Unifying Receiverīus 003 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hubīus 002 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hub Sensors: System Temperatures: cpu: 45.0C mobo: N/A RAID: No RAID devices: /proc/mdstat, md_mod kernel module present Sound: Advanced Linux Sound Architecture v: k4.15.0-43-generic Version: 1.4 Mesa 18.0.5 Direct Render: YesĪudio: Card Intel NM10/ICH7 Family High Def. Resolution: renderer: Mesa DRI Intel 945GME x86/MMX/SSE2 Graphics: Card: Intel Mobile 945GSE Express Integrated Graphics Controllerĭrivers: intel (unloaded: modesetting,fbdev,vesa) Machine: Device: laptop System: ASUSTeK product: 1000H v: x.x serial: N/A And I'm used to the workflow of Photoline, that's it! And it's only for the blogging. I prefere Photoline to gimp, and gimp 2.8 works only on 8bit colour depth, and gimp 2.10, I think is not installable on my netbook. Of course i have to install 32bit, but I don't think that's the difference. Thanks for your tips! Didn't visit the forum for some time, now back againĪlso thanks for your installation. I read there was some discussion the developers were considering a Linux version, perhaps people could check on that and make requests. Personally, I would use Gimp v2.10 rather than Photoline with Linux Wine. It was saving everything by default to the PlayOnLinux Virtual drive folders. Just for the heck of it, I already have Linux Wine (wine staging, winetricks, and play on linux) installed, so I downloaded the MS Windows version of Photoline without the installer (plo.zip), right-clicked and extracted it, brought up Play On Linux, selected install other application, chose 64-bit, followed the prompts, select the "PhotoLine.exe" from that folder, and it came up and works. The are also many image browsers some with basic image editing built-in and you may already have one installed like "Pix", "XnViewMP", etc.īest Photo Applications For Linux - It's FOSSħ Apps That Prove You Don't Need Adobe Creative Suite on Linux There are numerous excellent photo and image applications available that work natively in Linux from easy (Kolourpaint, Pinta, etc.) to advanced (Gimp, Inkscape, Blender, etc.). If your computer does not have many resources, then using the "Wine" system is not helping. If you run " inxi -Fxzd" and " lsusb" from the console terminal prompt, highlight the results, copy and paste them back here, that should provide enough information. It would help to know more about your system setup. I just read your post and the good replies to it. Welcome to the wonderful world of Linux Mint and its excellent forum!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |