[Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-25 Thread jolie
Hi Jolie,

I like your tutorials, just found them on the mailing list. Much
better than the stuff I saw up to now on YouTube.

I am making Meet the GIMP, a (more ore less) weekly video podcast
about GIMP and other Open Source graphics software. I am doing this
for 2 1/2 years now and still have fun.

I would love to have you on the show. Are you interested in a cooperation?


Rolf


Hi Rolf,

I sent you an email to the address on the Meet the GIMP website. 

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[Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-23 Thread Mickey B.
On 1/22/2010 9:48 AM, Deniz Dogan wrote:
snip
 It didn't take me long at all to become productive in GIMP and I'm
 still learning! I'm in no way a professional, I mainly do web design
 using GIMP (which can be a pain at sometimes because it doesn't have
 layer groups like Photoshop).
 
 Try out different things, click stuff you have no idea about what they
 do. At least that's what I did... Tutorials helped me very little.
 

What might work for one doesn't always work for someone else. To say: This
works for me or this doesn't work for me is setting a standard that cannot
apply across the board. Tutorials are needed for the masses in general because
for many, a starting point is needed.

That's how I learned how to use GIMP. I don't like tutorials myself.

I love tutorials as they tend to be rather helpful in realizing the potential
of a plug-in, filter, or script. Sure, experimentation is strongly
recommended, but to say what helps you should help everyone else, is a bit
over the deep end.

They tend to be rather specific, even though they are trying to teach
generalized techniques. I just experiment until I find something I like
and than I try to remember what I did so I can do it again. My favorite
tool right now is the fractal explorer.

My favorite thing is when someone else shows me what I can accomplish from
using various tools. Again, experimenting is a necessity, but I can admit
getting lost in GIMP for hours on end being in the experimentation mode.

 I have a good notion I'll never
become an expert at using it but boy, do I have fun[0]!



I'd go out on a limb and say that for most us beginners, GIMP SHOULD be
FUN. 

And again, why not make it into a tutorial? I can honestly tell you that
thousands of GIMP beginners will appreciate your input in the form a tutorial.
And I am not being facetious about this.

(:

[0]: http://adragonstale.joseph-a-nagy-jr.us/art/digital/


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[Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread BGP
I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a 
very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it 
take you to learn how to use it?

For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date and they usually 
tell you to click something that isn't even present in the latest 
version.  What a PAIN.


There has to be an easier waythey has to be.
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Olivier Lecarme
BGP bigsk...@gmail.com wrote:

 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a 
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it 
 take you to learn how to use it?

GIMP is a very powerful and complex tool, and thus you cannot master it
in a few minutes. But its learning curve is such that you should be able
to do interesting things in a few hours.

 For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date and they usually 
 tell you to click something that isn't even present in the latest 
 version.  What a PAIN.

Since GIMP is continuously improved, it is impossible to maintain all
parts of the interface in the same place, used in the same way. And
people who made tutorials years ago may be occupied elsewhere now.

 There has to be an easier waythey has to be.

The easiest way is to buy and use a recent book. Depending on what are
your main usage of GIMP and your budget, you have some choice, and new
books are in preparation. Give a look at the first five entries on

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooksfield-keywords=GIMPx=0y=0


-- 


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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Alexandre Prokoudine
On 1/22/10, BGP wrote:
 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
 take you to learn how to use it?

Learning is something you never stop to do. If you stopped learning,
you are dead and the coffin with your body is about to be put six feet
underground.

 For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date

Did you read *all* tutorials on GIMP? Really? I'm sorry, but I don't
believe you.

Alexandre
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Jay Smith
On 01/22/2010 09:58 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
 On 1/22/10, BGP wrote:
 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
 take you to learn how to use it?
 
 Learning is something you never stop to do. If you stopped learning,
 you are dead and the coffin with your body is about to be put six feet
 underground.
 
 For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date
 
 Did you read *all* tutorials on GIMP? Really? I'm sorry, but I don't
 believe you.
 
 Alexandre

While the responses to the original poster are surely technically
correct, the original poster _does_ have a legitimate point.

It might actually be easier for a person to learn Gimp if they have
never used another image editing program.

However, for people who grew up on Photoshop, it is a particular
challenge to learn Gimp because one must learn substantially new
techniques, methods, terminology, concepts, and workflows.

And the OP is correct that there is some out-of-date documentation being
presented as if it were current.  This is especially a problem because
many aspects of the UI have changed in the last couple years.  And this
problem is only going to be much _worse_ when the single-window
possibility is available -- the docs will really be behind.

The first step in increasing broad acceptance, support, and development
of Gimp is to _accept_ its shortcomings and to honestly recognize the
challenges that new users face.

