Courtesy to Twitter user XdanielArt (date of publication: 8 June 2024)

  • rhabarba
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    13718 days ago

    Honestly, GIMP is not a good alternative to Photoshop. I know, “it’s free” is enough for many people, but it … just isn’t.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      I love love love GIMP!!!

      But yeah it’s not a PS alternative, and tbh that’s not really what it’s supposed to be or what its developers want out of it. it’s different

    • @[email protected]
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      818 days ago

      My go-to PS app:

      https://www.photopea.com/

      All online, same controls, hell, same icons. I’m a little stunned that Adobe hasn’t sued them into oblivion.

      You can pay to drop the ads, but I’m not really seeing much end user benefit otherwise. Not seeing ads ATM, maybe I blocked 'em.

    • @[email protected]
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      8218 days ago

      With GIMP 3.0 it’s a bit better at least, they’ve finally added non-destructive editing:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfaq-Cm1ZkA

      Full changelog here:
      https://www.gimp.org/release-notes/gimp-3.0.html

      I’d dare say that unless you’ve already learnt Photoshop (and have to unlearn it) then Darktable+GIMP works fine for home photo editing.
      If you’re used to Photoshop and your skills with it is what puts bread on the table… then I completely understand not switching tools.

        • Rose
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          18 days ago

          GIMP didn’t “just figure out non-destructive editing by 2025”. You’re talking as if it was something that the GIMP development team just decided to randomly add recently, after previously ignoring user demands.

          The foundation for that functionality (GEGL) has been in development for ages and was also used for some functionality in 2.6 for a long time. The reason why it took this long is that it’s a pretty fundamental change to how the app works. Also, that meshed with other upcoming changes at the time. Also, small development team.

        • @[email protected]
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          3018 days ago

          My understanding is that a lot of tech debt has been removed with the release of 3.0 and I’m hopeful it will make future updates simpler and faster. :)

          • @[email protected]
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            12 days ago

            I want to make GIMP work for me but it’s the small things like trying to select a layer and move it with the arrow keys but the arrow keys instead are incessantly switching between layers for some reason? I find the fussiness of layer selection among other stacked layers in your canvas frustrating also.

            I wish there was a plugin that made everything work exactly like Photoshop, made all keyboard shortcuts Photoshop user friendly, added content aware fill, etc…if these issues would be fixed then I’d use it more often. (I found and tried to install PhotoGimp for my Gimp install on my Mac but alas it didn’t work…recommendations?)

      • @[email protected]
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        1918 days ago

        As somebody who has been trying to decided which of the RAW photo editors to use, I can tell you that Darktable has a steep learning curve over Lightroom. The UI is incredibly dense and the names of sliders don’t make sense unless you’re an image science expert.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          I’ll take your word for it, I’ve never used Lightroom.

          Whenever I played around with Darktable it seems finding a tutorial to get the effect I wanted was just a minute of searching away, and there’s a ton of beginner tutorials available too.
          https://www.darktable.org/2024/12/howto-in-5.0/

          But then I was the kid that rtfm the game manual on my way home from the store and love dense UIs as an adult. :)

        • jwiggler
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          418 days ago

          Darktable is a godsend to me for converting film negatives.But I pretty much only use image conversion, RGB curve, then fidget with the exposure and RGB sliders in negadoctor a little more then I’m done. No idea how to do anything else.

        • @[email protected]
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          217 days ago

          Been usin DT for close to a year now. I agree the learning curve is a little steeper than light room but once you get it, everything clicks into place. I can’t believe how powerful this program is and it’s free. It’s unbelievable

    • symbolic
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      1418 days ago

      The same with Lightroom sadly. The open source alternatives are either too buggy or have UX designed by very “opinionated” people, making them painful and frustrating to use. I currently want to get rid of Lightroom but can’t.

        • @[email protected]
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          617 days ago

          You could give Photopea a try, if you’re looking for a free (as supported) alternatives, it has all core functions and a interface that looks very familiar. No installation required so you can easily test it, and use it in any browser (not sure how well it works without mouse and keyboard or low end devices though).

          If you want more than core functionality I don’t think there is a (legally) free option out there.

