My thoughts on Slackware, life and everything

Day: December 18, 2013

KDE 4.12 is available

The new release cycle of KDE has commenced today with the revealing of KDE SC 4.12.0!

KDE Software Compilation 4.12.0 will be mainly about improving and polishing KDE Applications. The Plasma Workspace has been feature-frozen at the end of the 4.11 cycle. There is no new source tarball labeled “4.12” for kde-worlspace anymore, the KDE folk have stuck to the 4.11 tarball for inexplicable reasons… you may recall that the basis on which all of KDE is built, the KDE Platform, has been feature-frozen since 4.9 already. New features in the Platform are being implemented for the future KDE Frameworks 5.0 but nevertheless, a 4.12 tarball has been made available. I guess they are too smart for me, I do not understand this difference in versioning choice.

Anyway, KDE SC 4.12 (with kde-workplace 4.11) runs smoothly here.  I sure hope that KDE 4.12 will soon be added to Slackware-current (Slackware skipped 4.11 entirely). In the meantime, I built packages for you, on Slackware-current. I have not tested them on Slackware 14.1 and although they will probably just work, my focus for new KDE releases will be slackware-current as usual. If you want to be on the bleeding edge of KDE, you’ll have to follow Slackware’s bleeding edge as well.

What’s new in KDE 4.12?

KDE keeps an up-to-date feature plan page for the 4.12 release, as they do for every release past and future. Since the Workspace and Platform have been frozen, much activity is showing in the KDE Applications. Looking at that overview page, I want to check out Okular and Dolphin in any case. The graphical text editor Kate has been improved in areas of code completion and python support, which could make it an interesting choice for code developers. Especially so, since these Kate improvements trickle through in KDevelop which uses the Kate engine. I did not add kdevelop-4.6.0, anyone interested in case Slackware-current does not move soon?

And reading about Kwebkit, I guess I will have to renew the kwebkitpart package sometime soon because I seem to have missed a release.

The PIM suite had a lot of improvements (in speed and functionality) but to be honest I do not use KDE’s PIM software. Interesting to know in any case: According to a mailing list post by Vishesh Handa: there is a chance that Nepomuk will be replaced by Baloo, which performs better and avoids the data duplication currently seen in KDE (copies of the same data, think of emails, get replicated between nepomuk, akonadi and virtuoso leading to large homedirectory storage needs).

How to upgrade to KDE 4.12 ?

You will find all the installation/upgrade instructions that you need in the accompanying README file. That README also contains basic information for KDE recompilation using the provided SlackBuild script.

You are strongly advised to read and follow these installation/upgrade instructions!

Where to find packages for KDE 4.12 ?

Download locations are listed below (you will find the sources in ./source/4.12.0/ and packages in /current/4.12.0/ subdirectories). Using a mirror is preferred because you get more bandwidth from a mirror and it’s friendlier to the owners of the master server!

Have fun! Eric

Recipe: braided cinnamon wreath

aliens_cinnamon_roll

I am currently enjoying three weeks of Christmas holidays. Today was my first day, and after a successful bake of Waldkorn bread last week, I decided to have a go at a bigger version of the bread. My first attempt, creating a small bread,was met with so much approval that I did not get to eat very much of it myself. For your information, Waldkorn is a type of multi-grain bread which is quite light and very tasty. It the Netherlands, you can buy “Waldkorn mix”, containing several flours like wheat, rye, oats, barley as well as some sunflower and lineseed. You complete the bread mix by adding normal white flour, water, yeast and a bit of butter. Yummy! But my wife nudged me to create something different instead, as a holiday treat. She suggested a cinnamon roll.

What we came up with was a recipe for a braided cinnamon roll. Did not take all that much time to create (most of the time is spent waiting for the proving and baking).

Time required:

15 minutes for mixing and kneading, 1 hour for proving, 10 minutes for rolling and braiding, 35 minutes for baking.
Total: ~ 2 hours.

Ingrediënts:

Dough:

  • 125 ml lukewarm milk
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 7 gr fast-action yeast (one sachet)
  • 250 gr white flour
  • ½ ts salt
  • 30 gr soft butter
  • 1 eggyolk

Filling:

  • 50 gr molten butter
  • 4-5 tbsp sugar
  • 3 ts cinnamon powder

Preparation:

  • Mix the yeast with the sugar and the warm milk, Allow some time to let the yeast activate and create bubbles and foam.
  • Add the egg-yolk, softened butter, flour and salt. Stick the fingers of your hand in there, it’s fun! Mix the ingredients until the dry components have been absorbed and a dough has been formed. Dump the dough onto your work surface and knead it firmly for 10 minutes until it forms a smooth ball. You’ll feel the transformation in texture when the gluten start to develop.
  • Place the ball of dough into a large, lightly oiled, bowl. Cover with cling film or a tea-towel and place the bowl in a warm environment (room temperature is warm enough, do not put it directly over your central heating!). Leave the dough to prove until it has doubled in size (should take roughly 1 hour).
  • Pre-heat your oven to 200 centigrade.
  • Lightly cover your workspace with some flour, take the dough out of the bowl and use a rolling pin to flatten the dough to a rough rectangle of 1 mm thickness.
  • Spread the largest part of the molten butter over the dough and sprinkle generously with the sugar/cinnamon mix (keep a bit of both butter and sugar/cinnamon for the finishing).
  • Roll up the dough. Using a sharp knife, cut the roll in two halves length-wise.
  • Braid the two halves and make sure to keep the open layered side pointing up and outward (see picture). Place the braid on a baking tray lined with baking paper, and bend it into a circular shape. Tuck one end under the other.
  • Apply the remaining molten butter and sugar/cinnamon mix to the top which gives the finished bread a nice color.

Baking:

  • Bake for 30 to 35 minutes until the top is golden brown. Lower the oven temperature to 180 degrees centigrade after 5-10 minutes of baking.

 

Well folks… apparently there is nothing more attractive than a bake straight out of the oven. I think that about 10 centimeter of bread is left at the moment. This is the result of all family members sneaking into the kitchen in the evening and pinching pieces of the cinnamon bread. It tastes absolutely delightful! The picture on top is my own produce.

gevlochten_kaneelbrood_2

Original recipe found at: http://totallyloveit.com/braided-cinnamon-rolls/
Photo Credit:Ana Maria Ciolacu from Just Love Cooking

© 2024 Alien Pastures

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