Normal humans wait for 4.2, geeks should use 4.1 now.
KDE 4.1 is made entirely of *delicious eye candy*. It’s still slightly unfinished and geeky, but remains deeply tasty. As I say that “KDE is like Windows but it works,” so KDE 4.1 is like Vista but it works. Which is a bit like “like anthrax but not bad for you,” but anyway.

Still takes a bit of fiddling - if you're not a geek, don't bother. But if you are, do bother. I has a <a href="http://davidgerard.co.uk/notes/2008/08/01/kde-41-is-really-nice/">blag post</a> on how I got it going on Kubuntu 8.04.
Where else you can fine that a new version doesn't support some old application version? And than add it again in a next version. What warratity if other application still exist in next new version?
KDE 4.1 is made entirely of *delicious eye candy*. It’s still slightly unfinished and geeky, but remains deeply tasty. As I say that “KDE is like Windows but it works,” so KDE 4.1 is like Vista but it works. Which is a bit like “like anthrax but not bad for you,” but anyway.

Still takes a bit of fiddling - if you're not a geek, don't bother. But if you are, do bother. I has a <a href="http://davidgerard.co.uk/notes/2008/08/01/kde-41-is-really-nice/">blag post</a> on how I got it going on Kubuntu 8.04.
Where else you can fine that a new version doesn't support some old application version? And than add it again in a next version. What warratity if other application still exist in next new version?