On Wednesday, 27 Mar 2002, Øyvind Kolås wrote:
* My workflow for posters that will be printed on a laser printer is:
- make a new grayscale image with the same size ratio as A4/A3
- fullfil the design
- scale the image up to the full res of the
On Friday, 29 Mar 2002, regis rampnoux wrote:
You can load the files with the plug-ins amp4gimp which is in the
registery. (I found yesterday a bug but you can use it ...)
There is no save option at this moment.
If the amp format is simple enough, why don't we just make it the
default format
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (2002-04-04 at 1143.34 +0100):
If the amp format is simple enough, why don't we just make it the
default format for Gimp curves too?
The problem I see is that it means not under GIMP people control
(basicaly about improving, I doubt the format would change). For
example, when
On 04-Apr-2002 Guillermo S. Romero / Familia Romero wrote:
example, when moving to 16 bits or other modes, I do not see PS AMP
256 entries LUT or GIMP 17 entry curves as the way to go. It sounds
absurd to work in such high mode and then limit other things to brute
approximations.
I have a
Roger Leigh [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
so should we speak of gnu-bsd-mpl-qpl-artistic/linux ?
or, as gpl softwares number is greater than gnu/fsf ones, should
we speak of gpl/linux ?
A distribution is much more than an operation system. If you just
look at the core components that make
Can anyone tell me how I would supply the GIMP_HOST environment for a
gimp-perl server. I am trying to execute a script that call's the server,
but am getting a protocol error. From information that I have located it
looks as if I need to set the auth in the GIMP_HOST. The following
That depends a whole lot on what is in a bare bones system, does it not?
I feel confident that I can build an entire bare bones system without
having any programs in this system being from GNU packages.
The GNU percentage depends highly on what the distribution provider puts
into it.
Since
Actually, his name is Linus Torvalds =) He got the X because of the X at
the end of Unix. First he was planning to call it FreaX or something, as
in FreeX and Freaks =)
Just a bit of information, so that his name wouldn't be mistaken for his
OS =)
Have a nice day
-Nas
On Fri, 2002-04-05 at