Wednesday, January 14, 2026

KDE Gear 26.04 release schedule

This is the release schedule the release team agreed on

  https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_26.04_Schedule

Dependency freeze is in around 7 weeks (March 5) and feature freeze one 
after that. Get your stuff ready!

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Game Jam for Free Software Desktop Games

The folks at GNU/Linux València are organizing a Game Jam focused on Free Software Desktop Games. 

 

You can see the details here: https://itch.io/jam/lliurejam 

 

Maybe we could take the opportunity to try to revive a bit the very very very dormant KDE Games community?

 

Though we have the basic games covered already so someone would have to come up with an idea of what to do first :D 

Sunday, December 14, 2025

KDE PIM 2025 Sprint in Paris

This weekend, I attended the KDE PIM 2025 Sprint (AKA meeting) in Paris.

First, what does PIM mean? Personal information management.

Second, what does Personal information management mean? It's the software for managing email, calendar, address book, etc.

Third, this is going to be long, so let me thank https://haute-couture.enioka.com/en/ for hosting us (their office  is in Rue du Mail which seems very fitting for a meeting improving e-mail software) and thanks to KDE e.V. for sponsoring travel and hotel for the meeting. If you can, please donate so that more meetings like this can happen. 

This was my first time attending a PIM sprint even though I have been a KDE developer for a long time and a KMail/KOrganizer user for possibly even longer. 

It is true that these softwares are not in the most polished state, but honestly I would not know how to handle my email without KMail.

Anyhow here's a list of things I did: 

We talked a bit about bugs handling and it turns out not a lot of people are having a look at bugs, so I volunteered to watch the pim-bugs-null@kde.org address in Bugzilla (where most/all related bugs are assigned to) so I can help a bit. Note that I only committed to quickly read over them to try to make sure "really bad things" don't get overlooked. "Normal" bugs will always exist in every software and those will be fixed when they are fixed :)

If you also want to help you can set yourself to watch that pim-bugs-null@kde.org address in https://bugs.kde.org/userprefs.cgi?tab=email

On the topic of bugs, I managed to fix "left-click does not work on links with target="_blank" in HTML e-mails" with an impressive 1-liner change. It should be available with KDE Gear 25.12.1.

On Friday night, I experienced "sending emails does not work". After a few hours of debugging and thanks to our sysadmins, we found out it was due to "Your SMTP configuration was wrong". It seems older KMail versions were a bit more gracious when your configuration was wrong, but now it fails (fair enoug, although ideally it could give a better error). Incidentally I was not the only one with this problem since a few hours later we got this bug https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=513284 that was basically the same. (My watching of pim-bugs-null@kde.org was already fruitful!)

On Saturday morning, I continued scratching my own itch and fixed a rather obscure bug where some context menu actions when right clicking on emails in KMail were not properly updated when expanding/collapsing threads.

KMime is undergoing API modernization and is slated to become a KDE Framework soon (TM). I helped a bit adapting code that uses KMime to the new API. 

On Sunday, I worked a bit on polishing address suggestion blacklisting on KMail (i.e. when I search for Foo, I don't want to get a suggestion to send an email to their old employer's email address). You can do that right now by right clicking on the "To" text field and selecting Completion Configuration and then going to the third tab. But that is a bit cumbersome (to the degree I had no idea that feature existed until the very same day). To make it a bit easier to discover, i have proposed adding a right click menu on the suggestions themselves that let's you blacklist that particular email address.

And now, a short list of things we did: (many more were done and will be explained in detail by other folks)

  • Talk about switching the default backend to SQLite instead of mysql MariaDB. In general dropping servers (MariaDB/postgres) support would help making the code more maintainable. There are some people using it without problems, but Nico volunteered to do a test run during the sprint and he ended up with some problems, so there's still some things to debug there.
  • Talk about doing a survey/adding more KUserFeedback data. We kind of agreed that first we need to know what question we really want to know the answer to and what would be the consequences of a given answer before spending time in designing a survey. But anyway if you use the KDE PIM software, please enable User Feedback in the settings, we promise we won't spy on you.
  • New online accounts system. It should replace the not very useful accounts system that we now have (that also has a quite complicated dependency chain). It showed quite some promise in making things much more user friendly.

All in all it was a very productive meeting and I am happy to have attended.

On a closing note, one day we will have to speak about potentially sponsoring food for sprint attendees. We got travel and hotel sponsored, but I spent around 100 € on breakfast/lunch/dinner for that sprint (not going to any fancy place at all). Yes, I can spare that amount of money, but maybe some others in the community can not, and for sure we want them to also attend. One could even argue that having to spend money on top of spending a weekend and 2 work-holidays for the travel is a bit too much, it won't be me because I ❤️ KDE but someone could argue it 😁

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

KDE Gear 25.12 release schedule

This is the release schedule the release team agreed on

  https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_25.12_Schedule

Dependency freeze is in around 2 weeks (November 6) and feature freeze one 
after that. Get your stuff ready! 

