Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 18th Oct 2006 09:54 UTC, submitted by cypress
Graphics, User Interfaces "Pixel (formerly Pixel32) is an image editing program, similar to Photoshop or Gimp, that runs on a large variety of platforms: Linux, FreeBSD, Zeta, OS X, SkyOS and more. In an 8 year period, it has grown to become a very pleasant-looking and usefull application. Unlike Gimp, it has support for CMYK and uses its own GUI toolkit called eLiquid. Pixel can work with PSD files and work is being done to improve this feature. Pavel agreed to answer some of our questions regarding Pixel."
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RE: Why think outside the box??
by deepspace on Wed 18th Oct 2006 13:38 UTC in reply to "Why think outside the box??"
deepspace
Member since:
2006-01-03

You weren't born knowing how to use Photoshop; you learned Photoshop. You can just as easily learn Gimp, if you put your mind to it and take the time.

I never put my mind to working with most of the Photoshop stuff. I didn't need to learn most of the stuff. It just works in an intuitive way. With Gimp on the other hand, that is not at all the case. It's not at all intuitive, and therefore the learning curve is a lot higher.

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