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    8611 months ago

    Linux loads the gtk libs when your desktop starts because it’s a major component of gnu/gnome. Windows doesn’t until you launch an app that would use it. It’s not a small library.

    • @heeplr@feddit.de
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      3811 months ago

      It’s not a small library.

      it’s featherweight compared to Windows Desktop, tho

      • Album
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        2211 months ago

        Sure… But the point is that it’s an apples to oranges compare when half of gimp is loaded by the OS at boot under Linux and at runtime on Windows.

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        611 months ago

        I don’t use KDE any more so I don’t follow closely. But it used to be significantly slower. I recall some years back they were working to change KDE loading of gtk libs but I’m not sure what came out of that

      • darcy
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        311 months ago

        for me, it takes a few seconds on my decent spec laptop. (kde)

    • @pilaf@lemmy.world
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      411 months ago

      But GIMP uses GTK 2 (unless you’re using the 3.0 beta), while GNOME and most other GTK-based DEs use GTK 3 (or maybe 4 now?), so the OS still has to load GTK 2 for GIMP on a cold run.

      • Album
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        311 months ago

        You need to have libgtk installed to run gimp. It would be like running a Qt app (what KDE environment and apps are based on, among other apps like OBS, roblox, google earth, virtual box, etc) without libQt. You couldn’t because the dependencies aren’t installed.

        Of course nothing is stopping you from running both, except maybe memory limitations on low ram hardware.

        Or you don’t install it as you suggest and use alternative apps.

  • donuts
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    6111 months ago

    Everything loads slower on Windows. I’ve run programs through fucking Wine that still load faster than they do on Windows.

  • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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    4711 months ago

    Wait, so are people going to claim that the start-up speed is the problem with GIMP on Windows and not the god awful UI? This is the problem with the Linux crowd. You guys write software to write software and not because you are a user of that software. A clunky UI - which is far, far too common on open source applications - will cost someone a heck of a lot more than a few seconds in getting work done.

    • @OtakuAltair@lemm.ee
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      2511 months ago

      There’s alot of irritation and bad general assumptions here lol. Krita, vlc, firefox, kdenlive etc exist and are amazing.

      Gimp’s ui is pretty bad though imo, even if it’s good enough. I’d pirate and use photoshop as it is now if I could.

    • @voidMainVoid@lemmy.world
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      1911 months ago

      Is it a bad UI? Or is it a case of “I know where this thing is in Photoshop. Why isn’t it in the same place in GIMP?”

        • @uis@lemmy.world
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          111 months ago

          Yeah, Blender UI is so terrible, that people were asking to make separate library, so Blender’s UI could be used by other projects. SARCASM.

      • Tippon
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        111 months ago

        It’s an awful UI. Last time I tried to use it, it took a while to find where the layers menu was. I don’t think I found how to make a brightness / contrast layer before I gave up and booted back to Windows and Photoshop.

    • @joel_feila@lemmy.world
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      811 months ago

      wait people are supposed to use GIMP I think it was for that special level of hell for graphic designers

    • Milady
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      811 months ago

      A clunky UI - which is far, far too common on open source applications

      So, what are you going to do about it ? Contribute ? Learn the ins and outs of gimp, and propose some UI changes ? And if you don’t have time to do that, who does / who cares enough for that ? People who code stuff like GIMP generally don’t really care for UI, or have the time. They’re volunteers, passionate people. Not designers.

      That’s also a broad generlization. Firefox has bad UI/UX ? (Sometimes yeah on some niche things but I wholeheartedly believe google is at fault somehow) What about Krita ? Blender has been doing UI work last I heard of it, so that’s also that. Paint.net was also open source. Chromium has bad UI ? Android ? Vs Code ? GNOME ? KDE ? Element ? Jitsi ? Signal ? Wordpress ?

      Yeah, gimp sucks. And the type of people who are “linux elitists”, that tell you you suck for not enjoying bad UI, also suck. But why not make a meaningful change to the world ? Try to hope for a world where GIMP is actually usable ?

    • @heeplr@feddit.de
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      711 months ago

      This is the problem with the Linux crowd. You guys write software to write software and not because you are a user of that software.

