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Latest Comments by Shmerl
Need a distraction-free art application on Linux? Try out MyPaint
23 Jan 2020 at 5:00 pm UTC

Quoting: GuestAnd because of this hand-eye disconnect some very impressionable people will latch onto anything that makes drawing on a tablet feel more like drawing on a paper, but it's not that there's anything special about paper in this case, it's just that they're trying to tackle the hand-eye disconnect through completely illogical and ineffective ways.
Are you talking about non-display tablets? Wacom has display tablets for a long time already (Cintiq series), so no hand-eye disconnect anymore.

Need a distraction-free art application on Linux? Try out MyPaint
22 Jan 2020 at 4:53 pm UTC Likes: 2

Quoting: Purple Library Guy
Quoting: ShmerlFor drawing, try Krita. It's a lot better than Gimp for that. The later is a good raster image processing editor.
So where does Inkscape come into all this?
Vector graphics - the third use case.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_graphics [External Link]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raster_graphics [External Link]

Need a distraction-free art application on Linux? Try out MyPaint
22 Jan 2020 at 6:41 am UTC Likes: 5

Quoting: GuestThe other day I literally just threw my hands up and gave up on this. After 5 years of trying to learn digital art on linux I'm just quitting, going to windows and using photoshop, because fuck this shit I'm not dealing with it while I'm learning. Nobody should. Do you know how many years this bullshit has potentially held me back for because I didn't know any better?
Did you file Krita bugs about all the above? Would be interesting to follow (performance, banding and etc.).

Need a distraction-free art application on Linux? Try out MyPaint
22 Jan 2020 at 6:37 am UTC

For drawing, try Krita. It's a lot better than Gimp for that. The later is a good raster image processing editor.

Valve give a little more info on what 'Gamescope' actually does for Linux gaming
21 Jan 2020 at 7:42 pm UTC Likes: 2

Quoting: GuestBasically I regret buying a recent card to have the same performance of a 4 year old card I already own at the moment. I had high hopes in the NAVI cards but they turned out being not so amazing.
It's an iterative process. AMD said they are investing a lot into microarchitecture for Navi, so I expect its performance to continue improving and catch up to Nvidia, or hopefully get ahead of it. Current iteration of Navi is obviously still only catching up in this sense.

So yes, currently using AMD you get lower performance than some Nvidia cards, but not really much lower, and as I said, AMD is on the course to fix it. That's a tradeoff I'm OK with. The other option is to support a nasty company that slows down Linux progress to begin with.

Steam reportedly coming to Chrome OS - Linux gaming across even more devices
19 Jan 2020 at 1:06 am UTC Likes: 1

If it will help increasing the number of Linux games, then it's a good development.

Valve give a little more info on what 'Gamescope' actually does for Linux gaming
17 Jan 2020 at 5:50 pm UTC Likes: 2

Quoting: poisondMany games link directly against X, even 'modern' ones that also use SDL, they won't just go away or be ported.
Run a find+ldd on your steam/games directory to see for yourself.
That's why I said modern games, and I mean native ones. Obviously, you need XWayland for a ton of cases still, especially Wine that still requires X.

As for managing input, there you can use ydotool [External Link]. Nothing that you mentioned is a regression, but something that should be supported by the compositor. You probably used something poorly developed.

DOOM Eternal coming to Stadia on March 20, plus other Stadia news - a round-up
17 Jan 2020 at 3:12 am UTC

Ah, yeah. That's the usual joke for expecting it on Linux by 2077 ;)