Applications: November 2007 Archives

Commercial software and its free, open-source equivalents

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Go here for a great list of traditional (read: expensive) commercial software and the free, open-source programs you can use instead. The Webi page includes links to the home pages of all the FOSS (free, open-source software) programs it cites.

Two I plan to try are Cinepaint and Paint.NET, both image editors.

Many of my favorite apps are missing -- but the fact that there are enough FOSS apps that you can miss a bunch and still have a credible list is a very good thing.

Still, what's nice about this list is that it includes apps for Mac, Windows and Linux. I've always said that the best way to experience open-source is to do it on the OS you already know. Then the transition to a free, open-source OS like Linux will not be so daunting.

Free, open-source software is important for many reasons, but one of the biggest for me is that it enables me to compute with a clear conscience. Let's be real, most of us are using PCs with pirated software. Even if Microsoft Office, Photoshop and what have you are made by big corporations who charge many hundreds of dollars for their products, that's still no justification for stealing them. I feel a lot better using software that's meant to be free -- and freely modified, as are all FOSS programs.

And remember, you can't have freedom without "free" in the first place.

The winning image-editing application is ...

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irfanview.gifIrfanView.

Between the application itself and its plugins, it's light as can be but does absolutely everything I need.

It took me awhile to figure out how to crop a photo to exact dimensions and get control over that process, but I did figure out that final missing piece of the puzzle.

OK, there were two missing pieces. I couldn't figure out how to create an image file, but now that I've crossed that bridge, I'm ready to say that Irfanview is the best shareware/freeware image-editor out there. I say "shareware/freeware," because developer Irfan Skiljan says the program is free for home or noncommercial use but requests a $12 or 10-euro donation for business use.

While I prefer remaining in the world of free, open-source software, a $12 shareware, closed-source program is way better than a many-hundreds-of-dollars closed-source program like Photoshop.

And the great thing about IrfanView is that it loads in a couple seconds. Try that with Photoshop.

Now if only Irfanview was available for Linux and Mac. That would be great. As it is, I will try running IrfanView with WINE (the Windows emulator) in Linux, and I will report back.

Along the way, I tried out MANY applications. I still love MtPaint, the best lightweight image editor for Linux, but it doesn't handle the IPTC info that I need to preserve. I'll have to check whether it destroys it, as the GIMP so tragically does whenever a JPG is saved.

Others I tried included the KDE apps Krita (love it ... but it doesn't do IPTC; again, I'll have to check what it does to existing data) and digiKam.

The latter -- digiKam -- is digital-camera interface software for the KDE Linux/BSD desktop. Soon KDE is coming to a Windows machine near you, and I predict that MANY Windows users will adopt KDE as their user environment of choice.

Anyway, digiKam does have an editing function, and it does support IPTC, though to the extent that IrfanView does. The problems: digiKam wants to create its own directories (like iPhoto) that seem to mandate multiple copies of the same images in hard-to-navigate-to places. And the act of resizing a photo can, for some reason, take many minutes and/or crash the app. If only the KDE people would put full IPTC editing capability into Krita, which I think is a great image editor. Fix that and fix the initial-open-quote problem in KWord, and I'd be a die-hard KDE user.

But again, IrfanView is -- in my opinion -- the best photo-editing program for Windows that's out there today.

Update: I didn't realize that my version of IrfanView was old. I'm using Version 3.95, and the latest is 4.10. I'm downloading the new app and plugins now. I will report later on how it works.

Another update: This guy installed IrfanView in Linux with WINE. And so did this guy. And this guy, too.

This, however, I don't understand at all, but it might help. Also, check out this thread.

Even further update: The IrfanView forum.

Tech Talk column

Steven Rosenberg's weekly Tech Talk column, which appears Saturdays in the Los Angeles Daily News, is now available on the Daily News Technology page.

About this blog

Comments are back: Comments have returned to Click, but due to the thousands of spam comments clogging up the system each day, commenters must now log in. To comment, either create a Movable Type account when prompted, or create and use a Typekey account. Movable Type, as configured on this blog, allows commenters to create a Movable Type account, verify it via e-mail and then sign in to comment. Other methods of verification are OpenID, Live Journal and Vox.




Steven Rosenberg aims to learn what he does not know. He writes about it here.



About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Applications category from November 2007.

Applications: September 2007 is the previous archive.

Applications: December 2007 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

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