Price starts at €999 and releases in April, and will come with Plasma 6.
- This is the best summary I could come up with: 
 - The KDE Plasma 6 open-source desktop environment is launching next week and ahead of that the Slimbook V has been announced, the latest laptop crafted in partnership between the KDE project and Slimbook. - This KDE-catered Linux laptop will feature the Plasma 6.0 desktop experience out-of-the-box and is powered by an AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS Zen 4 processor. - The Slimbook V is powered by the 8-core AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS processor with Radeon 780M integrated graphics, features a 16-inch IPS 2560 x 1600 display, up to 8TB of NVMe storage, up to 64GB of DDR5-5600 non-soldered RAM, a 720p web camera with physical switch for privacy, and a 68 Wh battery. - The Slimbook V laptop features a fully aluminum chassis, dual fan cooling solution, and more. - The launch price for this first Plasma 6.0 desktop featuring laptop is €999. - Those wishing to learn more about this newest Linux laptop can do so at kde.slimbook.es. 
 - The original article contains 153 words, the summary contains 153 words. Saved 0%. I’m a bot and I’m open source! - Woah, I’ve never seen a summary at 0% that’s a first for me. - There has even been -1% before 
 
- you tried buddy 
- Lmao saved 0% 
 
- The KDE Plasma 6 open-source desktop environment - Makes me wonder, are there closed-source desktop environments for Linux? - Not surprisingly, North Korea’s Red Star OS has a closed source fork of KDE. 
- You got me curious. I found this. - “An example includes CDE (Common Desktop Environment), which was proprietary until 2012 before it was open-sourced. CDE was used in commercial UNIX versions like Solaris (before it became open source as OpenSolaris) and HP-UX.” - Sounds like the common desktop - 😎 - Isn’t so common 
 
- Android? It’s not wholly closed source similar to RedHat they’ve got closed source elements while using open source elements. - Linux and its kernel are based on GPL and so to distribute something using it would require a compatible license. That means a full distro can’t be anything but open source and actually be distributed in free or paid versions. That doesn’t mean there aren’t closed source interfaces being used personally or undistributed. 
- MaXX Desktop. A (authorized) clone of SGI’s desktop environment, the developer is trying to make it open-sourced but due to some contractual agreement he has to talk with HPE (which currently holds SGI assets and rights) first and make a new contract, at least this is what he said AFAIK. - IRIX was Unix based with BSD extensions and I believe Maxx Interactive now runs on FreeBSD without Linux compatibility mode. So hopefully it won’t be long before it goes open source. Though I can’t understand why it would be needed outside of anything but nostalgia. 
 
- Wasn’t Jolla’s sailfish (for phones) also proprietary? At least the GUI shell? 
- It’s a good question. I don’t think there are any widely used ones, but I’d bet there are a few running around for internal use. - I think that due to the nature of Linux in general the only ways to have a successful proprietary software package is by being a hardware vendor, owning a whole format that is widely used and needs to be licensed, or having pretty serious multiplatform support. Desktop environments don’t really fall under these. - But I could be way the hell off the mark. I’m just a rambling drunk. - Regarding internal use, if all the users of a piece of software can access the source code by asking to access it, then it’s open source, according to GNU. 
 
 
- Maxed out is 2300€, which is actually a great deal for what you would get. And since you don’t have to choose now without being able to upgrade later, the sub 1000 entry price makes this a really amazing machine. I’ve been looking for a PC to run alongside my MacBook, but as we all know finding the perfect Linux laptop can be difficult. 
- Still waiting for a Linux laptop with a fingerprint reader… 😔 - Framework 13 has a fingerprint reader in the power button. 
 
- Ok really stupid question. What os is it? I only know kde to be a DE - According to the customizing site (not the article), it’s KDE Neon. - From the Neon site: - KDE neon is the intersection of these needs using a stable Ubuntu long-term release as its core - Thanks, had no idea this was a thing - Not much different to Kubuntu really. In practice it’s just updated more often with latest Kde patches and has flatpaks enabled 
 
 
 





