A curated list of awesome applications, extensions, themes, and tools for the KDE Desktop Environment.
Awesome KDE is a curated directory of applications, extensions, themes, and tools specifically for the KDE Desktop Environment. It helps users discover software to enhance their KDE experience, from essential utilities to customization options. The list is maintained by the community and serves as a go-to resource for both new and experienced KDE users.
Linux users who utilize the KDE desktop environment and want to explore available software, themes, and customization options. It's also valuable for developers looking to contribute to or integrate with KDE projects.
It provides a single, well-organized source for discovering the best KDE-compatible software and resources, saving users time from scouring disparate sources. The curation ensures quality and relevance, highlighting both official KDE projects and notable third-party tools.
A curated list of awesome apps, extensions, modules, themes and tools for the KDE Desktop Environment.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Items are vetted and marked with pushpins for KDE-hosted projects, ensuring reliability and highlighting official community efforts, as seen in the README's emphasis on quality.
Spans applications, customization, documentation, and communities across categories like internet, multimedia, and development, providing a one-stop resource for KDE users.
Follows the awesome-list tradition with community contributions, linking to KDE Invent and blogs, which keeps the list relevant and user-tested.
Structured into well-defined sections like Applications and Customization with subcategories, making it easy to browse and discover tools quickly.
As a manually curated markdown list, it can become stale; the README itself warns that customizations quickly become outdated and recommends checking the KDE Store instead.
No built-in search, filtering, or user review systems, forcing users to rely on external tools or manual scanning for specific needs.
Heavily relies on linked resources; broken or outdated links are not automatically detected, requiring users to verify each entry independently.