While long-time users and the developers of Gimp may not feel like Gimp
should be treated as a product, the reality is that any new user
looking at Gimp is going to make choices and decisions that are product
choice decisions.  Denial of that fact is complete denial of reality.

It is my opinion that many in the open source / free software (OS/FS)
arena have long ago forgotten that truism.  In my experience the OS/FS
world pretty much tells new users that if they are not patient enough or
smart enough to figure out the secrets of whatever software, they don't
deserve to use it.

I feel that is completely backward.  The OS/FS community should focus on
(as much as software development) the education of new users and
bringing them into the community.

As an example, while I have not looked for it, I am sure that there must
at least be some book or maybe a website here or there that specifically
addresses How to smoothly migrate from using Photoshop to using Gimp --
the benefits, challenges, and differences of using Gimp.  Such content
should be right up front in the whole Gimp documentation, Gimp websites,
etc., etc.

Every successful organization (and the Gimp community IS an organization
of a sort) gets new users/customers by telling potential users/customers
how/why their product is better -- and then making the conversion to
using/buying their product as easy as possible.  The Gimp community
could do a lot better at this.  And if somebody says we don't care
about getting more users, I would ask them then, why make Gimp at all?

How about this as an answer to the OP:

  It took me twice as long to learn to use Gimp as it took
  me to learn to use Photoshop.  I agree that the documentation
  is behind the curve and needs to be improved.  There are a
  great many things that I still do not know how to do in Gimp
  and a great many things about Gimp that annoy me to the point
  of being incredibly frustrated.  While Gimp has many incredibly
  wonderful features, there are still major features missing that
  significantly hamper my own productivity.  However, when I add
  up and try to balance out all the pluses and minuses, I have
  come to the conclusion that I would rather use Gimp than
  Photoshop and that I would rather support Gimp's development
  than to fund the arrogance of Adobe's/Microsoft's management.

When a new user complains, I would rather we say ...

  Gee, there is a lot of truth in what you are saying and I
  understand that _has_ been your experience so far.  However,
  there are many great resources available and I hope that you
  will pursue using those resources so that you can fully
  benefit from what Gimp has to offer.



As an aside, I really think that the documentation issue is going to
become critical in the next couple of years.  As I understand it (and
please correct me if I am wrong), anybody can contribute to the
documentation effort, but it takes significant training and skills in
the special process involved with maintaining documentation versioning,
etc., etc., etc.  I don't begin to understand all of that and I DON'T
WANT TO have to become an expert in all that stuff -- I just want to
help improve the documentation.

What I DO want to do is be able to contribute if I see a small problem
or have a suggestion as a better way to provide a bit of information, etc.

I think it is time to seriously think about putting the documentation in
a real Wiki environment where we don't have to worry 

Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Alexandre Prokoudine
On 1/22/10, BGP wrote:

 Learning is something you never stop to do. If you stopped learning,
 you are dead and the coffin with your body is about to be put six feet
 underground.

 Never heard that one before.

Now you have :)

 For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date

 Did you read *all* tutorials on GIMP? Really? I'm sorry, but I don't
 believe you.

 I never said all- you did.

You were asked several times what tutorials out of hundreds that exist
you refer to, and you never replied. So when you say that tutorials
are mostly out of date, there is no way you can be sure of that unless
you've read *all* the tutorials. Basic logic.

 If you have an excellent tutorial for ver. 2.6.8 then please refer me to it.

What kind of tutorial? Drawing? Painting? Color correction?
Retouching? FX? Please understand that by refusing to provide details
you don't help us to help you.

Alexandre
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Alexandre Prokoudine
On 1/22/10, Jay Smith wrote:

 While the responses to the original poster are surely technically
 correct, the original poster _does_ have a legitimate point.

 It might actually be easier for a person to learn Gimp if they have
 never used another image editing program.

 However, for people who grew up on Photoshop, it is a particular
 challenge to learn Gimp because one must learn substantially new
 techniques, methods, terminology, concepts, and workflows.

 And the OP is correct that there is some out-of-date documentation being
 presented as if it were current.  This is especially a problem because
 many aspects of the UI have changed in the last couple years.  And this
 problem is only going to be much _worse_ when the single-window
 possibility is available -- the docs will really be behind.

 The first step in increasing broad acceptance, support, and development
 of Gimp is to _accept_ its shortcomings and to honestly recognize the
 challenges that new users face.

Jay,

It has been said by GIMP developers in public several times that
tutorials at gimp.org are out of date and need reworking. There is no
problem accepting the fact, see? There is a problem of people not
having spare time to work on that. It's really *that* simple. There's
no conspiracy.

Alexandre
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Norman Silverstone

 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a 
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it 
 take you to learn how to use it?
 
