News: 0001613306

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

KDE Plasma 6.6 Sees Last Minute Fixes, Plasma 6.7 Aims For Painless Samba Shares

([KDE] 3 Hours Ago KDE Plasma 6.6)


KDE's [1]Plasma 6.6 desktop release is due out next week (17 February) and there's been some last minute fixes to land. Additionally, KDE Plasma developers continue to be quite active in already landing feature work for Plasma 6.7.

This Week in Plasma is out with its newest issue for highlighting all of the interesting Plasma developments. This week in the lead-up to Plasma 6.6 there have been some last minute changes and fixes while the majority of the interesting work is now queuing up for Plasma 6.7.

Highlights this week include:

- Plasma 6.6's KWin is more hardened against crashes when the graphics driver unexpectedly resets.

- Plasma 6.6 is also fixing a case where Plasma could crash with the i3 tiling window manager.

- Plasma 6.6 is unifying the appearance of HDR content in full-screen windows and windowed windows.

- KSystemStats in Plasma 6.6 will now support GPU temperature monitoring on secondary GPUs.

- Plasma 6.6 is also now allowing support for setting custom modes for virtual screens.

- Plasma 6.7 is improving loop dvice handling for the Disks & Devices widget.

- Plasma 6.7 is improving the appearance of different dialogs created by KWin. Details on that can be found in a [2]separate blog post .

- KDE Gear 26.04 is improving the process of creating Samba shares for easier file sharing with Windows users or other Linux PCs. The KDE Gear update will now turn on the Samba service for systemd-based distributions as needed. The hope is to make Samba sharing relatively painless.

More details on these changes via [3]This Week in Plasma .



[1] https://www.phoronix.com/search/Plasma+6.6

[2] https://blog.broulik.de/2026/02/nifty-dialogs/

[3] https://blogs.kde.org/2026/02/14/this-week-in-plasma-finalizing-6.6/



The Magician of the Ivory Tower brought his latest invention for the
master programmer to examine. The magician wheeled a large black box into the
master's office while the master waited in silence.
"This is an integrated, distributed, general-purpose workstation,"
began the magician, "ergonomically designed with a proprietary operating
system, sixth generation languages, and multiple state of the art user
interfaces. It took my assistants several hundred man years to construct.
Is it not amazing?"
The master raised his eyebrows slightly. "It is indeed amazing," he
said.
"Corporate Headquarters has commanded," continued the magician, "that
everyone use this workstation as a platform for new programs. Do you agree
to this?"
"Certainly," replied the master, "I will have it transported to the
data center immediately!" And the magician returned to his tower, well
pleased.
Several days later, a novice wandered into the office of the master
programmer and said, "I cannot find the listing for my new program. Do
you know where it might be?"
"Yes," replied the master, "the listings are stacked on the platform
in the data center."
-- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"