Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 28th Apr 2008 18:01 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 311728
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[q
2) The Gimp 2.4 - In the past, for me anyway, The Gimp has always been a tool that allowed me to do a subset of the things I use Photoshop for. The Gimp 2.4 is the first time I've ever used The Gimp and thought to myself, "I wish Photoshop could do that". Perhaps I will finally be able to dump the aging and bloated Photoshop for good. It's still too early for me to tell. [/q]
This intrigues me. I'm currently using Gimp a lot on the Mac to retouch photos I take. I'm tempted to go investigate Photoshop Elements 6 as the Gimp's interface drives me slightly insane.
What does the Gimp do that Photoshop doesn't do? Or what does it do better than Photoshop?






Member since:
2005-07-05
I've only used the latest release of Ubuntu for a couple of days now, but I've been impressed by its stability and many of the included programs.
There were two things that really stood out for me right away...
1) PostgreSQL 8.3 - This release is a major leap forward for PostgreSQL, and I'm really glad it was included in this latest offering from Ubuntu.
2) The Gimp 2.4 - In the past, for me anyway, The Gimp has always been a tool that allowed me to do a subset of the things I use Photoshop for. The Gimp 2.4 is the first time I've ever used The Gimp and thought to myself, "I wish Photoshop could do that". Perhaps I will finally be able to dump the aging and bloated Photoshop for good. It's still too early for me to tell.
In a nutshell, I think Ubuntu provides a great desktop platform to work on. It is stable and easy to use, yet provides me with all the power of Linux when I want to use it.
I would also like to thank all the other open source teams, like PostgreSQL and The Gimp, whose contributions have helped to make Ubuntu 8.04 the best release yet.