Linux and photography

For many years pho­to­gra­phy and linux have not been the best fri­ends. But it seems, as if this has changed.

This week I did some­thing which see­med impos­si­ble until now. I kicked Windows.

No more XP/64, no more 7/64. Go figure.

DigiKam 1.4

Final­ly the­re are linux-repla­ce­ments for the have-to-have-apps like Ado­be PS and LR. Now I use Digi­k­am (curr­ent­ly 1.4, see screen­shot abo­ve) to manage/edit all my pho­tos, Gimp (2.7, devel) as addi­tio­nal editing-soft­ware and also Kri­ta, which has some poten­ti­al. And the Kipi-plug­ins are a real time-saver for re-occu­ring tasks.

The 8‑bit-bar­ri­er has been over­co­me by Digi­k­am and Kri­ta, which both can hand­le 16-bit-files. And I am sure that it is only a ques­ti­on of time, until Gimp can too. This was a big step ahead. Also the hand­ling of RAW-files has beco­me very easy – as well as imple­men­ting color-pro­files. Now I can say, that the­re is hard­ly a reason – at least for even ambi­tious ama­teurs – to shell out lots of money for com­mer­cial pro­ducts. On a siden­ote: This is also true for video-editing. My recom­men­da­ti­on: KDEnlive…

During the years I had many linux-dis­tri­bu­ti­ons on my HD, but the­re is one that I always come back to. So… the­re must be a reason 😉 It is Arch/64. Hard to beat speed-wise and the­re are tons of fresh apps for any pur­po­se you can think of.

If you want an over­view on what the alter­na­ti­ves for bread-and-but­ter-apps on win­dows are, I sug­gest that you have a look at this site.

ps. When I said, the­re is no more win­dows, this was not all true. I still run xp/32 in a vir­tu­al machi­ne even­tual­ly, as the­re is one pro­gram I could not replace: Nokia PC Suite. I need it to sync my mobi­le pho­ne. But this is easy and works well.

In case you’­re interested…

- Very com­pre­hen­si­ve artic­le by Nathan Willis