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msdobrescu

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Posts posted by msdobrescu

  1. 32 minutes ago, wonderings said:

    If you can't do what you need to do with Linux then Linux is not for you.

    Indeed. But what if we can do whatever we need with Linux, except for specific graphic, design and publishing at pro level easily. I say easily, because there are means to achieve that in Linux. We simply ask for the best.

    36 minutes ago, wonderings said:

    You certainly can keep using Photoshop though if Affinity Photo did everything you needed to do not sure why you would continue to pay monthly for Photoshop when you can get Photos for a very cheap price.

    Indeed. Well, for me, there are few thing I still can do fast with Photoshop. One of them is the boundary warp tool for panoramas.

    I am lazy. While I could keep Windows to upgrade Photoshop, then copy it to Linux and run it under Wine, I prefer to have a full solution, from installing to running it.

  2. 1 hour ago, Bez Bezson said:

    Add me to the list of people who don't use Windows/Mac, but who would buy if there was a native Linux version.

    (Definitely Publisher and Designer, but probably Photo too.) 

    I came here after being sold on how much better Affinity is than Scribus, but then I found out that I can't switch.

     

    If you ever decide to make it, I'd be happy to be a beta tester for the Linux version.

    Yeah, who wouldn't... I'd be happy with a Steam version, or a Wine + Proton one, if not native, really...

  3. 9 hours ago, wonderings said:

    I think companies support companies that will help them make profits. I seriously doubt Adobe would not work with Linux simply because it is European. Things are not as personal as that, it really is just business.

    I think it's easier to control when having a business relation in the same country, with all the state differences, than overseas. Easier to access and to assess. Nothing personal.

  4. @Deviad, I have tried to avoid this kind of issues, so I moved to Linux. Even though it is free and open sourced, it might have integrated metering too. Can't tell what happens there, never got straight answers, but there are things integrated in the DE sometimes there too, so be careful. For instance, Gnome was delivered with Zeitgeist, years ago, on many distros. Sometimes not intended, they've just did not know delivering it. When trying to remove it, the issue was it would generally remove the DE entirely due to dependencies. KDE has KUserFeedback API, said to report data to Microsoft.

    Look for a distro that would have this kind of apps removed by default. At least, there is an option.

    A thing that baffles me is that big or medium corporations seem to accept that software they're using collects data. Aren't they afraid it is steeling their ideas, strategies and projects?

    Also accepting the OS so often updating and restarting the systems when it considers it's an intrusion. I know companies blocked for hours due to this. Or rendered unusable because of keeping updating some drivers, because they think they know better.

    On other hand, even if I don't care for what they might get, my computer would be taking CPU time just to process for them... Somtimes it even shortens the hardware life span just by scanning continuously when the user is not using it. I remember Windows scanning my drives all time, so I was wondering if some remote hacker had entered in my system and is looking for something...

    So, even though big IT companies would like to keep me prisoner into their cloud or my own computer, I chose to have a fine tuned OS that I know for sure what it runs, and it does it for me only.

    An interesting read: https://sneak.berlin/20201112/your-computer-isnt-yours/.

  5. 19 hours ago, Snapseed said:

    I do know that Microsoft ICE (Windows) and Fotoxx (Linux) are very good at stitching photos together though. 

    By warping, I refer to this: http://kaiminghe.com/sig13/index.html.

    I think MS ICE is able to perform this, but does not run under wine, or I couldn't make it run.

    Sorry, I think Fotoxx is ages behind Hugin, which is almost what I need, except for the final touch, which is warping.

  6. 2 hours ago, Snapseed said:

    While it would be really nice to have the very good Serif Affinity range of products (I recommend them to Windows and macOS users) available on the Linux platform, those of use who use Linux only don't actually need them because of the existing range of native Linux and Wine-friendly softwares that are already available to use right now.

    Do you know some tool working on Linux that offers a feature close to the Photoshop's boundary warp tool for panoramas? Who knows one?

  7. 2 hours ago, MisterBooth said:

    I know people have been put off by Gimps old fashion interface but PhotoGIMP might change that opinion. The thing is we do have stable and powerful creative software for Linux it's just they don't have wow factor interface that the likes of Affinity and Adobe offer. Maybe rather than waiting and begging these companies to offer a Linux version we should be focusing on and investing in helping the software that is available to up their game on the interface design and show Affinity and Adobe the missed market opportunity they could have had. I own the Affinity suite for the PC and the Mac but if the likes of Inkscape and the others improve their interface experience I will automatically dump the Affinity suite like I did with Adobe and move to them. I agree with Snapseed, Gravit looks quite promising I will have to investigate that one.

     

    2 hours ago, tyniffa said:

    Then we would have all the creative tools at our fingertips with GIMP, InkScape and Scribus.

    I don't use those not because they look obsolete or they are not fancy looking, but they really miss functionality. I have requested features to them, never taken in years by any devs there, they look really busy due to the heavy request from their users to become more usable and implement productive features. They are literally buried in work to do and sometimes refuse good features due to that. They are also in their vicious circle, so it's hard to see the light. I think it's good to try investing money into them, but should it be on a clear direction and steadily. Once or few times is not enough.

  8. 53 minutes ago, wonderings said:

    Out of curiosity can you run Windows as a VM inside of Linux? I run Windows on my Mac and run it using Parallels (VM software). They have this great feature called "coherence" that makes the windows app I am using look like it is part of the Mac OS. Not sure if anything like that exists on the Linux side and if this is something that would be a work around on Linux for those who want to use it and not change their OS. 

    Of course you can run any Windows in VM under Linux. For example, you can host a Windows Server under VMWare ESX (that is Linux based too), but also WIndows 10 under Linux desktop.

    You can do this by using VMWare or VirtualBox or other. It is not as "coherence", it's like a window where you have Windows desktop, if it's a desktop, can be run headless too.

    You can also dedicate hardware to be accessed directly by the virtualized machine (generally speaking, regardless the hosted OS). For instance, you can have a video card for the host OS (Linux) and a video card (or more) for the guest virtual machine.

    But the idea is to get rid of Windows completely, as it has a nasty update habit, it's buggy lately (I can speak as daily developer under Windows that their development environment is less and less stable - imagine paying for expensive licenses and you get the editor stuck or losing refactoring or behaving erratically). Worst of all now, Windows 10 can't boot if some virtualisation technologies are enabled. Not to speak of the metering, that seems to take an important part of the resources you have. Linux is as light you need to be. You can choose your DE and modules and flavors of the modules, or you can take some  predefined setup. It's really lovely.

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