![]() ![]() If you’re already familiar with Photoshop, then there’s not a huge learning curve. It’s designed to use almost all the same Photoshop keyboard shortcuts, too, making it one of the best Photoshop alternatives on the market. Not only that, but it’s significantly more lightweight than Photoshop, and it’s able to use modern quad-core technology to run at 60fps for smooth editing.Īffinity Photo fully supports most popular models of graphics tablets as well as the Apple Pencil. Plus, it’s one of the few editors that can create HDR images.ĭesigned with professional photographers and designers in mind, Affinity Photo has key features like unlimited layers, over 1,000,000% zoom, RAW file editing, undo/redo of up to 8,000 steps, and autosave. Not only is Affinity Photo’s one-time license fee only a few dollars more than you’d be expected to pay for Photoshop for a month, but it’s got almost all the same features. If you don’t have the patience to create a VM you can grab one at bitnami.Available For: Windows, macOS, iOS (sold separately)Īffinity Photo is one of the biggest and most popular Photoshop alternatives, and for good reason. With Windows’ layer on top of Ubuntu I had all those problems solved (external monitor and suspend), which is quite ironic. ![]() So if you want my advice, use a virtual machine instead. What I don’t like are these tiny little things that greatly limit my work on Ubuntu. After all this years using Ubuntu I actually made a donation. I admire the effort the put on to create a powerful and beautiful operating system free for everyone. I like their vision to unify desktop, tablets, mobile (and TV) in a single OS and UI. ![]() I like the Ubuntu project, what it is and what it represents. No, I’m just asking to suspend my computer! That’s as basic as shutting down! Final thoughts It’s not like I’m asking Ubuntu to natively take advantage of NVIDIA’s Optimus technology – which would be great – since I know “NVIDIA is the worst trouble spot on hardware manufacturing” (Linus Torvalds). Once again, forced restart and loss of my work. Ubuntu suspended correctly turning off the fans, but when I pressed the power button to resume my session I couldn’t get passed a black screen despite the laptop being back on full power. I did that once on Ubuntu and learned the lesson – never suspend. Do you want to suspend your laptop on Ubuntu? Think twice!Īnother thing I’m quite used to do on Windows is to press the shutdown button to suspend the laptop if I’m going to be AFK for a while. The result was always a black or a frozen screen, a forced restart, and the loss of my work. I tried multiple combinations of connecting the cable, powering on, closing and opening the lid, switching windows and virtual desktops, to no avail. As soon as I connected the HDMI cable to the laptop, while on Ubuntu, it completely froze and I had to restart. I connect my laptop to the monitor using an HDMI cable and it always worked plug’n’play on Windows. Every time I try to connect my laptop to an external monitorĪt my bedroom I have a docking station setup for my computer: I have a LCD monitor, a keyboard, a mouse, and a laptop that connects to those devices. And I finally gave up on Ubuntu as an alternative. The last version I tried was 13.04 Raring Ringtail. ![]() Not yet an alternative for me but a nice complement to Windows. Games, Adobe Lightroom, and Microsoft Office didn’t let me fully convert to Linux.ĭespite my personal requirements, Ubuntu was a stable, enjoyable, fast and powerful operating system. By that time I was trying to use Ubuntu on a daily basis, in an attempt to convert from Windows to Linux. Meanwhile Unity came with 11.04 Natty Narwhal, I didn’t like it and switched to Gnome 3. I really enjoyed the dark theme and its warm tones. Ubuntu became a polished and cool looking OS for the first time. Then I updated from Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala to 10.04 Lucid Lynx. Ubuntu was fast no doubt about it, but I always preferred Windows’ usability and look (probably just because I was more used to it). My laptop had a slow disk (5200rpm) so I decided to use dual boot with Windows instead of a virtual machine. I had a hard time getting used to the UI even more to the command line. Back in those days the only think I knew about linux or unix was that it had something to do with penguins and gnus. I started using Ubuntu in 2009 when I had to develop C and Java software for some courses at college. Does Ubuntu hate me or is it really getting worse? ![]()
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