KDE4, the Anti-Cloud Desktop
Trust No One

Bruce Byfield
Monday, August 31, 2009 11:14:41 AM
Ever since the mid-1990s, pundits have predicted that the Internet and the desktop
would merge. However, exactly what that means has taken time to emerge. Today, the most
common vision is that the desktop will be reduced to the launchpad for online
applications, which is the premise for Google's Chrome Operating System.
But, unperceived by most people, another possibility is now being defined in the KDE 4
series of releases: a vision of desktop-oriented computing in which individual
applications are enhanced by Internet resources without being dependent on them, and all
online interaction is not funneled through a browser. This vision of the merger of the
Internet and the desktop seems a far healthier alternative than accepting online
applications -- so much so that I believe that which of these visions wins out could
directly determine the survival of free software.
By that, I do not mean that freely available source code is in any danger of
disappearing. Rather, I mean that the goals of the free software movement -- loosely
speaking, the complete control of computers by their users -- will become impossible if
online applications become the core of personal computing.
Common Origins, Different Goals
At first, this statement may seem an exaggeration. After all, both online applications
and what I am calling the expanded desktop both originate largely in the free and open
source software (FOSS) community.
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The idea of online applications -- in fact, most of what was called Web 2.0 a couple
of years ago -- could hardly exist without FOSS's example of giving something away for
free. If you investigate, many online applications have close connections to FOSS.
ThinkFree Office
originated as an office suite that supported GNU/Linux, while the apparently defunct Ajax
series of applications were developed by Michael Robertson, best known for the founding
of the Linspire distribution of GNU/Linux. Similarly
Google Docs, perhaps the most successful online apps, were created by a company whose
business model has always been heavily based on FOSS development.
As for the expanded desktop, its main proponent is KDE, one of the two most popular
interfaces for FOSS operating systems. As with online applications, you can probably find
examples of proprietary companies that support concepts similar to the expanded desktop,
but, so far as I know, only KDE has articulated it as a development goal. KDE developer
Aaron Seigo has gone so far as to suggest that it is a development of the desktop in
which FOSS can take the lead.
Yet, despite this common origin, online applications and the expanded desktop are
nearly complete opposites. With online applications, control of the software remains with
its provider. Users are dependent upon the provider allowing them access, and choose
(often, no doubt, without stopping to think that they are making a choice) to trust that
the provider will honor their privacy and adequately secure their files.
In many cases, they have no way to determine for themselves that the provider is doing
these things properly. Often, the only indication that the provider is not acting
properly is when a problem arises, as those who had downloaded George Orwell's
Nineteen Eighty-Four from Amazon recently found out when Amazon unilaterally
decided to delete their
purchases.
In other words, users of online applications are in exactly the same position as users
of proprietary applications. Just as most users have no way of knowing whether Microsoft
Office is recording and transmitting their actions, so users of online applications can
never know how their data is being handled. Nor do most online applications make source
code available, any more than proprietary desktop applications do. If anything, ensuring
privacy and security is even harder with online applications than with an application on
your hard drive, because you lack the accessibility and leisure to investigate.
By contrast, with the expanded desktop, the control of Internet applications remains
firmly in the user's hands. You might make a rash choice about what application to let in
past your firewall or SELinux, but you do not need to take anything on trust. You or your
system administrator can know exactly what privacy and security measures are being taken,
and when.
For example, in the current release of KDE, you can use the new
geolocation support to connect to locate other KDE users nearby so that you can
socialize or exchange information. If you want information about the music album you are
playing in Amarok, you can access Wikipedia without troubling to open up your browser. If
you want to download your photos from Facebook, you can do so from within digiKam.
Although these are far from the first applications to access the web directly, the extent
to which the latest releases of KDE applications are doing so amounts to an integration
of the desktop and online resources that provides a clear alternative to the idea of
online applications.
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