On 7/10/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 00:46:44 +0200, peter sikking [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Really? Let's have a look at the product vision. 'High-end'
is the word I want us to focus on.
Please dont distort this by taking one word out of context.
On 7/9/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 02:08:45 +0200, Chris Mohler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I expect the Save command to retain
*all* data: not just some.
If you expect that when using jpeg you are wrong and need to see the first
use warning that has
Chris Mohler wrote:
I understand that JPEG drops data. My point: in most applications,
'save' means save your data. In the image editing world, 'save' has
come to mean save as much data as you want given the limitations of
the format - here are (or might be) some options.
One view is that
Hello guys! Gimp is a GREAT program, not only for Linux but also for
Windows, and I'm loving it. However I have a suggestion:
Sometimes on Windows Explorer I create the windows version of Symbolic
Links, the Shortcuts, which are redirects to, e.g., another folder. So
if I have e.g.
ICMP Request writes:
Although I have to recognize that it's a very low priority issue, could
be nice to see it implemented on new versions.
Thanks for the suggestion. This problem is already reported in our bug
tracking system. See http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=163544
. It will
On Tuesday, July 10, 2007, 8:09:04, Chris Mohler wrote:
I understand that JPEG drops data. My point: in most applications,
'save' means save your data. In the image editing world, 'save' has
come to mean save as much data as you want given the limitations of
the format - here are (or might
Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 01:24:40 +0200,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If I have
a Quality setting of 95 and I load an image that was saved with a
Q=50, I should be very disappointed if the GIMP degraded to that level
when I have specified that I expect less loss when
gg, my dear agent provocateur,
creating interaction requires making hard choices, because you
cannot make an application for everybody. For that you use the
product vision that you set as a team at the beginning of the
project. And then you don't fudge when the moment is there.
You make hard
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 12:29:23 +0200, peter sikking [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
creating interaction requires making hard choices, because you
cannot make an application for everybody. For that you use the
product vision that you set as a team at the beginning of the
project. And then you don't
Raphaël wrote:
creating interaction requires making hard choices, because you
cannot make an application for everybody. For that you use the
product vision that you set as a team at the beginning of the
project. And then you don't fudge when the moment is there.
I would like to temper this
Von: Raphaël Quinet [EMAIL PROTECTED]
We also have to be humble and remember that writing down the current
vision only took us a couple of hours, not 5 years (basically one hour
of discussion at LGM plus some e-mail exchanges while we were
polishing the minutes).
... plus the better part of
Von: Michael Schumacher [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Kanila's
Kamila, sorry for misspelling your name.
Michael
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On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 16:32:11 +0200, peter sikking [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Raphaël wrote:
I would like to temper this a bit (not agent provocateur as gg,
but maybe devil's advocate): a team that is too rigid about its
vision and never adapts it over time runs a real risk of
becoming
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 00:46:44 +0200, peter sikking [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There is also a real benefit in opening a jpeg and then saving
the result in another (GIMP) file. We see from the explanations in this
thread that opening a jpeg and then saving it again means a loss of
information. So
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 18:26:38 +0200, Michael Schumacher [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Von: Raphaël Quinet [EMAIL PROTECTED]
We also have to be humble and remember that writing down the current
vision only took us a couple of hours, not 5 years (basically one hour
of discussion at LGM plus some
peter sikking writes:
But in between, as long as it is not finished, there is no role for
jpeg. Only one decompression at the beginning and a compression of the
end result is defendable in high-end graphics.
I'm seeing an unspoken assumption in this thread that most photos
are edited in
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 09:51:24 -0700, Akkana Peck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another thing I'm unclear on in this thread: when I first heard the
idea of forcing Export instead of Save, the plan seemed to be that
Save would always save XCF, and anything else would require Export.
But now you seem
On 7/10/07, Raphaël Quinet wrote:
GIMP parasites, etc. In fact, even the current XCF loses some
information if you consider that it does not record the full undo
history and the current tool contexts, but this is something that
most users accept.
They really do?
Alexandre
Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 01:24:40 +0200,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If I have
a Quality setting of 95 and I load an image that was saved with a
Q=50, I should be very disappointed if the GIMP degraded to that level
when I have specified that I expect less loss when
On Mon, 2007-07-09 at 18:37 -0400, Liam R E Quin wrote:
For my part I miss save a copy as... which in some programs
saves the file like Save As but doesn't change the filename of
what's being edited.
GIMP 2.3 has this feature for quite a while already.
I wonder if it'd be possible, for gimp
So I broke my promess.
creating interaction requires making hard choices, because you
cannot make an application for everybody.
I have to agree. A good UI doesn't do what users ask. It does what is better
for the users. ;-)
This approach of taking the lossy format to an import/export section
On Tue, 2007-07-10 at 19:41 +0200, Sven Neumann wrote:
On Mon, 2007-07-09 at 18:37 -0400, Liam R E Quin wrote:
For my part I miss save a copy as... which in some programs
saves the file like Save As but doesn't change the filename of
what's being edited.
GIMP 2.3 has this feature for
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