sally_maria: (Mint Logo)
wrong but wromantic ([personal profile] sally_maria) wrote in [community profile] linux4all2011-03-26 09:29 am

Because I spent too long on the lottery machine yesterday...

One of the big advantages of open source is that if you don't like something you can fix it, or pay someone to fix it for you. So, if you'd won the Euro lottery (£117 million), what little "quirks" of your favourite distro or software would you pay someone to fix?

What projects would you donate to?
ratcreature: Tech-Voodoo: RatCreature waves a dead chicken over a computer. (voodoo)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2011-03-26 12:11 pm (UTC)(link)
My major wishful thinking is wrt the projects doing drivers. I'd love hardware support be not such a potential pitfall, both with basics such as graphics cards as well as peripherals like printers or graphics tablets not working as they should when you were unlucky with your pick, because you couldn't find any reviews telling you in advance whether any of the drivers work for hardware you can currently buy.

Also making graphics software better, like improving GIMP, because I often can't follow Photoshop tutorials. I don't mean that GIMP ought to be exactly like PS (I've never used that myself), but some basics I can't replicate. Many functions have equivalents even if the interface is different, but some things are missing that seem really useful from what I see in tutorials, like its adjustment layers. Also I guess the often lamented lack of CYMK and such, though personally I don't need such professional print-related capabilities. Also make it better work with tablets and brushes imitating natural media. The screenshots I've seen of Photoshop make that seem much nicer with options for brush dynamics and such, though the newest GIMP has made some progress.

Also having one of the other linux graphics programs that are truly geared towards digital painting actually mature would be nice. I have used the program that came with my tablet in a demo version under Wine (ArtRage, I think it was called), but having something like that natively would be nice.

[personal profile] dragonwolf 2011-03-26 01:31 pm (UTC)(link)
You may want to check out MyPaint. It's supposed to be more tablet-friendly and geared toward digital painting, and from what I've seen, it's pretty mature.

I second the GIMP thing. I use it all the time and would love to see layer folders on it and just general better Photoshop compatibility (so I don't have to drop a grand for Photoshop and fight with it in Wine just to slice up some images sent by a graphic designer).

Also, seconded the hardware driver support. Specifically, I'd like to see better support for newer graphics cards (I've never had issue with peripherals), so the Linux gamer community can actually enjoy the mainstream games and potentially grow enough to warrant dedicated support from the mainstream game companies.

I'd also support LibreOffice, so there's a good, compatible alternative to MS Office.
ratcreature: RatCreature at the drawing board. (drawing)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2011-03-26 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I've tried MyPaint, but it did not work well for me. It does have more in the way of brushes and such, but it lacks all other advantages of digital painting, like you can't actually select areas, mask things or anything like that.

Over the years I've had trouble with printers, tablets, network cards, wireless cards, sound, graphics cards, mice (I still remember back with my first linux forays trying to get a scroll wheel to work), touchpads, keyboards (that on laptops only though with the special keys not working),....

[personal profile] dragonwolf 2011-03-26 02:03 pm (UTC)(link)
What distro(s) do you use?
ratcreature: Tech-Voodoo: RatCreature waves a dead chicken over a computer. (voodoo)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2011-03-26 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
For a long time I've used SuSe (up to its version 9.2 or so), but when they switched focus I switched to Ubuntu. So I don't use purist versions or avoid non-free drivers or anything like that, and yet it almost always takes fiddling. Like the laptop I had before my current one, I never got power management to work, and it really sucks to have a laptop that has no working battery monitor.
ratcreature: Tech-Voodoo: RatCreature waves a dead chicken over a computer. (voodoo)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2011-03-26 01:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I've used linux exclusively since the mid-1990s so by now suppose I'm pretty much used to the program quirks that I barely notice. (Except glitchy clipboard, I'd definitely donate fixing that under Gnome, so that it works at least as well as the KDE one). But otherwise besides the graphics stuff my demands on my computer are very modest. Mostly I need a decent browser, email, emacs for a text editor, a decent media player and every now and then a word processor for writing some letter. So my frustrations mostly happen in the rare instances when I can afford some new hardware and it doesn't work right away, or a few times not at all.