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This is a feed aggregator that collects what the contributors to the KDE community are writing on their respective blogs, in different languages

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

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!

Just a teaser this time.

I’ve read somewhere that Fedora will be the first distribution to replace SDDM with Dave’s brand new Plasma Login Manager.

Will Ni! OS be the first non-distribution to do the same?

And if it does, will it become a distribution as it distributes yet another package not available in vanilla NixOS? :)

Plasma Login Manager on Ni! OS
Plasma Login Manager on Ni! OS

Tuesday, 13 January 2026. Today KDE releases a bugfix update to KDE Plasma 6, versioned 6.5.5.

Plasma 6.5 was released in October 2025 with many feature refinements and new modules to complete the desktop experience.

This release adds a month’s worth of new translations and fixes from KDE’s contributors. The bugfixes are typically small but important and include:

View full changelog

Here are the new modules available in the Plasma 6.6 beta:

  • plasma-login-manager
  • plasma-keyboard
  • plasma-setup

Some important features and changes included in 6.6 beta are highlighted on KDE community wiki page.

View full changelog

Monday, 12 January 2026

I have a paper calendar. It hangs on the wall. I draw things on it, like 🎜 Kladderadatch, to remind me where to go of an evening (or this afternoon). At the end of the year, with that calendar and my ticket history from Doornroosje (a music podium in Nijmegen) I can reconstruct my concert visits of the year. Here’s my year wrapped.

