Plugins are bits of code that work with GIMP to add to the functionality. They may offer several exciting ways to extend the utility of the program. Plugins can be saved by unzipping the downloaded folder (if it is in a .zip format), and placing them in C:\Document and Settings\<username>\.gimp-<version>\plug-ins\. Restart GIMP, and the plugin will be activated."
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Owl_Farmer wrote:
this thread is the dumbest idea in the history of the internte
Plugins are bits of code that work with GIMP to add to the functionality. They may offer several exciting ways to extend the utility of the program. Plugins can be saved by unzipping the downloaded folder (if it is in a .zip format), and placing them in C:\Document and Settings\<username>\.gimp-<version>\plug-ins\. Restart GIMP, and the plugin will be activated."
Thanks!
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Joined: Sun May 01, 2005 2:06 pm Posts: 2539 Location: France
Patrick Bateman wrote:
To be honest I think the photoshop feature does a better job.
Possible but regarding the price, there is no competition : If you do this as a hobby, then gimp is a good choice. If you're a professional designer than of course photoshop is the way to go.
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Owl_Farmer wrote:
this thread is the dumbest idea in the history of the internte
Have been using PS CS5 since the trial became available. But seems CS5 responds a lot slower than CS4. Sometimes, it just freezes or slow the whole computer down when I tried to open a many-layer file. This reminds me of the liquid resize feature in the GIMP and Digikam which allows full image resizing while choosing to remove or keep certain parts of the image.
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