Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

GIMP 2.10.28 Released With More Fixes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #11
    Originally posted by Vistaus View Post

    At this point, I wonder if they will beat Duke Nukem Forever's record with regards to the GTK3 port…
    interestingly I was reading recently how the gtk3 port for GIMP was actually one of the first completed ports to GTK3. But they wanted to get GIMP 2.10 out first so it stayed in a branch and it was merged after the 2.10 release.

    They are severely understaffed but I wish them well as they seem to be (slowly) developing and fixing all the features that people have thrown wish requests for, despite such a small team.

    Then next step would be GTK4 (which from what I can see will soon support HDR, though this feature is not needed for GIMP to support it for content).
    Last edited by You-; 18 September 2021, 06:19 PM.

    Comment


    • #12
      Originally posted by danmcgrew View Post


      You gave up waiting "...5-10 years ago"? Well, at least you learned.
      Some people have been waiting twelve years for LibreOffice to deliver, and still are. And keep on sending them money...which LibreOffice' s management does NOT use for any development.

      At least you learned...
      I will be curious as to who is sending them money... If there are people doing that it is a good thing, but I think most users just use it. I dont think Liberffice existed 12 years ago, but it is an amazingly functional office suite.

      Comment


      • #13
        gimp is how many decades old? god even knows how atrocious the codebase must be. this is one they should have just started over from scratch

        Comment


        • #14
          As much as I love gimp and have been rooting for them and love their work on 2.99 -- I really wish they had a more functional organization behind the project that could rally funding organize energy building, team building, and maybe even getting some 100K or million dollar grants to then feed directly into paid programming positions.

          As an engineer, the type of talent required is not the weekend hobbyist, but requires a literaly lifetime of dedication to develop the skills needed to build something like that.

          Anything we can do to speed up the process or encourage, enrich, and supercharge development would be welcome by me.

          Maybe I am wrong for wanting GIMP to be something it's not, I can't say -- in many ways 2.99 is already adequate and amazing, and in other ways I wish I could use it in CYMK for professional printing & non-destructive editing.

          I guess I'll keep banging my head against the door and keep rooting for them. I sometimes just don't fathom why such a famous alternative to Adobe tooling has been stunted and hasn't taken off -- the opportunity has been immense -- I sometimes wonder if there has been any effort to sabotage from Adobe over the years or what the deal is -- it makes no sense to me.

          Comment


          • #15
            Originally posted by quaz0r View Post
            gimp is how many decades old? god even knows how atrocious the codebase must be.
            You know you can have a look for yourself, don't you?

            GIMP's situation has been dire for quite some time, but the new co-maintainer, Jehan Pagès, has been doing a really great job and helped getting development back on track.
            The fact is that GTK3 is not a priority whatsoever, features come first. There is a lot of software that use a "deprecated" UI framework, and nobody feels like it's an issue whatsoever. Even Adobe on Apple computers didn't use pure native OS X frameworks until Apple forced developers' hands.

            Comment


            • #16
              Originally posted by omer666 View Post
              There is a lot of software that use a "deprecated" UI framework, and nobody feels like it's an issue whatsoever. Even Adobe on Apple computers didn't use pure native OS X frameworks until Apple forced developers' hands.
              I agree, the problem today is that gtk2 (xwayland) doesn't looks too good on Wayland and soon the majority will use Wayland - with nvidias new drivers. I talked with one of the gimp developers to drop the migration to gtk3 and instead go directly to gtk4. He didn't agree. My reason is:
              1. Why migrate from one deprecated UI framework (gtk2) to another (gtk3). There are 2 new functions that the developers has requested from gtk3 - I don't think they will get them in gtk3 - its in maintenance.
              2. With gtk4 in active development its more probably that the feature requests will be met.
              3. gtk3 will be deprecated in a couple of years, with gtk4 you will get a longer lifetime.
              4. gtk4 is faster and will support more new Wayland interfaces.
              5. Gimp 2.x is usable now - better to switch to gtk4 and be a couple of month more late.

              Comment


              • #17
                Originally posted by You- View Post

                I will be curious as to who is sending them money... If there are people doing that it is a good thing, but I think most users just use it.
                That, plus the fact that most people who *do* donate are sending small amounts of money. Not that there is anything wrong with that - every penny counts - but I'm just saying that development won't magically speed up because they received a small amount of money. Speeding up development is only possible if devs can take some days off off their day job, which requires more than what most people are donating. Again: nothing wrong with that - please keep on donating! - but fact is that small amounts only help so much.

                Comment


                • #18
                  Originally posted by omer666 View Post
                  You know you can have a look for yourself, don't you?

                  GIMP's situation has been dire for quite some time, but the new co-maintainer, Jehan Pagès, has been doing a really great job and helped getting development back on track.
                  The fact is that GTK3 is not a priority whatsoever, features come first. There is a lot of software that use a "deprecated" UI framework, and nobody feels like it's an issue whatsoever. Even Adobe on Apple computers didn't use pure native OS X frameworks until Apple forced developers' hands.
                  I don't disagree with the “features come first” stance, but at this point, they're falling behind on the port, even though GTK3 and esp. GTK4 will be huge improvements. They can take advantage of many more things, which will make GIMP a better product overall and will make for more widespread adoption, so there's a lot to gain from finishing that damn port.
                  All the more reason they shouldn't have released this new GTK2 version, because someone has to maintain this version, which takes up precious time they could've spent on the GTK3 port.

