Other "KDE for" pages:<p>- developers: <a href="https://kde.org/for/developers/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/for/developers/</a><p>- kids: <a href="https://kde.org/for/kids/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/for/kids/</a><p>- gamers: <a href="https://kde.org/fr/for/gamers/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/fr/for/gamers/</a><p>- creators: <a href="https://kde.org/for/creators/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/for/creators/</a><p>- scientists: <a href="https://kde.org/for/scientists/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/for/scientists/</a><p>- activists: <a href="https://kde.org/for/activists/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/for/activists/</a><p>- students: <a href="https://kde.org/for/students/" rel="nofollow">https://kde.org/for/students/</a><p>I really like this approach of presenting their apps and others through defined usages / user profiles. It's a good discoverability mechanism for such a rich ecosystem as KDE.