  • Pup Biru
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    4218 days ago

    Davinci Resolve has to be one of the most jam packed free software packages available… seriously, it absolutely trounces Premiere at evvvverything

    the model of free for everything except if features you’d want for producing a professional movie, and financed by hardware sales - that you don’t need unless you’re a professional - is absolutely incredible for home users

    • Not a replicant
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      316 days ago

      It doesn’t trounce PPro, they’re about equal IME. I’ve used both and it’s the price that makes it beat PPro. And you get the full version for free when you buy a Blackmagic camera.

      • Pup Biru
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        116 days ago

        personally, my reasoning for saying it trounces it is the integration of all the tools: no switching to after effects etc

        but beyond that, ppro colour correction is just soooooo far behind

        granted i haven’t really used it much, so i might not have “got” its workflow - it took a while for resolves to click - but it just seems so disjointed and clunky to do anything beyond cutting together a basic video

        • Not a replicant
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          116 days ago

          I’ve edited a couple of independent shorts with PPro - I didn’t find it lacking at all. I like Resolve, but I can work with either one.

          PPro has multi-camera features, that’s much more than a basic video.

          The feature set of the Adobe suite is more comprehensive, but Resolve is a bit easier to use.

  • @[email protected]
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    1817 days ago

    Shout out to pdfgear.

    Does almost all the pdf file manipulation anyone needs and it’s free.

  • @[email protected]
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    2117 days ago

    Does anybody have a similar list of alternatives but for the Autodesk Suite/Ecosystem? Some open source CAD and BIM programs, some FOSS modeling and rendering programs?

    • @[email protected]
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      17 days ago

      I’ve spent the better half of six months trying to answer this question. (not continuously, just passively)

      For some background, I used fusion 360 for a number of years, so I witnessed it turn to absolute shit, but that means parametric CADs are my cup of tea.

      Here’s my thoughts.

      FreeCAD: I tried this, but I’ll admit I gave up quickly.
      It doesn’t feel like a complete solution. It feels like more and more tools have been tacked on without the realisation that people who haven’t been using it for years are going to have even less of an idea of where to start.
      I do want to come back and give it another shot, as it hit 1.0 recently.

      Plasticity:
      I was originally interested in it because if how easy it could be to model something. After having used it for a number of days, I agree that it’s relatively intuitive to get something going, but it lacks the precise feeling of a parametric CAD. Don’t get me wrong, you can be precise with it, but it feels something akin to a 3D paint and less like a CAD program.
      I can imagine if you just want to do something small, it would be sufficient.

      OpenSCAD: I’ve been a programmer for 15+ years, and I expected to like this.
      Sadly, if you lack a strong maths background, you’ll find this difficult to master.
      I’ll be the first to admit my maths isn’t as great as it used to be.
      The beauty of a parametric CAD is that I don’t need to know how to position everything exactly, I can just give it the constraints and it manages it for me.
      With this, it felt like I kept on testing a value, measuring the resulting dimension that I was trying to go for, tweaking it again, rinse and repeat.
      Didn’t feel like I was programming, it felt like I was writing the 3D model itself with a DSL.
      The lack of fillets and chamfers was also frustrating.

      And this brings me to my current recommendation:

      SolveSpace:

      I’ve been using it for about a month now, and I’ve been happy with it.
      It didn’t take much to understand what it’s trying to do.
      It’s completely parametric and I felt at home pretty quickly.
      You can do fillets and chamfers easily, it just requires a bit of creative work.

      Let me know if you have any other questions.
      I’d be happy to answer them.

      • @[email protected]
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        117 days ago

        I’d be curious to hear your thoughts on the 1.0 of freecad.

        I don’t use CAD professionally, and even my hobby usage is less than it was, and it was only a dozen or two small projects.

        I had never used freecad, always fusion 360. I’ve been away for awhile, and also switched to Linux in the meantime. I needed to make a simple object, and tried freecad 1.0, and I literally could not intuit how to begin. Not a single shape, I was so lost, it was very frustrating.

        I tried onshape and got a bit further, but still don’t like the corporate nature of it.

        I’m not trying to slam freecad, I really want it to work, and when I have more time to sit down and study it, I want to try again. But in the meantime I went back to fusion 360 in a VM, which was very sluggish, but at least I knew where everything was.

        • Ziglin (it/they)
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          116 days ago

          It really isn’t made for that anymore but I too find myself using it for CAD occasionally too.

    • @[email protected]
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      216 days ago

      If you are looking for FOSS CAD, then FreeCAD 1.0 is about the only game in town. SolveSpace is fine for fairly simple uses but lacks all the advanced toys one might like. Nor has it been updated in 3 years now. Siemans SolidEdge has a free community edition, but it’s Widows only. OnShape is is a popular alternative to Fusion, and is fully cloud based, but it is restricted like Fusion.

