Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Activities”
My Main Linux Activity Desktops
I just updated the Desktop Screenshot page. Here’s a gallery of my latest desktop with KDE 4:

20150428 - Programming Activity Desktop 1

20150428 - Programming Activity Desktop 2

20150428 - Programming Activity Desktop 3

20150428 - Video Editing Activity Desktop 1

20150428 - Video Editing Activity Desktop 2

20150428 - Video Games Activity Desktop 1

20150428 - Video Games Activity Desktop 2

20150428 - Video Games Activity Desktop 3

20150428 - Multimedia Activity Desktop 1

20150428 - Multimedia Activity Desktop 2

20150428 - Multimedia Activity Desktop 3

20150428 - School Activity Desktop 1

20150428 - School Activity Desktop 2

20150428 - School Activity Desktop 3

20150428 - Main Activity Desktop 1

20150428 - Main Activity Desktop 2

20150428 - Main Activity Desktop 3
An appeal for keeping KDE Activities
As KDE 5 reaches 5.2 and many begin to debate its features (this is a small evolution on 4 compared to the difference between 3 and 4) there has been an ever-increasing assertion that Activities are pointless. (At least it appears that way to me) I wanted to share how I use Activities, why they make me more productive, and why they’re the biggest feature keeping me on KDE.
So, I have lots of Activities: Main, Media, School, Photography, Video Games, Video Editing, Programming, and Reading. In its current implementation, each Activity must have the same number of virtual desktops; three in my case. In each activity I make use of different widgets. On nearly all of them are the brilliant folder view and application launcher widgets. These allow me to quickly see the folders relevant to the task at hand. In the case of the Multimedia activity, desktop 1, this is very useful for my workflow. Let’s look at that desktop:
Testing out KDE's Activities
Now that KDE 4.6 has finally landed in Fedora (KDE 4.6.1, to be precise) I can properly test activities. I spoke before of how I planned to use them back in this post. So let’s see how well it works in practice. I think for my first activity, I will setup an activity for programming because it will have the least adverse affect on my current way of working if things go wrong. So I click on the KDE cashew on my left screen. I click on the activities button. Here’s what I get:
When KDE 4's Activities Finally Made Sense
I’ve been using KDE since November of 2010 around the time that 4.5 was released for Fedora. Around the time of 4.4, the KDE folks, especially Aaron Seigo and the rest of the Plasma team, started really pushing activities. I kept talking to people on identica and I couldn’t quite figure out the point of activities. They seemed to be redundant in a world with virtual desktops. (And, as you can see in the comments of the article I’ll be linking to, most people feel the same way) The biggest reason I seemed to hear was that each activity could have a different set of widgets. But one weekened I was messing around with KDE system settings and found out that you could set each virtual desktop to have different widgets and not have to mess with any of these activities. So after that weekend I *really* didn’t understand the whole hassle of activities. This is how I configured my desktops: