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LINUX PICKS AND PANS

Fork Skewers Photoshop Skin GimpShop

I thought I had found image-manipulating Nirvana with GimpShop. But the wide world of open source software and the Linux community failed me this week. My quest for a better GIMP tool to give me a Photoshop-like Windows experience (as in Adobe’s Photoshop) turned into a fool’s folly.

GIMPShop

GimpShop

Actually, my faith in the Linux OS is still intact. But my disappointment in not finding salvation from resorting to a return to Microsoft Windows caused me to question my decision years ago to convert to Linuxism.

All of this stemmed from a two-part need. One aspect was my weekly quest for software to review for this column. The other driving factor was my desire to produce graphics for a project consuming too much of my time without retreating to that other operating system.

I usually set aside badly performing open source products when I test them rather than waste readers’ time with negative reviews. But my experience this week laid bare a larger issue. As great as the concept of Free Open Source Software (FOSS) is, not every Linux software package serves the greater good.

The Problem

Linux users have an impressive cache of photo editing tools available. Some of them received favorable reviews in the annals of Linux Picks and Pans — for example, Shotwell, FSpot and GIMP. But few programs tooled for the Linux environment offer the professional-strength options of high-end commercial photo manipulation software.

Perhaps the gold standard bearer in that category is Photoshop. Alas, it is very costly and not available in a free Linux version. For those with a Windows version of the app, getting Photoshop to run suitably, if at all, under WINE in Linux is frustrating at best.

You can also run Photoshop on a Linux computer running a virtual box containing a Windows operating system. But that option just presents another layer of workarounds. It also is not an available option if you do not already have the very expensive Windows OS as well as the Photoshop software.

So one of the few Linux options for high-end photo manipulation software is GIMP, which runs on a variety of operating systems. GIMP is Linux Speak for GNU Image Manipulation Program. It is a free powerhouse that sets the Linux standard for displaying and tweaking all things photographic on a computer screen. It is a very close first cousin to Photoshop.

The Almost Solution

GimpShop modifies the GIMP user interface. It is a clone-like remix of GIMP to make the menus and functionality almost one with the Photoshop experience. GIMP has similar capabilities as Photoshop. But it is sometimes more awkward to use and misses a few of the core features available in Photoshop.

Of course, if you never used Photoshop, you simply struggle to learn the user-unfriendliness of GIMP. Settling for second best is not a real problem for typical users. But finessing unorthodox characteristics in GIMP is not such a bad idea.

Clearly, that was GimpShop creator Scott Moschella’s intent. As he explains in his blog, he renamed and reorganized GIMP’s tool sets, options, windows and menus so they closely resemble Adobe Photoshop’s menu structure and naming conventions. Many of the menu options and even whole menus were recreated to faithfully reproduce a Photoshop-like experience.

Indeed, after running Moschella’s GimpShop hack, Photoshop and GIMP are strikingly similar. But therein lies the problem — running the hack.

Non-workable Solution

I have grown used to GIMP’s quirkiness. I learned proficiency in navigating my way through its disjointed three unattached panels. But I still have to think out the correct combination of drop-down menu options and right-click access that works to supplement the menus.

Having a more intuitive interface was the attraction that drew me to the GimpShop promise. But I found it was a failed promise. It seems that the Linux architecture and GIMP itself have moved on. GimpShop was left behind with version 2.2.11.

But some hope for an updated version of GimpShop may still exist. The developer’s website refers to a new Version 2.6.11. That version already exists for the Windows and the Mac OS X platforms. But the Debian Linux download only produces the older 2.2.11 version. And that older iteration does not run.

Download to Nowhere

At first I thought I erred in installing GimpShop. But I had the same failure in attempting to install the Debian package on Linux Mint 12 and Ubuntu 11.10.

The first sign of an anomaly was the absence of a menu entry for GimpShop. The second was the absence of any documentation within the GIMP application that would indicate that GimpShop was working.

Then I hit the technical forums to sniff out a tale of similar woes of failed installations. The only available Linux version was based on an older GIMP version. It does not work with the latest GIMP code base. So GimpShop is useless.

Fork Worth Fixing?

Perhaps the situation with GimpShop is indicative of a larger scenario with forks in the Linux roadway. This is just a case of software incompatibility caused by one open source project not keeping pace with its host software.

The newer version of GimpShop is already ported to the Windows and MAC OS X platforms. So maybe the developers will catch up with the newer Linux version soon. The larger question is, does anybody care?

Do Linux users need what is essentially a clone of a clone to mimic a non-existent Linux Photoshop app? If Moschella could tweak a more user-friendly interface into GIMP, why does the GIMP development community not do the same thing? Why not give GIMP users a choice of which interface to use?

The Bottom Line

The concept behind GimpShop is a worthy one. But the longer it takes the developer to release a working version of the GIMP hack, the more unnecessary the GIMP clone will become.

Software — and, for that matter, OS — forks result from a failure of developers to share the same goals. I would prefer to have a truce produce an optional set of GimpShop plugins to work with the current version of the photo manipulation package.

I discovered a similar failure to launch with another GIMP clone product, GIMPhoto. This further underscores the need for fixing the fork in the Linux GIMP roadway.

Jack M. Germain has been writing about computer technology since the early days of the Apple II and the PC. He still has his original IBM PC-Jr and a few other legacy DOS and Windows boxes. He left shareware programs behind for the open source world of the Linux desktop. He runs several versions of Windows and Linux OSes and often cannot decide whether to grab his tablet, netbook or Android smartphone instead of using his desktop or laptop gear.

2 Comments

  • Jack,

    Be advised that both the "Gimpshop" and "GIMPhoto" projects were abandoned many many months ago, but that GIMPshop is being squatted on by someone who’s pushing an ad-banner toolbar. 🙁 I was trying to find if there was an official gimp plugin to rearrange the UI the way gimpshop did, but it looks like http://www.gimp.org is down.

  • GIMP is not Photoshop. Quit trying to make it Photoshop, quit trying to compare it to Photoshop, learn GIMP as it is and you may be pleasantly surprised that it is a powerful image manipulation software.

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