                  Comment


                  • #19
                    Originally posted by ElectricPrism View Post
                    As much as I love gimp and have been rooting for them and love their work on 2.99 -- I really wish they had a more functional organization behind the project that could rally funding organize energy building, team building, and maybe even getting some 100K or million dollar grants to then feed directly into paid programming positions.
                    We've been discussing this on and off for the past few years. There has been some research done on establishing a foundation. Essentially, one of us has to become a paper pusher to get this going, and none of us is particularly fond of this idea. So while we are generally interested in creating an organization, this is going to take a while.

                    Originally posted by omer666 View Post
                    The fact is that GTK3 is not a priority whatsoever, features come first.
                    Um, nope, not true

                    The whole point of v3.0 is porting to GTK3 and revamping APIs to make way for new features coming in 3.2. The fact that people _will_ get new features in 3.0 that are not in 2.10 is simply because some of the new stuff either relies on new APIs or is just too time-consuming to backport to 2.10. So far, it's color management rewrite, multi-item (e.g. layer) selection and accompanying changes (like cloning on multiple layers at once), Paint Select tool, and various smaller things. So no, it's not features first in this dev cycle

                    Originally posted by Vistaus View Post
                    All the more reason they shouldn't have released this new GTK2 version, because someone has to maintain this version, which takes up precious time they could've spent on the GTK3 port.
                    Let's see We released GIMP 2.10.24 in March 2021. Supposing we need another year from now to complete 3.0 development. That would mean that users would not get anything, even bugfixes for 1.5 years straight. Why is this a good thing?

                    Besides, we only backport changes from the main dev branch if the changes are easy enough to backport. We hold major changes in 2.99 now (see the list above).

                    Comment


                    • #20
                      Originally posted by You- View Post

                      I will be curious as to who is sending them money... If there are people doing that it is a good thing, but I think most users just use it. I dont think Liberffice existed 12 years ago, but it is an amazingly functional office suite.
                      The majority of commenters these days find it extremely hard WORK at being knowledgeable on the subject at hand, and are only here for the same reason most people are 'on' Facebook'--- to spout personal opinion, and not fact. Your very post attests to this.

                      And then there's this attempt, by a commenter who has almost 3500 posts here, to lend credibility to your---and his, or her---completely fallacious position, said position(s) indicating how totally ignorant both of you are regarding anything concerning the finances, and development efforts (vis-a-vis LibreOffice) of The Document Foundation:

                      "That [your comment], plus the fact that most people who *do* donate are sending small amounts of money. Not that there is anything wrong with that - every penny counts - but I'm just saying that development won't magically speed up because they received a small amount of money. Speeding up development is only possible if devs can take some days off off their day job, which requires more than what most people are donating. Again: nothing wrong with that - please keep on donating! - but fact is that small amounts only help so much."

                      This particular commenter not only indicates how totally clueless he or she is regarding anything LibreOffice or TDF (it is implied that LibreOffice developers are employed by TDF), but then, stupidly--there is NO other word--implores everyone else to engage in the same moronic behaviour.

                      I have followed LibreOffice and TDF since LibreOffice's inception; since StarOffice and before.
                      I do not intend to waste my valuable time educating people whose only desire is to spout self-serving opinion, totally devoid of any fact(s)...

                      ...except to point out, that if you are going to hold yourself up as an expert on the subject, you probably wish to be informed of, and REMEMBER, the correct spelling of the subject at hand:

                      "LibreOffice".


                      After all, experts are experts, and the most basic of expert skills lies in the correct, expert use of grammar and spelling...most particularly, when one is attempting to convince others of one's expertise.

                      You two need to go back to your Chromebooks---or, more likely than not, to your DumbPhones---and to Facebook. And, at a minimum, have the intellectual integrity to preface, and end, ANY of your comments in a venue such as this with

                      "This is strictly my personal opinion".

                      ************************************************** *******

                      The Document Foundation's charter forbids it from spending any of its money on the payment of developers.

                      So then, what does TDF spend all that money on--which all you suckers send it in the totally mistaken belief that it is spent on development?
                      Why, on the astronomical salaries of the TDF's elite management, of course What did you think? And what else could it possibly be?

                      Do your homeWORK.

                      And--quite probably--hardest of all: quit spouting personal opinion, and

                      read.

                      Full disclaimer: this is my personal opinion--plus a lot of facts--but does include a lot of conclusions based on facts which can, otherwise, lead to no other conclusions--"circumstantial conclusions", as it were.

                      READ. COMPREHEND. Own up to your limitations.
                      Then, and only then, speak.


                      "There is no such thing as an empty head. [On the contrary, ] 'Empty heads' are filled with garbage. Thus the difficulty of putting anything into an 'empty head'.--Eric Hoffer

                      “Facts are facts and will not disappear on account of your likes".― Jawaharlal Nehru

                      "It takes a great amount of work to be an intellectual slob."---paraphrase of Wm F Buckley, Jr.
                      Last edited by danmcgrew; 20 September 2021, 08:39 AM.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X