First Look at GIMP 2.4 317
Liam30 writes "Newsforge (ed: part of the OSTG family) is running a story that gives a first look at the next version of GIMP." From the article: " A major update to the GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP), widely regarded as the leading free software raster image editing program, is scheduled for this month. The 2.4 release is expected to include a number of new features and enhancements to existing features ... The first thing most users will notice about 2.4 is the addition of three new tools to the palette: the Align tool, the Foreground Extraction tool, and a new 'Simple' Rectangle Selector. The Align tool lets you vertically and horizontally align image layers -- a task you had to perform manually before. You can align an image to any edge or the center, specify an offset in any direction, and adjust vertical and horizontal alignment separately."
SIOX (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway - good luck to the GIMP guys - a nice tool!
Re:SIOX (Score:5, Informative)
Re:SIOX (Score:2)
I probably should have replied to you instead of the parent; summary of my other post [slashdot.org]:
"the Berlin guys" are part of the same AI-workgroup that is behind the "FU Fighters" Robocup robot soccer team..
Re:SIOX (Score:2)
Nice one, GIMP team! I already love the GIMP, now it gets better
Re:SIOX (Score:3, Funny)
It presumably would, as long as machine vision/AI people have pictures of their bosses that they want to place on supermodels' bodies, or need to prove to their girlfriends that they really were at the ballgame and not at the strip club.
SIOX and Photoshop Contests (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:SIOX (Score:2)
Re:SIOX (Score:5, Informative)
SIOX was developed for echalk [echalk.de].
And echalk is developed by people of the AI-working group at the CS department of the FU Berlin.
And that working group is also behind the successful robot soccer team FU Fighters [fu-fighters.de] who are currently World Champion in the small-size league of Robocup [robocup.org] and vice-champion in the middle-size league.
So it wouldn't surprise me if parts of it are already in use for "machine vision/AI"..
Re:SIOX (Score:2)
SOIX! (Score:5, Informative)
professional tools (Score:2, Insightful)
I think both the Gimp and Photoshop are poor photo editing applications for professional users because they have too many extraneous features and don't focus on addressing the essentials well.
In the case of Photoshop, its real problem is that, in addition to trying to be a photo
Re:professional tools (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:professional tools (Score:2)
Just like svg is the rave for icons so is a 32bit enviroment for images.
All I know about SVG is that it's an open standard alternative to Flash that is supposed to eventually become popular for web sites once all the browsers support it. I haven't heard of it being used for anything else. How is it being used for icons? Is there a window manager that uses it or is it being used as a file type in graphics editing?
Re:professional tools (Score:5, Informative)
Re:professional tools (Score:2)
I don't think retrofitting the Gimp is the right approach, though. Writing 32bit imaging tools (and I have been doing that for a couple of decades) is very different from writing 8bit imaging tools.
Re:professional tools (Score:3, Informative)
Then I'm sure you'll be aware that CinePaint (used to be called Film Gimp) does 16-bits per channel (64-bit RGBA).
Re:professional tools (Score:4, Insightful)
The reason for the success of Photoshop is given by not trying to be a niche tool for either designers or photographers. Any designer can, in any day, need Photoshop under its multiple facets. Creating a photo album or a contact sheet, designing a webpage or touching a photo for that website, it all has to be under the same app, with the same familiar workflow. The photographer might need to add a frame to that photo, or maybe he wants to add some text to get a postcard out of his picture.
Re:professional tools (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll second that... One of the reasons that Photoshop is so popular is that there's pretty much no limit to what you can do. Maybe you should take some time to sit down and actually learn the program. Find out what all these tools do and I bet you'll change your attitude a bit. There are very few, if any, tools in photoshop that I haven't found a use for at least once.
Re:professional tools (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:professional tools (Score:2, Informative)
It focuses directly on exactly what was designed for - image creation and editing - and does it extremely well.
Re:professional tools (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:professional tools (Score:2)
Re:professional tools (Score:2)
Re:professional tools (Score:2)
Re:SOIX! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:SOIX! (Score:2, Informative)
Still no CMYK huh? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Still no CMYK huh? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Still no CMYK huh? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, I don't think it's too difficult to work around that. For example to have a lookup table + simple linear model locally. As for Pantone+Hexachrome it's copyright + trademark law, not patent law. GIMP should just create the framework of named colors, so they can have one for HTML colors, and you can define your own "My company" profile with "My foreground", "My background" and so on. The rest would probably sort itself out. It all depends on a much more complex color management than what is available though.
