Phil_F_NM
Camera hacker
I've been a Linux user for about 5 years now and hung on to Windows for the image processing ability and wide distribution. Once I got used to GIMP and UFRaw, Windows kind of went by the wayside for me. I still maintain a small partition on my laptop with XP loaded in the case of needing some cross platform capability when I'm out on the road.
I don't own PS anymore, last version that I owned was PS-6. GIMP has since been brought up to the level of about PS CS2 in my opinion. There is no creative suite in Linux like the Adobe product, but I get by.
I have been looking for a GUI application for image management akin to Lightroom. Finally, I "found" Darktable which is at last stable and, based upon the applications which it is built to work with, quite powerful.
http://darktable.sourceforge.net/
I shoot a Leica M8 and use exclusively DNG capture so the other programs which have been available for some time have been incompatible since they don't support DNG from camera.
I've only been using Darktable for a day now but it integrates file management with UFRaw and GIMP in one non-destructive tool. I'm not proficient with it to say the least, but it looks like an application that is going to really change my workflow and productivity.
Just thought I'd put this out for you Linux / Mac OS users out there who don't have Lightroom.
Phil Forrest
I don't own PS anymore, last version that I owned was PS-6. GIMP has since been brought up to the level of about PS CS2 in my opinion. There is no creative suite in Linux like the Adobe product, but I get by.
I have been looking for a GUI application for image management akin to Lightroom. Finally, I "found" Darktable which is at last stable and, based upon the applications which it is built to work with, quite powerful.
http://darktable.sourceforge.net/
I shoot a Leica M8 and use exclusively DNG capture so the other programs which have been available for some time have been incompatible since they don't support DNG from camera.
I've only been using Darktable for a day now but it integrates file management with UFRaw and GIMP in one non-destructive tool. I'm not proficient with it to say the least, but it looks like an application that is going to really change my workflow and productivity.
Just thought I'd put this out for you Linux / Mac OS users out there who don't have Lightroom.
Phil Forrest
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