I am, sometimes.

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 21st, 2023

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  • Agree, partly.

    I’ve migrated to a lot of different programs since switching to Linux: Premiere to Resolve, 3DS Max to Blender, to name a few. And I never expected the switch from Photoshop, which I so dearly love, to whatever good alternative that exists - to be easy. I’m willing to put in the time to learn GIMP, if only it hadn’t such glaring and prominent issues that make it really difficult to use.

    I’m not expecting a clone. I’m not expecting the UI to be the same. And, I’m willing to learn this program from the ground up. But I want a consistent experience - an app that works. For me, GIMP gets in the way a lot; making things unnecessarily difficult just for the sake of being “different”.

    I don’t mean to hate on GIMP. It works very well for people who like it. But we all have different preferences when it comes to software, and in the end - It’s just, not a good alternative for what I prefer. I’m willing to learn something new, but from my experience, GIMP will have (and has) a lot of icks that I just need to “put up with” to be usable. Especially efficiency. GIMP does not feel efficient, like at all. Might be because I haven’t learned it, but even Resolve felt efficient the first time I used it.

    I don’t have the same experience with Krita whatsoever. And sure, maybe Krita is a little closer to Photoshop than GIMP is, but I much prefer Krita’s overall experience much more than GIMP - even if it’s missing some more advanced features.

    I will stick to Krita, most likely, as that’s what I find myself most comfortable with. But it’s been interesting to hear what everyone else’s experiences are.




  • They’re two different tools, yeah - I get that. But in the end, I want them to do the same thing. Think just, I’ve learned how to use a screwdriver over the years. I’m fast and efficient with the screwdriver, and I find it reliable. But now, I’m forced to learn to use a hammer. Both will, in the end, achieve similar results.

    Okay, maybe I’m just going to have to learn how to use a hammer then? That would be no problem - if the hammer wasn’t such an unintuitive mess of a tool that just doesn’t work like how I would expect it to. It’s just going to take a lot of time, that I really don’t want to invest, just to “get comfortable” with the large drawbacks this hammer has.

    I’m not opposed to learning a new tool. I’m opposed to learning a tool which just gets in the way, over and over.






  • There is a Photoshop CC installer for Linux hosted on Github. I’ve tried it - it works. It’s just not a great experience. Saving files is a pain, because the export option does not exist. You need to use Save As, and that only works with a hacky workaround.

    The UI doesn’t update until you do something that forces it to re-draw (like zooming or panning), which is a real pain when transforming or moving layers - for example. Plus, the UI doesn’t scale. You need to use Photoshop in complete fullscreen otherwise parts of the UI will be missing.

    AI filters do not exist, for obvious reasons. However, most other filters work fine.

    And most obviously, performance has an extreme degradation. It’s really slow.

    But yeah, would probably get a “Bronze” rating on WineHQ, which is better than not working at all - I suppose. It’s progress?




  • Not sure why people are downvoting you. I agree with this sentiment. Results are better than DDG and even has bangs. They even have their Brave AI like Google’s small pop-up boxes when searching for questions, etc.

    I suppose Brave is a sketchy company itself, but I’ve read the privacy policy and ToS for brave, and I see nothing sketchy. It’s nice and private, as search engines should be.