sharp pixel-perfect representation and overlays a grid on top of the screen. You can actually see how individual pixels look relative to other ones. Very useful for artists and designers.



In the color department, screen colors are more accurate when using the Night Light feature both with and without ICC profiles, and KWin offers the option to choose screen color accuracy—although this can sometimes affect system performance.

A smaller but still nice detail is that widgets placed on the desktop are very slightly translucent, just like the popups of widgets placed on the panel:



Hardware Monitoring
System Monitor monitors CPU usage more accurately, and consumes vastly fewer CPU resources while doing it! If you're using Plasma 6.3 on FreeBSD, you're in luck: the System Monitor app and widgets can now collect GPU statistics on your system too.

Info Center also provides more information, exposing data about all of your GPUs as well as your batteries' cycle counts.

Monitoring printers is equally easy, as each printer's print queue is shown directly in the widget. The widget also shows a little spinner on any printers that are currently printing, so you can see at a glance which ones are in use.

Plasma already includes a variety of background services that let you know when something has gone wrong and what to do about it. New in Plasma 6.3 is a service that detects when the kernel terminated an app because the system ran out of memory. The service shows a notification explaining what happened, and suggests ways of avoiding this issue in the future.

Tools
Moving on to specific tools, Plasma 6.3's KRunner (the built-in search tool that also does conversions, calculations, definitions, graph plotting, and much more), Discover (Plasma's software management/app store application), and the Weather Report widget all come with new features and improvements:
KRunner

KRunner and KRunner-powered searches now let you jump between categories using the Page Up/Page Down keys and Ctrl+Up/Ctrl+Down key combinations.
Discover

A security enhancement landing in Discover highlights sandboxed apps whose permissions will change after being updated. This allows you to check on such changes in case you suspect any shady behavior.

In a similar vein, you can now see whether apps are packaged directly by their developer, or verified by a trusted third party.

Weather Widget
If you're a fan of the forecasts provided by Deutcher Wetterdienst, you're in luck: Plasma 6.3's weather widget allows using this source for weather data.

Usability
Plasma 6.3 makes things easy without ditching flexibility. If you prefer using a mouse with your laptop, you can now configure its built-in touchpad to switch off automatically, so it doesn't interfere with your typing. Also, if you set up your machine as a network hotspot, Plasma generates a random password for the network so you don't have to think one up.

Finding help is easier in Plasma 6.3. A "Help" category has been added to the launcher (the menu that tends to live on the left hand side of your panel), and we have removed the Settings category entirely. Its contents have been merged into the System category, reducing the number of categories that don't offer meaningful grouping.



Speaking of menus, the default Kickoff launcher menu now switches categories only when you click on them, matching the behavior of all other sidebar lists. However, if you preferred the old switch-on-hover behavior, it's still available too.

We have made things clearer by adding a Show Target item to the desktop context menu for symbolic links, the digital Clock widget displays all events on days with more than five of them (giving you have a complete view of upcoming commitments), and when you want to reboot into the bootloader menu the next time your machine reboots, the logout screen now indicates this.



To avoid overwhelming you with too much information, when notifications arrive while Plasma's "Do Not Disturb" mode is engaged, exiting that mode shows the number of missed notifications, rather than sending them all in one giant torrent.

Additionally, a subtle but important change: when you drag a file out of a window that's partially below other windows, it no longer jumps to the top, potentially obscuring what you wanted to drag it into!

Customization
Finally, what would Plasma be without customization? To begin with, panels can be cloned! You can also use scripting to change your panels' opacity levels and what screen they appear on.

In Plasma 6.2, we introduced symbolic icons in Kickoff's category sidebar. Some people didn't like that, so in 6.3 you can undo the change yourself: we modified the implementation to pull icons from the standard data source, allowing you to set them to whatever you want using the Menu Editor app.

Speaking of the Menu Editor app, editing desktop files for apps from the "Edit Application…" menu item in Kickoff (and other launcher menus) opens the app in the editor, rather than showing you file properties. This lets you easily edit the entire applications list!



If you have ever lost a widget in the process of customizing your system, you'll love this new feature: in Plasma 6.3, the Widget Explorer gives you the opportunity to remove every instance of a widget, including those that got lost or are only present on unplugged screens.

