With the upcoming release of Debian 13 "Trixie", I want to formally raise a critical technical objection to one of the adopted upstream changes that risks undermining the efficiency,
consistency, and user trust that Debian has long upheld:
KDE Plasma 6's decision to enforce double-click as the default behavior for file interaction.
This change, introduced by KDE's upstream maintainers and publicly promoted by Nate Graham, is not a neutral adjustment.
It constitutes a user experience regression that actively degrades workflow efficiency for advanced users and developers,
and contradicts Debian's historical role as a distribution that respects user autonomy and practicality over cosmetic defaults.
_*I strongly urge the Debian Desktop Team to consider overriding this default or at minimum providing an opt-in mechanism at installation time.*_
*1. Debian's strength lies in curating, not copying upstream*
2. The double-click change is functionally regressive*
*3. "New user friendliness" is not a Debian design principle*
*4. Combined with Wayland, this shift further fragments usability*
Wayland is now being shipped by default in KDE 6, despite known limitations with multi-display, remote workflows, legacy software, and graphical tablet support.
*5. Proposal: restore or prompt for interaction mode*
*6. Debian must remain a power-user OS by default*
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