      As an acolyte that wears the sackcloth and ashes of FreeCAD, there is a growing community of tutorials, (I highly recommend MangoJelly on youtube) for beginners to learn with. But the learning curve can be steep as you get past the basics. There is a FreeCAD community here, but it’s small and not very active. Sadly the best place for answers remains on reddit.

  • @[email protected]
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    1817 days ago

    Dreamweaver is still used? I used it a bit back in the day when Macromedia was around and shortly after Adobe got a hold of it. How does it work with the modern web? Does it work well with modern programming languages or is it still just a WYSIWYG HTML editor?

    • @[email protected]
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      817 days ago

      I used it briefly in a class around 2015ish. It worked about as well as any Adobe software does, but honestly it was really difficult to use and quite frankly it probably would take just as long to learn the HTML and CSS skills necessary to make a decent website as it would to learn how to make one in Dreamweaver

    • Russ
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      1117 days ago

      I am surprised that its actually still a product they sell and seemingly update. Looking on their product page, wow it has git support - it can be yours for $22.99/month too!

      (That will also require you to give your soul to them too, via a contract signed in blood)

  • @[email protected]
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    818 days ago

    Affinity Photo is an excellent Photoshop alternative. I switched a while ago and have used it for all of my major projects since.

    • Kühlschrank
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      1018 days ago

      Really nervous to get into that ecosystem after they were bought by the Canva crew

      • mew
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        17 days ago

        someone else may have already said this to you elsewhere, but as an affinity haver I more recently got an email from affinity indicating that to use the generative AI the user must manually allow it and activate it on their own account/program and but for how long that pro-choice statement lasts, I don’t know.

        I will never choose to install it on my affinity suite though.

  • @[email protected]
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    17 days ago

    What the actual fuck is adobe acrobat? A pdf editor with subscription model payment? Firefox, the browser, can edit pdf files. It’s 2025.

    • Jyek
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      2117 days ago

      Adobe acrobat is THE PDF editor. PDF is a proprietary format created and developed by Adobe. Any software that can edit PDFs is doing so in a format they do not have any control over. And there just aren’t any proper PDF editors that are feature complete. now if you’re an individual who needs to make a PDF in the privacy of your own home, by all means, use a cheap or free or FOSS application to do so. But if you need that PDF to be readable and useable and seamlessly compatible on other computers for other users for ever? Better pay the Adobe tax because there is a good chance, it won’t look the way you expect it to when someone opens it up in Adobe which their company definitely has.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        I’m not sure this true - PDF is an open standard. The issue isn’t generally with layout and reproducibility - a good PDF maker and a good reader will give you an accurate representation of how it looks on all devices once the PDF is created.

        Certainly there isn’t a dedicated FOSS tool for make PDFs; Libre Office and Inkscape do a decent job but not perfect which may be what you’re referring to. And they’re not dedicated PDF makers plus the real problem is building fillable forms and signature tools.

        But there is a proprietary alternative called Master PDF that is a dedicated and supports all the PDF standard features I believe; one perpetual license is $80 compared to Adobe subscription based charging. I’m not aware of other options myself but they may exist. But it’s a viable alternative to the “adobe tax”.

        Also of course if you have Office 365 from Microsoft, you can use Word to export docs to PDF reliably (in my experience). Obviously as far as you can get from FOSS, but it is an option on Linux via web browser if you have it from work for example; at least you don’t have to pay Adobe but it’s scraping the bottom of the barrel for this threat I know!

      • @[email protected]
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        617 days ago

        There are a few other PDF editors that are cheaper, but they don’t have the same features. PDF seems like something that has outlived its purpose. There has to be other document formats that provide a similar or better experience and prevents alteration.

        • @[email protected]
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          117 days ago

          PowerPDF or Kofax or whatever it’s called now was very close to parity if not exceed functionality for most office jobs.

        • @[email protected]
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          117 days ago

          should be? yes. could be? if one of the big corpo’s with money decides to spend it, yes. But don’t assume ‘there has to be one’, it’s not like file formats suddenly appear like a rare insect or something.

      • ᕙ(⇀‸↼‶)ᕗ
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        417 days ago

        not true. dont oay adobe so more pdfs will look like the user intended. dont fall adobe scams like weird functions that should be in a pdf anyways. pdfs created with masterpdfeditor look exactly as intended. so, again: no, adobe is a scam. always has been.