Saturday, July 05, 2025

KDE Gear 25.08 branches created

Make sure you commit anything you want to end up in the KDE Gear 25.08 
releases to them

Next Dates:  

  • July 10 2025: 25.08 Freeze and Beta (25.07.80) tag & release
  • July 24 2025: 25.08 RC (25.07.90) Tagging and Release
  • August  7 2025: 25.08 Tagging
  • August 14 2025: 25.08 Release

 

https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_25.08_Schedule 

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Monday, June 16, 2025

KDE Gear 25.08 release schedule

This is the release schedule the release team agreed on

https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_25.08_Schedule

Dependency freeze is in around 2 weeks (July 3) and feature freeze one
after that. Get your stuff ready! 

Wednesday, May 07, 2025

Qt World Summit 2025

These past two days I attended the Qt World Summit 2025


It happened in Munich in the SHOWPALAST MÜNCHEN. The venue is HUGE,  we had around 800 attendees (unofficial sources, don't trust the number too much) and it felt it could hold more. One slightly unfortunate thing is that it was a bit cold (temperatures in Munich these two days were well below the average for May) and quite some parts of the venue are outdoors, but you can't control the weather, so not much to "fix" here.

 


The venue is somewhat strangely focused on horses, but that's nothing more than an interesting quirk.

Qt World Summit is an event for the Qt developers around the world and the talks range from showcases of Qt in different products, to technical talks about how to improve performance along others less Qt centric talks about how to collaborate with other developers or about "modern C++".

As KDE we participated in the event with a stand trying to explain people what we do (David Redondo and Nicolas Fella were more in the stand than me, kudos to them)


For following years we may need to re-think a bit better our story for this event since I feel that "we do a Linux desktop and Free Software applications using Qt" is not really what Qt developers really care about, we maybe should focus more on "You can learn Qt in KDE, join us!" and "We have lots Free [Software] Qt libraries you can use!".

 

Talks for the videos will be published "soon" (or so I've been told). When that happens the ones I recommend you to watch are "Navigating Code Collaboration" by  LAURA SAVINO, "QML Bindings in Qt6" by ULF HERMANN and "C++ as a 21st Century Language" by BJARNE STROUSTRUP, but the agenda was packed with talks so make sure to check the videos since probably your tastes and mine don't 100% align.

 

All in all it was a great event, it is good to see that Qt is doing well since we use it for the base of almost everything we do in KDE. Thanks to The Qt Company and the rest of the sponsors for organizing it. 

 


 

Saturday, March 08, 2025

KDE Gear 25.04 branches created

Make sure you commit anything you want to end up in the KDE Gear 25.04
releases to them

Next Dates  
    March 13 2025: 25.04 Freeze and Beta (25.03.80) tag & release
    March 27, 2025: 25.04 RC (25.03.90) Tagging and Release
    April 10, 2025: 25.04 Tagging
    April 17, 2025: 25.04 Release

https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_25.04_Schedule

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

KDE Gear 25.04 release schedule

This is the release schedule the release team agreed on

https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_25.04_Schedule

Dependency freeze is in around 3 weeks (March 6) and feature freeze one
after that. Get your stuff ready!
 

Friday, November 08, 2024

KDE Gear 24.12 branches created

Make sure you commit anything you want to end up in the KDE Gear 24.12
releases to them

Next Dates:

  •   November 14, 2024: 24.12 freeze and beta (24.11.80) tagging and release
  •   November 28, 2024: 24.12 RC (24.11.90) tagging and release
  •   December  5, 2024: 24.12 tagging
  •   December 12, 2024: 24.12 release


https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_24.12_Schedule

Saturday, October 19, 2024

KDE Gear 24.12 release schedule

This is the release schedule the release team agreed on

https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_24.12_Schedule

Dependency freeze is in around 3 weeks (November 7) and feature freeze one
after that. Get your stuff ready!

Monday, October 07, 2024

Google Summer of Code Mentor Summit 2024

This weekend "The KDE Alberts"[1] attended Google Summer of Code Mentor Summit 2024 in Sunnyvale, California.


The Google Summer of Code Mentor Summit is an annual unconference that every project participating in Google Summer of Code 2024 is invited to attend. This year it was the 20th year celebration of the program!

I was too late to take a picture of the full cake!


We attended many sessions ranging from how to try to avoid falling into the "xz problem" to collecting donations or shaping the governance of open source projects.

 

We met lots of people that knew what KDE was and were happy to congratulate us on the job done and also a few that did not know KDE and were happy to learn about what we do.

 

We also did a quick lightning talk about the GSOC projects KDE mentored this year and led two sessions: one centered around the problems some open source application developers are having publishing to the Google Play Store and another session about Desktop Linux together with our Gnome friends.

 

All in all a very productive unconference. We encourage KDE mentors to take the opportunity to attend the Google Summer of Code Mentor Summit next year, it's a great experience! 

 

[1] me and Albert Vaca, people were moderately amused that both of us had the same name, contribute to the same community and are from the same city.


Friday, September 13, 2024

Disable the Plasma Morphing Popups effect (at least on X11)

If you're using Plasma/KWin 6 i suggest you disable the Morphing Popups effect, it has been removed for Plasma 6.2 https://invent.kde.org/plasma/kwin/-/commit/d6360cc4ce4e0d85862a4bb077b8b3dc55cd74a7 and on X11 at least it causes severe redraw issues with tooltips in Okular (and i would guess elsewhere).