What I want to know: Can I paint circles in it? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's the little things that separate the good programs from the bad. Not the amount of features.
Re:What I want to know: Can I paint circles in it? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What I want to know: Can I paint circles in it? (Score:2)
Re:What I want to know: Can I paint circles in it? (Score:2)
Re:What I want to know: Can I paint circles in it? (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:What I want to know: Can I paint circles in it? (Score:2)
How to make a circle (Score:2)
8-bit graphic ? (Score:2, Redundant)
If I am right, may I know if the new 2.4 version has any improvement on this front ?
Thanks !!
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2)
That's not the same as saying they're using 8 bit CPU instructions though. They're not. The code has kept up with modern CPUs and languages.
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:3, Informative)
The format you describe is the standard, but there is also a higher-quality standard where each channel is 16 bits. This is supported to some extent by many graphics packages; certainly Photoshop has had fairly decent 16-bit channel support since Photosho
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2)
And if either you or the GGP had read the article, the answer is no. It's been pushed back. Actually, most cameras don't operate with 16 bit/channel color. I know mine has 12 bits/channel in the raw format. That still means I lose a tiiiny little bit when processing with a 8 bit application, but I honestly can't see any difference. And I've kept my raw images for later, should I wish to redo them. It's not so much the end produc
Re:true color and your display (Score:2)
Yes, my screen is limited to 8bpc, But if I export it to 8bpc or 16bpc TIFF, perform the same operations and print it, I don't see the difference. At least not in any sense of "this is the original, this is the lo
Re:true color and your display (Score:3, Informative)
This is 99% true for image VIEWING programs.
However for image MANIPULATION programs (like the GIMP) it's a very different story.
Say for example you have a photograph that is underexposed such that the brightest pixel is 25% gray. For the sake of argument let's deal with a grayscale image (or just one channel of an RGB image).
On a histogram all the 'bars' for this underexposed picture will be bunched up the left side, o
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2)
As it turns out, even many modern consumer cameras give you 12bit or 16bit per channel, and many modern displays can display that.
The biggest holdback right now is that common image formats like JPEG are still limited to 8bit per channel.
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2)
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2)
The human eye isn't really capable of perceiving significantly more than 8 bits per pixel. Those extra bits aren't for us, they're for the computer to use in calculating the 8bbp it wants to display for us after a picture is edited.
Say you want to adjust the brightness of a picture, if you change the brightness of an 8bbp ima
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2)
As it turns out, even many modern consumer cameras give you 12bit or 16bit per channel, and many modern displays can display that.
I'll have to nitpick here a bit. Even on DSLRs there's sufficient amount of noise to make the bit depth somewhat theoretical. But in general , I agree that >8 bits per channel bit depths are commonly used in various contexts and it would be very nice if GIMP would also get the support.
However, for digital camera use, UFRaw plugin for the GIMP does conversion from digital cam
Re:8-bit graphic ? (Score:2, Informative)
I think they are more than well aware that people want 16 bits per channel support. Too bad there's been too many hurdles on their way. You probably want to go for the FilmGimp/ Cinepaint [movieeditor.com] for 16bpc.
Also there'll be still no trace of color models other than 8bitRGB/Gray/Indexed. They were supposed to develop a whole new framework [gegl.org] for colorspace management and port the GIMP to it, but apparently all of the developers who knew anything about colorspace stuff choked to death when they tried to pronounce the na
GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it pays to use open source or GPLed software.
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:3, Informative)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:2)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:2)
Of course, the situation could be further improved by making the pallette windows use the small/thin/toolbox style window borders, and having them automatically hide and show themselves when a Gimp document window loses and gains the focus.
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:2)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:4, Funny)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:2)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, the next version. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, the next version. (Score:2)
Re:GIMP is becoming a real threat for Photoshop (Score:2)
To be honest, I don't feel being three years behind the leading professional graphics tool is a long time. Particularly if GIMP 2008 would be anything like PS 2005, which is overly optimistic. Going from a 32bit RGBA model to a 64bit RGBA/CMYK/Pantone pixel model is really changing the heart of a graphics program, all transformations have to operate on these new pixels and so on. I hope to see it coming th
Text Editing (Score:2, Interesting)
I also really like Photoshop's 'Save for Web' dialogue, and would like to see something like that in The GIMP.