 For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date and they usually 
 tell you to click something that isn't even present in the latest 
 version.  What a PAIN.
 
 
 There has to be an easier waythey has to be.

I sympathise with you, GIMP is complicated but then, so are lots of
applications. The darkness was lifted from my eyes when I discovered
www.meetthegimp.org This is a series of video tutorials which is so
helpful without being over complicated that even an oldie like me can
understand. Give them a try, and tell me what you think.

Norman


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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Deniz Dogan
2010/1/22 BGP bigsk...@gmail.com:
 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
 take you to learn how to use it?

 For example- the tutorials are mostly out of date and they usually
 tell you to click something that isn't even present in the latest
 version.  What a PAIN.


 There has to be an easier waythey has to be.
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It didn't take me long at all to become productive in GIMP and I'm
still learning! I'm in no way a professional, I mainly do web design
using GIMP (which can be a pain at sometimes because it doesn't have
layer groups like Photoshop).

Try out different things, click stuff you have no idea about what they
do. At least that's what I did... Tutorials helped me very little.

-- 
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Alexandre Prokoudine
On 1/22/10, Jay Smith wrote:

 While long-time users and the developers of Gimp may not feel like Gimp
 should be treated as a product, the reality is that any new user
 looking at Gimp is going to make choices and decisions that are product
 choice decisions.  Denial of that fact is complete denial of reality.

And who denies it? :)

 It is my opinion that many in the open source / free software (OS/FS)
 arena have long ago forgotten that truism.  In my experience the OS/FS
 world pretty much tells new users that if they are not patient enough or
 smart enough to figure out the secrets of whatever software, they don't
 deserve to use it.

How does it relate to GIMP?

 I feel that is completely backward.  The OS/FS community should focus on
 (as much as software development) the education of new users and
 bringing them into the community.

Agreed.

 As an example, while I have not looked for it, I am sure that there must
 at least be some book or maybe a website here or there that specifically
 addresses How to smoothly migrate from using Photoshop to using Gimp --
 the benefits, challenges, and differences of using Gimp.  Such content
 should be right up front in the whole Gimp documentation, Gimp websites,
 etc., etc.

Not a book and not a website, but something I started a while ago in
Russian and haven't finished translating into English yet.

http://wiki.libregraphicsworld.org/doku.php?id=migration-ps-to-gimp

Basically it covers status of support for file formats (needs updating
a bit), table of tools and their keyboard shortcuts mapping, table of
functionality mapping

I'll see if I can finish it this week.

 could do a lot better at this.  And if somebody says we don't care
 about getting more users, I would ask them then, why make Gimp at all?

And does anyone actually say that?

 As an aside, I really think that the documentation issue is going to
 become critical in the next couple of years.  As I understand it (and
 please correct me if I am wrong), anybody can contribute to the
 documentation effort, but it takes significant training and skills in
 the special process involved with maintaining documentation versioning,
 etc., etc., etc.  I don't begin to understand all of that and I DON'T
 WANT TO have to become an expert in all that stuff -- I just want to
 help improve the documentation.

I understand your feelings, but GIMP documentation is a single-source
effort that isn't well supported by current wiki engines.

Alexandre
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Programmer In Training
On 1/22/2010 9:48 AM, Deniz Dogan wrote:
snip
 It didn't take me long at all to become productive in GIMP and I'm
 still learning! I'm in no way a professional, I mainly do web design
 using GIMP (which can be a pain at sometimes because it doesn't have
 layer groups like Photoshop).
 
 Try out different things, click stuff you have no idea about what they
 do. At least that's what I did... Tutorials helped me very little.
 

That's how I learned how to use GIMP. I don't like tutorials myself.
They tend to be rather specific, even though they are trying to teach
generalized techniques. I just experiment until I find something I like
and than I try to remember what I did so I can do it again. My favorite
tool right now is the fractal explorer. I have a good notion I'll never
become an expert at using it but boy, do I have fun[0]!

(:

[0]: http://adragonstale.joseph-a-nagy-jr.us/art/digital/
-- 
PIT



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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Alexandre Prokoudine
On 1/22/10, Programmer In Training wrote:

 My favorite tool right now is the fractal explorer.

Don't forget to write a tutorial :-P

Alexandre
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Programmer In Training
On 1/22/2010 10:12 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
 On 1/22/10, Programmer In Training wrote:
 
 My favorite tool right now is the fractal explorer.
 
 Don't forget to write a tutorial :-P

I've thought about it. I was going to start doing so for Renderosity
(they have nothing for GIMP users there) several years ago but never got
around to it. I'm not really sure where to begin as I really don't
understand the settings. I just click and slide and adjust until I find
what I like. No skill there! :p

-- 
PIT



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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Paul Hartman
On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 8:41 AM, BGP bigsk...@gmail.com wrote:
 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
 take you to learn how to use it?

