Ben Klein wrote:
2009/5/8 Nicklas Börjesson <nicklas.borjes...@ws.se>:
And the *rest* of the world DO revolve around a few applications.
That is why they think so.

No, the rest of the world does not revolve around a few applications,
it's just that the #1 complaint against free operating systems has
been traditionally "it won't run Photoshop". In my experience, most
people who argue this don't even care about it, and in fact some
people miss the point entirely and dismiss Wine as "not a solution",
because they expect it to run natively, fluidly, with complete desktop
integration etc.


The great thing about this is these are all solvable problems, even in the near term. Photoshop almost works. Desktop integration is almost there. I'm doing what I can to make Wine a very impressive piece of software to the point where its integration into the desktop seems completely natural.

Though, I must say, the majority of people I see/hear using Photoshop
*are* using it as a toy/hobby, not for 'real' work, i.e., a full time
job.
I have the same impression. And most haven't paid for it either.
Anyway, that really isn't important.

Except that WineHQ does not officially support pirated software (it
may run, but you'll get no official help getting it to run or work
properly).


Internet Explorer: Free as in beer. Wine: Free as in speech. Photoshop: Free as in stolen.

The important thing is that they want it, no why.

As it stands, yes, the fact that they want it is more important than
why. It's also unimportant to Wine's goals (which is for *all*
applications to run, not just Photoshop), and should not be considered
a factor in determining when the next release is ready.



We had "no application regressions" as a release goal for 1.0, more or less - in practice that meant we were targeting every application users wanted to test it on. But there were also 4 specific apps targeted too - IIRC stuff like word viewer. In principle there's no reason an application like Photoshop couldn't be considered release critical in much the same fashion these were.

For practical reasons, however, we probably don't want to target particular applications just because they're popular - a better strategy would be to target particular users who only need one application that is almost working. At least, that's what the model I wrote told me: http://yokozar.org/blog/archives/48

Thanks,
Scott Ritchie


Reply via email to