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My Canon IXUS doesn't want to talk to my kubuntu, if I remember correctly.
This is down to whether the camera manufacturer is too fucking lazy to implement the USB mass storage standard on their hardware. Oye, vatos, dees English sink todos mi ships, chinga sus madres, so escuche: el fleet es ahora refloated, OK? — The War Nerd
The point is, USB storage devices should speak the darn USB mass storage protocol. Oye, vatos, dees English sink todos mi ships, chinga sus madres, so escuche: el fleet es ahora refloated, OK? — The War Nerd
But... I doubt any app on any version of Linux is going to have solid support for camera RAW files across a decent range of cameras.
As usual, most instantiations of Linux seem too busy playing 'Me too' to deal with (slightly) more high end requirements.
Should I take the answer to the question: can kubuntu read the manufacturer's disks as a straight "no"?
(Maybe I'll have to go dual boot...) Don't fight forces, use them R. Buckminster Fuller.
But any of this falls under the "boys and girls, don't try this at home" category. Oye, vatos, dees English sink todos mi ships, chinga sus madres, so escuche: el fleet es ahora refloated, OK? — The War Nerd
Also, drivers do not exist for maybe 90% of industry-standard professional or semi-pro audio and video hardware.
The me-too apps that exist - like Blender, GIMP, Audacity, etc - are poor imitations of the professional apps they're based on, and lack either the stability or the variety of the tools available for Windows or OS X.
I don't much mind that Linux exists, but exaggerated claims for its ability to slay Windows are clearly nonsense.
(And I don't much like Windows, so if a genuine Windows-slayer appeared, I'd be near the head of the line for it.)
No one wants to pay £££££ for quality apps, and if Linux offered them for free it would be on the receiving end of a stampede.
But it doesn't. At all.
Hence the lack of interest.
As for apps... You can cross-compile them with very little tweaking necessary. They're just choosing not to. How much effort do you think it cost microsoft to make IE and Office run on Mac OS? Not a whole lot. And that is BSD Unix compatible. Oye, vatos, dees English sink todos mi ships, chinga sus madres, so escuche: el fleet es ahora refloated, OK? — The War Nerd
From a sales and numbers POV, Linux users count as a rounding error, so there's no way a corporation could make back the cost of cross-development. And even if it could it would either have to run development in parallel, which complicates everything, or have Linux conversions running six months to a year behind the 'official' releases.
But it's also a cultural issue. The me-too aspect comes from the way that current Linux apps are second rate versions of their professional equivalents. And emulators like Wine are always a generation or three behind what's needed to run native Windows apps reliably and successfully.
There is exactly one professional recording studio in the world that (sometimes) uses Linux commercially. But considering how expensive ProTools is, it's not as if there's a lack of interest from potential users. But the community isn't together enough to put together a viable alternative.
The problem is that amateur spare-time development can't compete with full-time cube-farm development with professional project oversight.
Linux will always be me-too until the community realises this and organises itself to put together a BIG showcase prestigious project that's very obviously superior to the equivalent professional app.
Users want apps. They don't much care what the OS is. Until Linux gives them the apps they want, without compromise, it's always going to be a footnote. Drivers would inevitably follow if the interest were there.
I don't see this happening. It might, but I don't see any evidence that Linux developer culture is focussed enough to pull it off. There's just about enough interest to put together a kernel, but it doesn't seem likely that finding a thousand people would be willing to work together to develop a full-featured video editor.
(To a smaller extent similar issues apply to blogging and activism, IMV.)
No recompile. No virtual machine. No memory hog. WINE on steroids. Works for real, all MS Office, IE, etc...
Well worth the price. Pierre
(Although now I'm going to have to learn MacOS and Photoshop, since that's what we're using at school.) You have a normal feeling for a moment, then it passes. --More--
you are the media you consume.
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