      It’s a problem you have since your OS pretends that Software (or a Computer in general) isn’t complex.

      Linux crowds use *NIX principles that are >50 years old and didn’t change a lot, because they work. Not because some software devs circlejerk or want to annoy you.

      • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        This is the most Linux-ist answer ever.

        I’m talking from a users perspective. I don’t give a flying fuck about whatever development technologies you are taking about because ultimately I don’t care. The vast majority of people don’t know - or care - how their car works. They just know it has to start. That’s how you folks lose the battle. You wrote code because you want to practice your skills or learn some new techniques or just because your bored. That’s great. That’s fine. But you’re not asking people that USE that software HOW it’s used. Next to zero effort is put into workflow. Your code might be fast. It might be bug free. Congrats, but if it takes 10 clicks to accomplish something that other software can do in 2, then that’s a problem. If the workflow is totally disjointed and not how a graphic designer actually works, then what good is that 2.735% more efficient code going to do for them?

        The fact that my post was about UI and workflow and youre talking about Unix principlea speaks volumes to why open source software tends to be so bad from a users perspective.

        • @heeplr@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          I’m talking from a users perspective.

          no, you’re talking from a patreon perspective. You have no clue of the subject and you simply demand people serving stuff the way you think is best. Also you don’t care why things are the way they are.

          Basically a Karen User.

          The vast majority of people don’t know - or care - how their car works. They just know it has to start.

          Exactly. The vast majority buys a $50.000 car and only use 2% of it’s features. And if the manufacturer starts to charge for a feature you like or decides to spy on you, there’s nothing you can do about it.

      • Melllvar
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        411 months ago

        The Unix principles generally don’t translate well to interactive graphical interfaces.

        • @heeplr@feddit.de
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          411 months ago

          Which principle exactly? Early motif UIs still are in use in a lot of nieche applications.

          Not saying UI design is easy or FOSS apps shine with excellent GUIs, but they work for their users and complaining doesn’t help.

          My point is: Either improve the UI or pay someone to improve it. Or at least make a suggestion to the devs but don’t blame linux people for not providing a free product perfectly adapted to your personal habits.

            • @heeplr@feddit.de
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              11 months ago

              I was talking about all *nix-typical principles. e.g. that everything should integrate into batched jobs. Modularity. Human readable error messages. Transparent logging. Integrated software repositories & version control, man pages. file permissions & user groups. etc.

              Stuff that seems strange and unnecessary complex for new users, who don’t know how to use stuff.

    • @deejaythedj@lemmy.world
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      711 months ago

      I tried to use GIMP when my PS sub ran out and I NEEDED to get some pics edited. Good GOD it took me way too long to get used to the workspace. Workflow was cut ion half, I guess that’s a thing with any new program but it took me like maybe a minute to figure out Darktable when I switched from LR.

      • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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        311 months ago

        I totally hear you. This is what far too many of these open source projects don’t get. Software needs to be usable. Fast code means squat if you are a user and you are pulling your hair out because the software forces you to work a way that is not intuitive.

        • @QuazarOmega@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          The developers of free software will never beg you to use their software, that’s what companies with commercial software do.
          They surely try to appeal to a certain userbase so they also ask for feedback, bug reports, testing and also contributions, translations because they aren’t working for you, they are working with you. Your phrases sound kind of entitled, like there’s someone that ows you better software, but there’s no one to complain to except to those who tell you that GIMP/any software is totally fine for everyone without knowing your specific use case. Developers of free software are anyone with any skillset who will try their best, but it doesn’t mean they’re masters, people who code to flex will probably be found at code golfing competitions instead

    • Xylight (Photon dev)
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      611 months ago

      Yes, it’s a common complaint that it doesn’t use GTK 4 yet, it’s still on GTK 2.

    • @Tag365@lemmy.world
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      611 months ago

      What fixes would you apply to GIMP’s UI to make it better and more convenient to use?

  • @akash_rawal@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Everything seems to be way faster on Linux than on windows for some reason.

