Photo Shop

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/index.html

GraphicalUserInterface editor for bitmap images from AdobeSystemsInc. The de facto standard for graphics professionals from roughly the mid-'nineties to the present (2008).

Notable features of Photoshop include:

History of Photoshop


W/O photoshop, and its ilk, we would not have latter-day masterpieces like this:

http://www.boingboing.net/2010/08/11/aurora-borealis-sad.html


Alternatives

PaintShopPro is a less expensive, albeit lighter-weight, alternative.

CorelPainter: Not as cheap, but with an unmatched feature set. Differs from Photoshop in that while Photoshop was designed to manipulate existing images, Painter was designed to create images from scratch using a wide variety of realistic (and not-so-realistic) brushes.

TheGimp: Originally for LinuxOs, TheGimp is now available on Windows and Unices (including MacOsx). It has most of Photoshop's functionality, but is still under development. But it's free, which makes it worth it. The Gimp is limited to 8bit indexed color, greyscale, or 8bit RGB. Specifically, TheGimp doesn't do CMYK. This is the major limitation of TheGimp versus PhotoShop for print work. Other people complain about the UserInterface of TheGimp.

CinePaint?: Fork off an old version of TheGimp that goes in a different direction. Aimed at film work, but with users choosing it because it is also good for video, also good for very high resolution and/or bit depth scientific imaging, or because it is faster and easier on older hardware than current versions of TheGimp are.


Gimp is good but it's not Photoshop. Photoshop still has a more complete set of tools and when the going gets tough, i.e. big files, Gimp gets left in Photoshop's dust. This is surprising; considering each programs origins, you'd think Gimp would have better memory management.

One thing in Gimp's favour though is that while it is improving, Photoshop is getting worse. Photoshop has steadily deteriorated since v5 (about the time it became a Windows app). But what can Adobe do? When you've got a perfect app you can only make it worse. In the feature frenzy they are sacrificing the best workflow in the business and I'm questioning whether the annual upgrade is worth it. - hjm

Considering Gimp's origins, it actually makes sense. It was originally written by a couple of undergrads who didn't really know what they were doing. There were some pretty glaring design errors with respect to manipulating large files; they had never really thought of that. There was a rewrite to address problems caused by this lack of foresight, but there are still 'blind spots' in the design. This makes it difficult for them to do the right thing at times, such as with smaller quantizations and colour.


The above tools all manipulate bitmapped images, such as photographs.

Is there another WikiPage somewhere to discuss vector graphics tools, such as

-- DavidCary


CategorySoftwareTool


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