Sunday, July 21, 2024

KDE Gear 24.08 branches created

Make sure you commit anything you want to end up in the KDE Gear 24.08
releases to them

Next Dates  
  • July 25, 2024: 24.08 Freeze and Beta (24.07.80) tag & release
  • August  8, 2024: 24.08 RC (24.07.90) Tagging and Release
  • August 15, 2024: 24.08 Tagging
  • August 22, 2024: 24.08 Release

https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_24.08_Schedule

Friday, June 14, 2024

KDE Gear 24.08 release schedule

 

This is the release schedule the release team agreed on

  https://community.kde.org/Schedules/KDE_Gear_24.08_Schedule

Dependency freeze is in around 4 weeks (July 18) and feature freeze one
after that. Get your stuff ready!
 

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Help wanted! Port KDE Frameworks oss-fuzz builds to Qt6/KF6

If you're looking for an isolated and straightforward way to start contributing to KDE, you're in the right place. At KDE, we use fuzzing via oss-fuzz to try to ensure our libraries are robust against broken inputs. Here's how you can help us in this essential task.

What is Fuzzing?

Fuzzing involves feeding "random" [1] data into our code to check its robustness against invalid or unexpected inputs. This is crucial for ensuring the security and stability of applications that process data without direct user control.

Why is Fuzzing Important?

Imagine receiving an image via email, saving it to your disk, and opening it in Dolphin. This will make Dolphin create a thumbnail of the image. If the image is corrupted and our image plugin code isn't robust, the best-case scenario is that Dolphin crashes. In the worst case, it could lead to a security breach. Hence, fuzzing helps prevent such vulnerabilities.

How You Can Help:

We need to update the build of KDE libraries in oss-fuzz to use Qt6. This task could be challenging because it involves static compilation and ensuring the correct flags are passed for all compilation units.

Steps to Contribute:

  1. Start with karchive Project

    • Download oss-fuzz and go into the karchive subfolder.
    • Update the Dockerfile to download Qt from the dev branch and KDE Frameworks from the master branch.
  2. Update build.sh Script:

    • Modify the build.sh script to compile Qt6 (this will be harder since it involves moving from qmake to cmake) and KDE Frameworks 6.
  3. Check karchive_fuzzer.cc:

    • This file might need updates, but they should be relatively easy.
    • At the top of karchive_fuzzer.cc, you'll find a comment with the three commands that oss-fuzz runs. Use these to test the image building, fuzzer building, and running processes.

Need Help?

If you have questions or need assistance, please contact me at aacid@kde.org or ping me on Matrix at @tsdgeos:kde.org

Note:

[1] Smart fuzzing engines don't generate purely random data. They use semi-random and semi-smart techniques to efficiently find issues in the code.

Monday, May 13, 2024

KDE Goals April 2024 sprint

A few weeks ago I attended the KDE Goals April 2024 sprint

I was there as part of the Automation & Systematization sprint given my involvement in the release process, the "not very automatized" weekly emails about the status of CI about KDE Gear and KDE Frameworks, etc. but I think that maybe I was there more as "person that has been around a long time, ask me if you have questions about things that are documented through oral tradition"

I didn't end up doing lots of work on sprint topics themselves (though I participated in various discussions, did a bit of pair-programming with Aleix on QML accessibility issues, inspired DavidR to do the QML-text-missing-i18n check that he describes in his blog); instead I cheated a bit and used the sprint to focus on some of the KDE stuff I had a bit on my backlog, creating the KDE Gear release/24.05 branches and lots of MR reviewing and more!

Group photo

Thanks KDE e.V. for sponsoring the trip, if you would like such events to continue please we need your continued donations

And remember Akademy talk submission period ends in 10 days, send your talk now!

Saturday, May 04, 2024

Send your talks for Akademy NOW!

Akademy 2024 (the annual world summit for KDE) is happening in Würzburg, Saturday 7th – Thursday 12th September. (I hope you knew that)


First of all, if you're reading this and thinking, "Should i go to Akademy?" 


The answer is [most probably] YES! Akademy has something for everyone, be it coders, translators, promoters, designers, enthusiasts, etc.


Now, with this out of the way, one of the many things that makes Akademy is the talks on the weekend, and you know who has something to say? *YOU*


Yes, *YOU*. I'm sure you've been working on something interesting, or have a great idea to share.


*YOU* may think that your idea is not that great or the things you work on are not interesting, but that's seldomly the case when someone explains me their "boring" thing they've been working on, i always think "Wow that's great".


Ok, so now that I've convinced you to send a talk proposal, when better than *TODAY* to send it?


Yes I know the Call for Participation is open until the 24 of May, but by sending it today you make sure you don't forget sending it later and also [more important for me] you help those of us in the Program Committee not to worry when the final date starts approaching and we don't have lots of talks yet because you all prefer sending talks on the very last minute.


So stop reading and send your talk today ;-)