• ubergeek@lemmy.today
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    11 hours ago

    What does “Excel” do? What does “Steam” do? What does “Balena” do? What does “Conky” do?

    • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Programs that we think of as being part of the OS, such as the included text editor, is a very different thing to something like Steam, imo.

      Steam isn’t preinstalled on your PC, it’s not a core part of your desktop OS. You download Steam yourself, so you’d only do it once you already know what it is.

      Third party apps kinda need unique names and branding like that to distinguish themselves.

      A newbie won’t know what “Kate” or “Okular” do. They might know what “Dolphin” does because it has a folder as the app icon (although users of screen readers won’t see that). They will probably know what “Notepad” or “Text Editor” does, though.

      • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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        9 hours ago

        Kate isn’t a part of the OS, though… the text editor that is a part of the OS is called “vi”.

        • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          It literally is. It’s part of the KDE Plasma desktop. It comes preinstalled.

          The Vim, nano command line text editors also being there doesn’t mean Kate isn’t an OS app.

          Would you say the Dolphin file explorer isn’t an OS/system app on the basis that you can use commands like cd, mv, cp, pwd in terminal? Because I certainly wouldn’t.