  • Roos Rebergen & SunSun Orchestra Roos is always really peculiar, and did not fail to deliver. The classical string quintet as band worked well. It’s quite different from her pop recordings. I saw Roos in 2006 or so when she played in a local school, and it’s always stayed with me.
  • Politie Warnsveld + Misprint POPO! It’s like Doe Maar has reincarnated. Happy ska, although now they have a bigger setlist it is a little less wild. This was also a sad concert because of the death of a concert-friend – she was a big POPO fan – in an accident a few months earlier.
  • De Kift “Ik heb rood haar, en lees wel eens gedichten” It’s a punk-jazz-improv group. Live they’re weird, but I did miss listening to the actual words.
  • Parker Millsap Blues country, now as a solo show instead of with a band.
  • Stippenlift Dutch-language electro-pop about his depression.
  • ELUCID Rap, old-school.
  • Dorpsstraat 3 Dutch indie.
  • The Vices I’m pretty sure that during this concert I ended up thinking about the font-kerning in their logo, more than the music. Meh.
  • Rats on Rafts I have no real recollection, it might have been boring.
  • Ghost Funk Orchestra Jazz. If you asked me beforehand about a trombone solo, I would have said “probably boring”. Afterwards, fuck yeah! Trombone solo! They were amazing on stage.
  • Girls to the Front A triple show with L.A. Sagne, Death Sells and C’est Qui? I’ve seen Death Sells a couple times after, they’re fun and personable.
  • De Roos van Nijmegen is a yearly battle-of-the-bands, and I go with the kids, and we Have Opinions about things. It’s spread across 3 nights and the finals. I voted for PORTRAY. I thought Grandad was pretty good in the first round, and boring in the finals. The peeps from Pomme Grenade are the ones I run into around town most often. Liz Beekman was, as singer-songwriter, the odd-one-out in the first round, but I quite liked both her music and relaxed podium presence.
  • The Ex + Brader Mûsikî More punk-jazz. Brader was a totally new Kurdish-language experience for me. The Ex was weird and experimental and the broad grin on the drummer’s face as she puts in more cowbell in The Apartment was magical.
  • Tramhaus had a lot of social message that I agree with, but not amazing.
  • Place to Bury Strangers I saw them in “old” Doornroosje, with my friend Armijn who described them as “ear-bleedingly loud”. Regulations prevent that now, but they were great and the round-through-the-crowd is a lot of fun to be part of.
  • Elephant is a big-ish name and had a lot of radio play, so that’s why got tickets. I have no real recollection, it might have been boring.
  • KNIVES Absolutely wild live-show, amazing energy. I told them I thought they were “amazeballs” after the show, they called me “old”. Love you too! I was here also because of Death Sells opening.
  • Crash Fest Organized by Outahead – an indie band that don’t do it for me – but I went because Lodyne and Death Sells were playing and I’m into naked bass players.
  • Alice Faye The first of a week of singers-songwriters. I don’t remember anything particular, but I do know I liked it for being a relaxed night out instead of sweaty and loud.
  • Tara Nome Doyle Second one of singers-songwriters. I remember her being very chatty and open about the songwriting process and what things were about. That’s one of the nice things in a really small venue, the artists are there and all themselves.
  • Stereolab The crowd was all fans, who could sing along with every song. I could tell they were having a ball, but it did not land at all for me.
  • Heather Nova in the park, in the rain, with a rainbow, with ducks waddling across the stage, and a spider that dropped onto her hand during Like a Hurricane. As a consummate performer, she put the spider away and picked up the chorus again.
  • The Hard Quartet This is a supergroup, I guess you could call it. I saw Pavement back in the day, and when Stephen is at the mike, it’s like a Pavement song. And when someone else takes over, it’s a different band. This was good to see for being a bunch of really experienced and work-well-together musicians.
  • Bassolino Italian funk. It was funky, but the funk did not reach my hips. I’m way too much a white boy for that – put me in a mosh pit instead.
  • Magic Bullet I have no recollections of again. It was possibly boring.
  • Rosalie Cunningham I did not expect a ’70s hardrock revival on stage. It was amazing. She has wonderful eyes. Roscoe can sing that one song pretty good. And it was a party for all.
  • Dick Move More punk bands should sell hot pink T-shirts. This was a blast.
  • Preoccupations I figured “band from Calgary”. There was a Flames T-shirt on-stage. They did their thing. They left. Very little interaction with the audience.
  • Misprint They were with POPO earlier this year, and I kept bumping into their bass player at other concerts, so it was the least I could do get tickets for their own show. Kind of middle-of-the-road, good enough.
  • Early James Blues from Alabama. He did a nice closing number with his girlfriend, it worked pretty well as a duet.
  • Gill Landry Blues from Louisiana. This was very personal, and you can tell Gill was a street performer before moving on to the stage. One to re-visit if he comes back.
  • Joachim Cooder Son-of-Ry, playing an electric thumb piano. This was very much not what I expected. It was interesting, and I told him “peculiar” after the show, but I’m afraid it did not get my feet a-tappin’.
  • Frazey Ford Was she drunk? It took forever before the show gelled a little, but it never really moved.
  • Leith Singer-songwriter. Blue eyes that stare right through your soul. I really enjoyed this show, and the openers, Robinson Kirby, were fun as well.
  • DITZ Fucking well tore the house down. Her with the boots has an amazing command of the audience, the pit was wild, the communion weird and disconcerting. KNIVES opened here, but did not get nearly the same response as earlier in the year (in a different venue, must be said).
  • zZz These guys I saw when they – and I – had no grey hairs and I remember them jumping up and down on the organ and it was loud and chaotic. They still are, although with a bad back climbing on stuff is no longer an option.
  • Vals Alarm Punk with too much backing track. Gotta hand it to them, though, with your parents in the audience belting out “I wanna fuck some new boys / I need a new dick / new dick” takes some courage.
  • De Niemanders This is a collective that brings singers from refugee centers in the Netherlands to the stage. With a gospel couple, and a good backing band, we can see what talent we’re squandering. I don’t know the names of the individual performers though. Ahm has amazing sustain. Habibi from Yemen, I think, is such a cute boy with an excellent delivery.
  • Black Bottle Riot Does a end-of-year show every year in Nijmegen. Packed house, almost all fans. Random people come up to talk with you. Sabine from Zeeland, it was good to meet you. This show was almost three hours, and one big party. It’s good to have something to plan again in 360 days or so.

Not in Nijmegen:

  • Black Country New Road In Paradiso, Amsterdam. I’m clearly spoiled by easy-going Nijmegen, because I thought the venue was annoying. And every song was .. not quite it. Nothing landed, and the feels-like-American-film-music makes me unhappy. Where there was a neat idea (five recorders? sure, woodwind quintet) it was executed in a too-limited way. Bit of a disappointment, but the openers, Westside Cowboy, were fun.
  • West Side Story in Rome. Man, the story is paper-thin, even if the singers were excellent. The only fun I had here was realizing that “having problems with the PRs” is not a GitHub thing.
  • Opera school in Arezzo. There’s an opera school, students come from the United States to learn to sing an Italian opera, and execute it in the square. Stories still paper-thin, but such is operetta as an art form. I learned that “learn to sing” means “make the right sounds”, because the students could not actually speak Italian.

Ones I missed (but did have tickets):

  • Spinvis I was doing drywall and at 10pm remembered I had tickets to a one-off special show in Kleve. I had bought them a couple of days previous and hadn’t written it down.
  • Felipe Baldomir Singer-songwriter week, but I was sick.
  • Hackensaw Boys Bluegrass, but I was sick.