    On one occasion I tested a build that took ~10 min on windows, in a Linux VM installed on the same machine, it finished in ~1min.

    I have searched around for an answer for quite some time now, I could not find any definitive reason. Some say that process creation is slower on windows, some say IO is inefficient. Still struggling to explain 10x increase in throughput.

    Here is a funny instance: https://emacs.stackexchange.com/questions/17783/why-does-emacs-take-longer-to-start-on-windows-than-on-linux

    • @gosling@lemmy.world
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      2111 months ago

      IMO it’s because Windows is targeted for general use so they don’t bother optimizing anything. They’ll just convince people that thei have aging hardware when things become slow and say stuffs like “unused RAM is wasted RAM” to justify taking up half of my memory on idle.

      Even running Linux from a USB is still a way smoother experience than running Windows for me.

      • @akash_rawal@lemmy.world
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        311 months ago

        Windows is so not optimised (unoptimized?) that I cannot even see what is slow anymore. Doesn’t look like windows is targeted for anything in this state.

    • @redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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      11 months ago

      I thinks it caused by two reasons:

      • process creation has much higher overhead on windows. On top of that, the antivirus system adds additional overhead not present in Linux because it scan every process on launch and monitor its behavior until the process finished. This result in any workflow that relies on launching a bunch of processes (e.g. make-style compilation which launch the compiler process recursively) to be very slow on Windows.
      • file access on windows is also significantly slower on windows due to its filesystem filter. Also, antivirus typically hook into this filter and inspect every opened files. You can imagine this would result in significant slowdown for any workflow that relies on opening a lot of small files (e.g. compilation)

      If you disable the antivirus (including windows defender) performance would definitely improve, but it’ll still slower than on Linux.

      In order to gain sufficient performance in windows, you’ll have to use threads instead of processes (basically a single program doing everything instead of chaining multiple program Unix-style) and put your data in a single file so it can load all at once instead of in a bunch of small files loaded recursively. Basically a complete opposite of what people do on Linux.

      • @akash_rawal@lemmy.world
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        211 months ago

        Thanks for information.

        Some day I might try to controllaby worsen process creation and file access of Linux to match windows performance. Not today though.

    • @athlon@lemm.ee
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      311 months ago

      Well, in case of Gimp for Windows, it also doesn’t help that it uses a modified GTK. So, when you start on Gimp on Windows, the program must load all the GTK libraries first, while on Linux the shared libraries are already loaded.

  • KluEvo
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    1011 months ago

    Am I going crazy or something? Gimp loads in under 5 seconds on windows for me, and that’s with an absurd amount of crap (unity, blender, a vm, and 400+ browser tabs across 5 browsers) running in the background.

      • KluEvo
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        311 months ago

        Meh? It’s a “thin-and-light” gaming laptop, so it’s quite decent, but idk if that counts as ‘godly’.

        • @Arutttelar@lemmy.zip
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          211 months ago

          Tbf they did say ‘sounds like’

          and it does sound like it, if you’re casually running all of that and still booting up gimp

          unity, blender, a vm, and 400+ browser tabs across 5 browsers

    • @uis@lemmy.world
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      111 months ago

      Windows cheats with scheduler. When foreground app uses a lot of CPU or IO, background apps basically stop running.

  • Psaldorn
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    911 months ago

    Me: Export this 256x256 PNG.

    Gimp on windows: Bro, you’d better get a drink and a snack.

    • @TheBERFA@lemmy.world
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      611 months ago

      I think you need a better PC my man. Takes me under a second for images upwards of 2000x2000.

      • Psaldorn
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        111 months ago

        It’s a beast, 3080, recent CPU. I can do the same thing in inkscape in a fraction of a second.

        I’ve been living in image software hell since fireworks disappeared. Why can’t someone make vector and image manip together? Frustrating.

  • nx5qly
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    411 months ago

    Kind of funny because I was using an old laptop earlier to recover a partition that Mac fucked up.

    Instead of clicking GParted, I accidentally clicked GIMP. For a Core2Duo computer with 4GB RAM, 2 seconds wasn’t an exaggeration.

    Distro was Manjaro.