        • Jyek
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          117 days ago

          Funny, it’s been less than 24hrs and I got a ticket in complaining about why PDFs look one way in Ease US PDF editor and totally different in Adobe Reader. You’re just wrong. I didn’t say it was worth the money to pay for Adobe, and I didn’t say it wasn’t a scam. But I do tell the truth when it comes to true parity, there are competitors to PDF editing but there is no free PDF editors that properly do the job 100% of the time.

          • ᕙ(⇀‸↼‶)ᕗ
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            116 days ago

            i do not know what “ease US PDF editor” is and dont care. there are plenty of broken editors. i am saying you are wrong to think only adobe scamware can create pdfs that look as intended in the reader.

      • @[email protected]
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        417 days ago

        Building off of this, the PDF standard supports all sorts of craziness. It can have embedded math and logic similar to excel files, to the point there’s templates available for banks which will automatically calculate entire loans (including weird ones like balloon mortgages and variable interest rate stuff) without leaving Adobe Reader, and the recent Doom PDF and Linux PDF projects exploit the fact that pdfs support embedded javascript.

        There’s also an actual market for enterprise PDF templates like the banking ones I described with automatic calculations and whatnot. So some people literally make their living selling PDFs to businesses that businesses actually use

      • @[email protected]
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        317 days ago

        I don’t know how it stacks up price-wise, but I’d argue Bluebeam is a far superior PDF editing program. It even covers some word processing, Illustrator, and some PowerPoint adjacent things.

        That being said, I can’t see it as practical for the average consumer.

      • @[email protected]
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        317 days ago

        it won’t look the way you expect it to when someone opens it up in Adobe which their company definitely has.

        That sounds like a problem between them and Adobe tbh

    • @[email protected]
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      17 days ago

      Firefox can do basic annotating, adding text and adding pictures but it can’t make a new PDF from scratch.

      You may be confusing Adobe Acrobat Reader with Adobe Acrobat? Full Acrobat is the proprietary tool to make a PDF file from scratch including some of the more complex functions.

      PDF is an open standard and has been for a while, so there are now plenty of alternatives for most of the functions. LibreOffice Draw and Inkscape can do a lot of PDF creation functions but not all. There are also “print to PDF” options to create basic PDF documents too.

      However some of the more niche functions are not widely supported or well supported; and there isn’t really any opensource dedicated PDF maker that I’m aware of. Layout tools are abundant but I think it’s things like building forms and document signing that is less easily replicated. There is Master PDF - a fully functional PDF maker which is proprietary and available for Linux; it $80 for a perpetual license. I’m not aware of any other alternatives myself.

      • @[email protected]
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        417 days ago

        In AEC work we’ve moved almost exclusively to a competing PDF tool called Blubeam, which is proprietary but very worth the price, with tools for scaling, dimensioning, and producing material takeoffs from PDF drawings. Much of what you’d use Acrobat for in a more typical office environment are absent or limited, though.

    • @[email protected]
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      217 days ago

      In Acrobat I can go into print preview and see what my file will print like using only black and a spot color ink, I can auto-convert RGB images to CMYK, and it has a pretty robust set of accessibility features so the visually impaired can read it.

      It’s for professionals.

  • @[email protected]
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    2218 days ago

    Just a small thing, but as of the latest release Inkscape has a functioning live-trace tool

    It was one of the biggest things keeping me using illustrator but I used inkscape’s trace yesterday and it worked great

      • @[email protected]
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        2018 days ago

        It’s a tool that helps ‘trace’ a raster image into vector shapes and paths

        it’s useful for creating vector artwork from raster images - sometimes a logo or icon is only available in a poor resolution raster image, and so having an easy way to convert it into vector saves a ton of time.

        I used it yesterday to create an SVG file for CNC plotting of a company logo. It would have taken me a few hours to hand-trace it myself

        • @[email protected]
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          117 days ago

          Oh jeeze, that’s been around as a plugin in inkscape since at least 2011, I remember vectorizing an episode poster from Adventure Time using it. But I’d believe it wasn’t quite as good as whatever photoshop had. I used the “never learn photoshop” trick to be happy with what I’ve got, but then I only edit images for fun.

        • @[email protected]
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          718 days ago

          I sometimes get commissioned to make a logo here and there. This would come in very handy.