That’s 46 concerts this year. I do try to see something every week. In principle I don’t listen to stuff in advance, I just go and find out what it is once the band starts. I have a strong preference for Merleyn, the smallest of the Doornroosje venues, because everything is close-by and personal. The beer is better there, also. Punk has the best odds of making me happy on an evening, but I’m glad I go to random other stuff to broaden my horizons. I have punk, jazz, ska and rap lined up for the next three months, and also Green Milk from the Planet Orange, whatever genre that is.

Sunday, 11 January 2026

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 

Saturday, 10 January 2026

Online publication of the documentation for many KDE applications has been updated to docs.kde.org. Tellico’s current handbook can be found there.

A surprising long time passed since my last status update about KJournald. So it’s time again to shed some light on the recent changes.

KJournald is a KDE project that provides graphical browsing UI for journald log databases. For those who never heard the term “journald”, journald is the system logging service of systemd and it is found in most modern Linux systems. This means, in the journald databases one can find all the system log messages about important incidents happening on a system, which make it very important for system admins but also for all technical users who want to analyze when something is not working correctly on their systems.

The kjournald-browser provides a Qt and Kirigami based UI to efficiently browse and filter those logs (note: there exist different tools for that, even systemd provides its own command line tool “journalctl”). The focus of kjournald-browser are the following use cases:

  • ease filtering of log messages in order to efficiently reduce huge logs to sizes that a human can analyze
  • ease analysis of interactions of different processes / systemd units by colorizing and other graphical helps
  • provide a simple but powerfull UI/UX that focuses on log analysis
  • support access for local, collected and remote journald logs (and do this only for journald)

Since my last blog post, the kjournald-browser application became part of the regular KDE gear releases and nowadays is packages by e.g. Fedora and Suse; unfortunately, it is still not packaged on Debian or Ubuntu yet — if you want to do it and need support please reach out to me! At the moment, also the packaging as Flatpak application on Flathub is ongoing. But already since a long time though, the KDE Flatpak nightly builds provide the latest state of the app.

With the last major release 25.12.0, a few new cool features were added:

  • systemd differentiates between system service and user service and log messages are split. With the last release User Journals can be accessed in addition to System Journals.
  • The search bar was reworked (more compact UI, additional case-insensitive search)) and now a history of recent search subjects is stored for faster access.
  • KJournald-browser can not only used to load the log files from the local system but also to access arbitrary journald databases (e.g. collected from embedded devices for post-mortem analysis or from servers). For this loading mechanism, an improved UI database loading errors feedback is now available the validates access to loaded files.

One feature was slightly too late for this release, but is already ready for the next:

  • systemd provides the feature to use service templates, which means that every service instance has its own ID. Especially for user services that is a much used feature and this clutters the UI much. A new service grouping feature allows to group service logs by template name (this is also the default, but behavior can be selected in UI).

Since 2026 is still young, there are a few features on the roadmap of this year. The two most important ones in my opinion are:

  • adding access to the journald remote access protocol, which will be important to live-monitor servers or embedded devices that have a systemd-journal-remote service running
  • introduce pre-filtering of processes and units for the selected boot id, which will improve usability for very long journals

A short but sweet note to say I am coming out of my short retirement to help with snaps again. My time is extremely limited, however we are working hard on getting snaps on CI and I have some newer snaps in –beta trickling in for testing. You must install kf6-core24 from beta as well to test them ( this will likely break older kde snaps in the process so beware. ) This is slow going as I work on them during my hour lunch at day job and spare stolen moments. KDE is coming up on its 30th birthday!!! How cool is that!

I ❤ KDE

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Welcome to a new issue of This Week in Plasma!

Let’s thank Lubos Krystynek, Rafal Krawczyk, and John Veness for stepping up to help with this week’s issue. Thanks, guys!

This week, the first car running KWin won the “Car of the Year” award. Yes, really — KDE in the car! Here’s KDE’s Victoria Fischer talking about it at Qt World Summit 2023:

KDE in the Kar!

Almost all of these posts end with “KDE has become important in the world…” and I think this is a good reminder that it’s true, not just some empty platitude. KDE is important. And all of you building or using KDE’s software are important, too.

But KDE is not only important to cars; we’re incredibly important to computers! And on that subject, some really nice features and user interface improvements landed for the upcoming Plasma 6.6 release. The hard feature freeze is coming up soon, at which point we’ll move into full bug-fixing and polishing mode.

