Probably the most unique piece of hwardware I own is the Jide Remix Ultra-Tablet which runs Remix OS.
There was a lot of potential, but it's very hard to go up against Microsoft, Apple, and Google.
▶️ 3Speak
Probably the most unique piece of hwardware I own is the Jide Remix Ultra-Tablet which runs Remix OS.
There was a lot of potential, but it's very hard to go up against Microsoft, Apple, and Google.
▶️ 3Speak
There are some great open source options that can do all of what most people need, if they know about them. I've barely explored the Gimp or some others, but there are plenty of tutorials out there.
Cheers for the updates.
Gimp was actually a big part of what made me give Linux a shot.
I always used cracked Photoshop/Illustrator, but the move to Creative Cloud made me try Gimp. I liked it and wanted to know what the name meant, and saw it was GNU which I heard of as part of Linux.
But most of the 2D graphics I make now are with Inkscape. I couldn't live without Inkscape. There's a learning curve, but once you get it you love it.
I've not played with Inkscape. I've just not needed any commercial software in ages. I have donated to some I do use.
I may have asked before, but which open-source music production tools do you prefer?
Ardour is the main one, but I use Audacity for simple stuff.
Ah that makes sense.
A while back I did a video about all of the major DAWS for Linux including Ardour & Harrison Mixbus(which is based on Ardour but it has a paid license/plugins).
Ardour is amazing for recording, but it's overkill for me.
I use LMMS because it's more plug-in/sample/producer focused.
I use Ocen-Audio for recording my voice-overs for videos. It's similar to Audacity in scope.
Hermosa tabla ..es genial 🤩
Thank you!