    • Kühlschrank
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      318 days ago

      How much time have you put into Inkscape now? I’m hankering for some reviews from people who are also refugees from the Adobe ecosystem.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        I don’t use it regularly enough to weigh in comprehensively- I use it mostly for processing svg drawings created in other programs for cnc plotting, or for compiling svg drawings onto standardized layouts for sending to a printer

        My only complaint with inkscape is that it’s a bit slow with rendering complex shapes/canvases with many points, but otherwise it does everything I need from a vector program.

        • dantheclamman
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          418 days ago

          The CNC plug in is so useful! I also made my wedding save the dates in it and some figures for a scientific manuscript: worked great.

  • @[email protected]
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    18 days ago

    I’m no layout expert, but I did do some desktop publishing about 15 years ago 10 min in Scribus had me tearing my hair out. Installed InDesign and, while it’s still not easy to catch up on the modern capabilities, it was worlds ahead.

    GIMP is just fine for casuals. It’s not close for professionals.

    Truthfully I think that one major issue with open source programs that don’t have corporate involvement is that people who are great at code don’t always have the same skill in UI/UX. However, with support and a larger community, great things can happen. The barrier is getting that adoption level. If more people casually use the product and contribute financially or in code, it will help tremendously.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 days ago

      Scribus can’t even attach links to text; just static overlays that don’t move with the text.

    • nocturne
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      318 days ago

      I used to do layouts for children’s books back around 2010. The company used pagemaker still. I tried scribus, and the books I did manage to finish produced pdfs not usable by the print shop. I ended up buying a copy of CS5.

      Now I use affinity suite, I am still learning it all.

  • @[email protected]
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    917 days ago

    I don’t know what those two letters mean. I wish they had written out the name. I’ve avoided buying Adobe stuff because it’s stupidly expensive, but I’m still aware that in some industries, some of these have been industry standards at one point or another. Being able to tell wtf their names are, or even what they do would be helpful.

    • @[email protected]
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      217 days ago

      Some are easy, I’ll share the ones I know

      Ps = Photoshop
      Id = InDesign
      Pr = Premiere
      Ae = After Effects
      Dw = Dreamweaver

      I don’t know what Xd stands for, because everyone just calls is Xd but it is UI/UX design like figma and sketch. Ai is confusing but they use it for (Adobe) Illustrator, possible they thought Il would be more confusing

  • @[email protected]
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    18 days ago

    The Affinity Suite is so worth it. Pay a single time and get all the apps on all major OSes instead of the stupid subscription bullshit Adobe tries to lock you into.

  • @[email protected]
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    2317 days ago

    Neat list, but imo photoshop is closer to being called a photomanipulation/image editor than photography. lightroom is the more dedicated photography software.

    Also I wouldn’t call paint.net an alternative to photoshop. I love paint.net but its a relatively simple image editor and its functionally limited even with plugins.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 days ago

      Yes, that was my first question: what about Photoshop as an image editor? What is a comparable replacement for that?

      • @[email protected]
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        517 days ago

        GIMP has been the photoshop alternative for many years now. It stands for gnu image manipulation program, and it is an image editor. The category is named a bit weird but the program listed is the right one.

  • oce 🐆
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    7118 days ago

    For PDF “your browser” should be the default recommendation. Firefox allows to add text and images now. Gimp can also be used to edit PDF.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      18 days ago

      Browser is nice. On Linux though, Okular is superb (except for its occasional problems with forms).

      • TheTechnician27
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        2918 days ago

        I’m really disappointed not to see Okular there. It’s FOSS, and it’s very cozy and useful.

      • oce 🐆
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        217 days ago

        What does Okular do that Firefox doesn’t? I’ve used it on some distros because it was the default but I don’t know the advantage compared to using my existing browser.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      Yeah the PDF category is weird / lacking. LibreOffice Draw and Inkscape can both edit PDFs and are missing as well. Xodo looks like some mobile app only or SaaS product.

      Edit: Xodo does have a free desktop PDF reader but seems like they’re certainly focused on selling their subscription based PDF editor

    • @[email protected]
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      218 days ago

      Xodo and Xchange are both feature rich, lightweight, and easy to use programs. Browser view is fine for a peek but quickly feels clunky.

    • Venia Silente
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      718 days ago

      Isn’t it dangerous now that PDFs can run javascript? (Who had that idiotic idea, anyway?)