Just spotted this over at Planet KDE - http://blogs.kde.org/2013/04/11/hack...roject-updated
Do people seriously criticise KDE for being "too configurable"? And by people, I mean people other than GNOME devs and fanbois...
As has been repeated on Planet KDE over the past decade, KDE is not intrinsically bloated. At its core, it jumps through a lot of hoops for memory efficiency and speed, and is modular to a fault. But most packagings of KDE take a kitchen sink approach, and when you install your KDE distribution you get a full suite of desktop, applets and applications. The other major criticism of KDE is that it is too configurable. The KlyDE project applies KDE's modularity and configurability to the challenge of making a lightweight desktop. However, what I don't want to do is a hatchet job where functionality is crudely chopped out of the desktop to fit some conception of light weight. Read on after the break to see how we're doing it.
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