But until then, enjoy some juicy new goodies! Check it out:

Notable New Features

Plasma 6.6.0

You can now save your current visual settings as a new global theme! (Vlad Zahorodnii, plasma-desktop MR #6097)

Global Themes page in System Settings showing the opportunity to create a new global theme from the current visual settings

Added a “Forget device” action to the Bluetooth system tray widget, allowing users to remove paired devices without opening System Settings. (Andrew Gigena, KDE Bug #434691)

You can now search for processes in System Monitor based on their full command-line invocation when the “Command” column is visible. (Alexey Rochev, KDE Bug #448331)

On supported systems, the logout screen now mentions when the system will restart into a different operating system or boot option after it reboots. (Nikolay Kochulin, plasma-workspace MR #5469)

Logout screen showing that a different OS will be booted into after restart

Notable UI Improvements

Plasma 6.6.0

The Power and Battery widget now tells you what specific power management actions apps are blocking, instead of assuming that they’re all blocking both sleep and screen locking. (Jakob Petsovits, KDE Bug #418433)

Power and Battery widget telling you what each app is actually blocking

System Settings’ Thunderbolt page now hides itself when the device doesn’t support Thunderbolt. (Alexander Wilms, plasma-thunderbolt MR #47)

When there are many windows open, the Task Manager widget will now scroll to the active one when you open its window thumbnail list. (Christoph Wolk, KDE Bug #499716)

Notifications no longer waste space showing the same icon in two places. (Kai Uwe Broulik, plasma-workspace MR #6151)

Spectacle now remembers the size (and on X11, also the position) of its main window across launches. (Aviral Singh, KDE Bug #499652)

Made multiple UI improvements to the “Configure Columns” dialog in System Monitor. (Arjen Hiemstra, plasma-systemmonitor MR #405)

System Monitor’s new “Configure Columns” dialog

In the Weather Report widget, when a weather station isn’t reporting the current wind speed, the widget now says it doesn’t know the wind speed, rather than claiming it’s “calm”. (Tobias Fella, kdeplasma-addons MR #969)

The Kickoff Application Menu widget now does a better job of handling a huge number of favorite apps. Now the favorites column eventually becomes scrollable, instead of letting icons overlap. (Christoph Wolk, KDE Bug #424067)

You can now find System Settings’ Wallpaper page by searching for “desktop background” and some other related terms. (Shubham Arora, plasma-workspace MR #6152)

Frameworks 6.23

Made it possible to see more items at once in the “Get New [thing]” dialogs. (Nate Graham, frameworks-knewstuff MR #380)

More items visible at a time in the Get New Stuff dialogs

Open/Save dialogs now use relative-style date formatting for recent dates and times, which matches how Dolphin shows them. (Méven Car, frameworks-kio MR #2103)

Folders that show thumbnails of their contents now refresh the thumbnail immediately when any of those files are removed. (Akseli Lahtinen, KDE Bug #497259)

Notable Bug Fixes

Plasma 6.5.5

Fixed a strange issue that broke key repeat only in the Brave web browser. (Nicolas Fella, KDE Bug #513637)

Fixed an issue that could make the panel configuration dialog appear on the wrong screen with certain panel and screen arrangements. (Aleksey Rochev, plasma-workspace MR #6140)

Fixed two issues with the “Show Alternatives” popup: one that made it get cut off outside of the screen area for widgets positioned on certain areas of the desktop, and another that made it not disappear when it lost focus. (Aleksey Rochev, KDE Bug #511188 and KDE Bug #511187)

Plasma 6.6.0

Fixed an issue that made Plasma quit when you disconnected the last screen. (Xaver Hugl, KDE Bug #513003)

Fixed an issue with the Applications table on System Monitor’s Overview page being blurry with certain scale factors. We had already previously fixed this, but it turned out there were more remaining cases where it still happened, so this should take care of the rest! (Arjen Hiemstra, KDE Bug #445759)

Notable in Performance & Technical

Plasma 6.6.0

Implemented support in Plasma for the up-and-coming oo7 Secret Service provider. (Marco Martin and Harald Sitter, plasma-workspace MR #6109)

Fixed a hilarious issue that caused the wallpaper to bounce a tiny bit with certain fractional scale factors on secondary screens using direct scan-out while on a very recent kernel version. (Xaver Hugl, KDE Bug #513277)

How You Can Help

KDE has become important in the world, and your time and contributions have helped us get there. As we grow, we need your support to keep KDE sustainable.

You can help KDE by directly getting involved. Donating time is actually more impactful than donating money. Each contributor makes a huge difference in KDE — you are not a number or a cog in a machine! You don’t have to be a programmer, either; many other opportunities exist.

For example, helping out to write these posts is warmly appreciated. Anyone interested in getting involved should check out the evolving documentation on the topic.

You can also help out by making a donation! This helps cover operational costs, salaries, travel expenses for contributors, and in general just keep KDE bringing Free Software to the world.

To get a new Plasma feature or a bugfix mentioned here, feel free to push a commit to the relevant merge request on invent.kde.org.