It depends what you mean by learn how to use it. GIMP is just a
tool, what you can do with it depends on your creativity and skill as
well.

In other words, do you want to know Where can I define a layer mask?
or do you want to know What is a layer mask and why would I want to
use one?

If the latter, then you don't necessarily need a GIMP tutorial as much
as basics of digital image manipulation which would apply to almost
any similar programs.

Also, one option for dealing with tutorials that assume you're using
an old version is to use an old version. You may be able to learn GIMP
2.4 and then make the transition to GIMP 2.6 more easily.
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Ken Warner
I'm guessing that there are very few people who know how to use
every feature of GIMP.  And probably even fewer that actually
use every feature of GIMP in whatever task they do.

You can learn what you need to do with a little work and not
a lot of time once you get the idea of layers and channels sorted
out.  That would be the first thing to figure out IMHO.

Then just learn what you need to do as you need to do it.

Jay Smith wrote:
 On 01/22/2010 09:58 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
 On 1/22/10, BGP wrote:
 I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
 very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
 take you to learn how to use it?
 Learning is something you never stop to do. If you stopped learning,
 you are dead and the coffin with your body is about to be put six feet
 underground.
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Claus Cyrny

Paul Hartman wrote:

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 8:41 AM, BGP bigsk...@gmail.com wrote:
  

I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
take you to learn how to use it?



It depends what you mean by learn how to use it. GIMP is just a
tool, what you can do with it depends on your creativity and skill as
well.


I'm actually tempted to suggest something like Gimp - the Zen Way
or something like that! ;-)  At times, I just play around with the features,
just to see what's possible - and sometimes with surprising results. I came
up with things you probably won't find in any tutorial.

Just my 2 cents,

Claus

--
Blog http://artificial10.wordpress.com/
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/claus_01/
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[Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread jolie
I can't read the original message. I'm posting from gimpusers.com and it's not
available from there. But if I'm not mistaken the complaint was that GIMP was
hard to learn and part of the problem was tutorials being out of date.

There's plenty if you know where to find them. I posted this earlier but
might as well post again.

http://gimp-tutorials.net/
http://www.gimp.wisdomplug.com/
http://gtuts.com/
http://youtube.com/gimptricks
http://youtube.com/jxtutorials

The last two are video tutorials. GIMPtricks is me. 

Gimp wisdom plug is a site that gathers links to gimp tutorials from all over
the internet. You can stumble on good and recent or bad or old tutorials, but
there are a lot there on that site. There is lots more on youtube.
Unfortunately there are a lot of videos where people are babbling and mumbling
and being plain unclear or worse, telling you the wrong way of doing
something. But there are lots of excellent videos as well. 

Gtuts doesn't have many tutorials, but they are all excellent.

If you're willing to spend money I can recommend the VTC training videos for
the basics (on gimp 2.6). But I found it covered GIMP from a photoshop point
of view.
More thorough is Akkana Peck's book. Also for beginners but you learn much
more for half the price. It's on gimp 2.4 but I found it easy to follow since
2.4 and 2.6 aren't that much different.  

-- 
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Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

2010-01-22 Thread Michaela Baulderstone
GIMP is very intuitive if you play with it. Watching videos help. The desk
top could do with more reference points (e.g. the text box reflecting the
size of the font...adding text to the right size id taking a lot of fiddling
for me at the moment)

 

From: gimp-user-boun...@lists.xcf.berkeley.edu
[mailto:gimp-user-boun...@lists.xcf.berkeley.edu] On Behalf Of Claus Cyrny
Sent: Saturday, 23 January 2010 8:29 AM
To: Paul Hartman
Cc: gimp-user@lists.xcf.berkeley.edu
Subject: Re: [Gimp-user] Complaint

 

Paul Hartman wrote: 

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 8:41 AM, BGP  mailto:bigsk...@gmail.com
bigsk...@gmail.com wrote:
  

I'm sure you folks are all experts at GIMP but I've found it to be a
very hard to learn how to use.  But how many hundreds of hours did it
take you to learn how to use it?


 
It depends what you mean by learn how to use it. GIMP is just a
tool, what you can do with it depends on your creativity and skill as
well.


I'm actually tempted to suggest something like Gimp - the Zen Way
or something like that! ;-)  At times, I just play around with the features,
just to see what's possible - and sometimes with surprising results. I came
up with things you probably won't find in any tutorial.

Just my 2 cents,

Claus

-- 

Blog http://artificial10.wordpress.com/ 
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/claus_01/ 

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