…and there's much more. To see the full list of changes, check out the complete changelog for Plasma 6.3.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 

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Rather light, even for a point release, especially if you don't have a tablet.
Better scaling is welcome. And duplicate panels, I needed that so many times before... (I like to customize the panel and have an almost exact copy on my secondary screen).
 
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Been doing some linux stuff recently but im still lost like im stuck in an endless forest.
 
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Very happy with KDE Plasma. Currently on 6.2.5
KDE connect is very handy feature also. Really missed it when I was trying other desktop environments.
 
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While I'm not using it, Plasma 6 has had me veeery positively surprised.

Been doing some linux stuff recently but im still lost like im stuck in an endless forest.
What are you stuck at the most? Generally I'd recommend testing out reasonable stable distributions first (I'd recommend Debian), and do so in a virtual machine.
 
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KDE6 plasma is the first time in eons it feels like linux is on the right path!
 

Solaris17

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Benchmark Scores I dont have time for that.
Rather light, even for a point release, especially if you don't have a tablet.
Better scaling is welcome. And duplicate panels, I needed that so many times before... (I like to customize the panel and have an almost exact copy on my secondary screen).

I agree light release, but the improvements that were made are impactful. better QOL was needed, though I never personally thought it was bad or unusable by any stretch. Happy to see linux mentioned more at TPU.
 
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Been doing some linux stuff recently but im still lost like im stuck in an endless forest.
In my opinion,

I’d recommend you try the following:
1. Mint Cinnamon edition (Ubuntu and/or Debian based)
2. Manjaro (Arch based)

Give those two a shot. They’re very user-friendly. Live USB (also, please do yourself a favor and use Ventoy) lets you test them on hardware before installation. I personally like how rich the software store is in Manjaro, as well as how well it works out of the box. It can also access Flathub and Snap store, as well as AUR (just be careful with AUR). Installing dpkg will give you .deb support which can help with older printer drivers.

As for desktop environments, specifically how they feel:

xfce, Cinnamon, and KDE are similar to Windows 7. xfce is the most basic, but most stable, while KDE is more modern, but not as stable. Cinnamon is closer to xfce.

Gnome is simpler, more similar to MacOS, and friendly to HiDPI displays.

There are plenty of other DEs, but those are the more popular ones. They’re also not typically limited to a specific distro; if you find a DE you like you can almost always install it on another distro that doesn’t offer it by default. Just be aware that DEs come with their own batch of software packages; it’s not just a GUI, there’s also a file manager, systems settings app, system monitor app, Software Store, terminal app, office apps, theming apps, widgets, etc. and all the dependencies that are needed for those to function. So sometimes you’ll run into a situation where you’ll notice that 5 different default apps do the same thing. You’ll want to learn which apps are specific to your system and DE. You can run multiple DEs in a single system with the apps that come with them, but just be aware of their redundancies so you aren’t confused if you move to a different environment where the app you used to use for one thing is no longer there.

Plain old Debian is nice and stable, but tbh I wouldn’t get into it until you have a bit more experience with installing Linux and knowing what you want. It’s kind of barebones and the installer can be a bit intimidating for new users compared to Calamares (a different Linux installer app, which comes with Manjaro and many other distros).

Plain old Arch (rolling release, typically the most up-to-date software) is pointless until you’ve basically mastered Linux. If you want to run an Arch-based distro, then, Manjaro, EndeavorOS, and plenty of other distros are actually based on it.

distrowatch is a great resource for distro news. Highly recommended.

Ubuntu < Mint. Less stable, more clunky. Honestly with how Canonical is, I’d just avoid plain Ubuntu. There are forks of Ubuntu like Mint, Lubuntu, Kubuntu which are all more worthy of your time.

Flatpak > Snap. Both are supposed to be unified application delivery methods, to simplify app development and delivery across Linux distributions.

You may wind up shocked as to how much more compatible the Linux kernel (basically the driverbase) is compared to Windows. There’s no need to sideload Intel storage drivers just to simply detect a drive to install the OS to. Newer Wi-Fi is supported automagically with the Linux Kernel which might not be in Windows (shocker, I know). You will know before you commit to installing. If you are able to connect to WiFi and can see your drives during the Live Session, congratulations.

PS: Ventoy is your friend. Say goodbye to goofy flashing programs like doofus which typically only support one image at a time, and hello to a legit drag-and-drop-your-ISO-onto-bootable-USB-drive. As many ISOs as you can fit, plus it supports Linux and Windows ISOs.
 
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