Jason Alan Smith wrote:
please unsubscribe me from this list. I have tried using the web
interface, but have been unsuccessful. I did not see any other
address to which to send this request.
go to:
https://lists.xcf.berkeley.edu/mailman/options/gimp-user
Select the remind button at the bottom,
please unsubscribe me from this list. I have tried using the web interface,
but have been unsuccessful. I did not see any other address to which to send
this request.
Jason
___
Gimp-user mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.xcf.berkeley.edu/ma
Michael J. Hammel wrote:
The problem here is one that other open source projects have had to deal
with as well - how to take a loosely organized group and work with
outside, commercial groups who have more strict rules for interaction.
XFree86, Apache, and others all formed boards and/or non-pro
Robin Rowe wrote:
Although none of our developers are hackers, nice to hear you think highly
of some of us.
hmm, you don't have a single programmer who is working on FilmGimp
because he enjoys it? if you do, you probably have a hacker on your
team. Hacker in the original MIT definition, not
On Fri, 2003-09-12 at 14:19, Sven Neumann wrote:
> Because this decision did never happen. At least I don't remember that
> at anytime anyone ever discussed this topic. The filmgimp code slowly
> diverged from the main GIMP source code, mainly because the GIMP
> source code kept improving. Noone ev
> On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, "Robin" == Robin Rowe wrote:
Robin> Although none of our developers are hackers
Perhaps therein lies the problem? "...hackers..." is a good thing. See:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=hacker%20definition
Also the Hacker Manager FAQ is a good
Hi,
"Robin Rowe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> What bothered you and other GIMP developers so much about Film Gimp
> that in 2000 you unexpectedly discarded three man-years of your own
> work funded at substantial expense by the motion picture industry?
>
> In 1998 Film Gimp was an official devel
Title: RE: [Gimp-user] CinePaint and Film Gimp
What turned be off about CinePaint was how unstable it was. Maybe this is just a factor in the windows version. But I have never had any problems with stability win Gimp under Linux at least.
Timothy
-Original Mess
Sven,
> All I can say is that this application (now called cine-paint) is
> based on film-gimp which was forked from GIMP around version
> 1.0. GIMP-1.0 is a piece of code from the stone age.
CinePaint. It branched from GIMP 1.0.4 in 1998.
> In my opinion
> it is a shame that some good hackers a