These are the only things I use photoshop for, everything el
I hope they add "tabs" (Score:3, Interesting)
The only thing keeping me... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The only thing keeping me... (Score:2)
Re:The only thing keeping me... (Score:2)
(I haven't looked but I'd be surprised if neither of those could do it)
Re:The only thing keeping me... (Score:2)
GIMPing into the Future (Score:2, Troll)
Re:GIMPing into the Future (Score:2)
Re:GIMPing into the Future (Score:2)
Re:GIMPing into the Future (Score:2)
Re:GIMPing into the Future (Score:2)
Better support for OSX (Score:2)
So far, I'm considering getting a cracked version of photoshop instead. Come on gimp!
Holes and what to use to get around them now. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Holes and what to use to get around them now. (Score:3, Informative)
Looks good...but still no MDI...sigh... (Score:2)
On another note, I am curious to find out if GIMPShop will be updated. I know several people who really like that port of GIMP.
When will they integrate the GTK? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:When will they integrate the GTK? (Score:2)
As a sidenote what on earth are you talking about ""dependency hell" that Linux users have come to accept and Windows users never will". Have you been livin
For users that prefer Photoshop... (Score:4, Informative)
So, Scott Moschella made this modification. He isn't a programmer, he just is a GIMP user. It's called GIMPShop. A conversion that just rearranges the menu's to Photoshop style. Linkage for your pleasure... Gimpshop is available for Windows, Solaris/Sparc, Linux (detailed instructions), Debian, and RPM's. GIMPShop runs native under Mac.
ahref=http://plasticbugs.com/?page_id=294rel=url2
Features are good but what about the interface. (Score:3, Interesting)
How I hate GIMP's plugins (Score:2, Offtopic)
In one case, I foun
Krita (Score:2, Informative)
* CMYK
* OpenEXR
* 16 bit/channel RGBA images
* Many more filters
* Painting with watercolors
* Adjusting brightness and contrast with curves
Water, water everywhere.... (Score:2)
Rejoice (Score:3, Informative)
http://gimpfoo.de/2005/10/06/an-early-glance-at-g
Ok, ok, it's not quite there yet, but there seems to be a lot of progress lately.
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
The menu bar at the top of the screen is a typical example of OS X font rendering, the stuff inside the windows is probably rendered by OS X, but could be done by Freetype or a band of trained dwarves for all I know.
At any rate the fonts and sizes they've chosen to use in the examples wouldn't be used very often on OS X, particularly not in the microscopic point sizes shown in one of the examples.
As I said though, it might help if you were more specific.
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
The stuff in the windows what I see on linux, so presumably freetype2. I suspect the OP is talking about the title on the window, which isn't the usual OS X or freetype. I assume this is an artifact of the way the port has been done -- low level window creation and handling.
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
You're a hawkeye arose (644256), nothing gets passed you!
Re:Rejoice (Score:2)
Re:Native OS X version (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Native OS X version (Score:2)
Re:It moves (Score:4, Insightful)
Yep, his eyes move. As far as I know, Wilbur (the name of the Coyote) is the only icon on Slashdot that is animated.
Re:ponder this (Score:2, Informative)
However I do agree that there is a need for shapes often. Mostly there is a need to tweaking selections, paths, etc.. Much like you do in a vector drawing program (e.g. Inkscape - wonderful program, btw!).
But then I have to agree with your trolling a bit. Many new users find the GIMP very confusing simply because it forces them to change all their habbits. There aren't any shape tools, changing size of the brush isn't strait-
Re:32bit? (Score:2)
Until the GIMP can manage more than 8, then I'm stuck with having MSWindows on my machine.
Re:Somebody (Score:2)
Re:To save everyone the trouble (Score:2)
Re:a serious question (Score:2)
Re:a serious question (Score:5, Informative)
It's annoying when people try to use the "GNU image MANIPULATION program" to create illustrations... Same with photoshop. To people who ask me simple things like how to draw basic shapes in photoshop, I ask why they don't use illustrator. And to people asking those questions in GIMP, I point them to Inkscape [inkscape.org] (disclaimer: I have never used inkscape, so I can't vouch for its usefulness).
although photoshop added shape tools (mostly worthless, imo) relatively recently, there's really no reason for GIMP to follow. Unless, of course, they're trying to clone photoshop.
Re:a serious question (Score:2)
I still wish I had a useable updated paint program with a DeluxePaint style interface (the Amiga version, not the PC abomination). For me, it's the complexity of the Gimp interface that's a pain. I loved having just what I needed always on the screen and jus
Re:UI (Score:2)