Today, in this month of February, we bring you the part 24 from our series of posts on "KDE applications with Discover". In which, we are addressing, little by little, the more than 200 existing apps of said Linux project.
And, in this new opportunity, we will explore 3 more apps, whose names are: Kasts. Kate, KAtomic and KBackup. In order to keep us up to date with this robust and growing set of applications.
And, before starting this post about the apps “KDE with Discover – Part 24”, we recommend you explore the previous Related content, at the end of reading it:
KDE with Discover – Part 24
Part 24 of KDE applications explored with Discover
Box
Box is a small but fabulous convergent podcast application (desktop and mobile devices) whose most notable features are its excellent episode management through a playback queue, the possibility of synchronizing playback positions with other clients through gpodder.net or gpodder-nextcloud, its variable playback speed, the possibility of podcast search and its complete integration with the Plasma-based operating system.
Kate
Kate is a good office application that offers a text editor created specifically for KDE Plasma. And whose most notable features are being able to open several documents at the same time, offering several view modes, support for code folding, powerful syntax highlighting and parentheses matching, dynamic line justification, an integrated console , an extensive interface for plugins, and a powerful regular expression-based “find and replace” capability.
katomic
katomic is a small and entertaining playful software that offers an educational game based on molecular geometry. And to do this, it makes use of simplified two-dimensional views of different chemical elements. Furthermore, its game mechanics are based on show a molecule breaking down into its separate atoms and scattering across the playing field. With the aim that, andThe player must reassemble the molecule to complete the current level and move on to the next.
KBackup
KBackup is a software utility that offers solid and versatile backup management of the desired data, and in a simple and easy-to-use way. And among its most notable features we can mention some such as: The use of profiles with definitions for the folders and files to be included or excluded from the backup, the support of the backup destination on a locally mounted device such as a USB memory, a ZIP drive or similar, and even a remote URL (Network Drive). Lastly, it also allows automatic execution of backups without using a graphical user interface.
Installing KAtomic using Discover
And as usual, the KDE app selected for install today with Discover about my current educational and experimental Respin MX-23 called Miracles GNU / Linux es katomic. As seen in the following screenshots:
And at the end of the installation, now you can enjoy this cool app, opening it from the applications menu.
Summary
In summary, if you liked this post about the apps of “KDE with Discover – Part 24”, tell us your impressions about each of the apps discussed today: Kasts. Kate, KAtomic and KBackup. And soon, we will continue to explore many more apps, to continue to spread the word about the huge and growing catalog of apps in the KDE Community.
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