Posts Tagged ‘inkscape’

Balancing the Costs and Benefits of Commercial and Open Source Software

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

I recently ran across this 3D artist’s perceptions about moving from commercial to free, open source software.  I appreciated what I believe to be an objective analysis of the costs and benefits of commercial and open source software.  Sure, the commercial software has some nice features that you’ll have to live without…but do those really affect your artistic expression?  Probably not.  How much do you gain by moving to free, open source alternatives like the time you gain for artistic work when you don’t have to analyze the financial costs of upgrades, plugins and other up-sells that keep subtracting from your personal or professional budget?  I’m guessing most non-profits and churches identify closely with the author’s tension caused by  “[wishing] to conduct business in a legal, sustainable fashion amidst a struggling economy”.

There are many very full-featured free, open source alternatives to all of the mainstream art and production software.  Give them a try…you just might find that free is freeing in more ways than just in your pocketbook…

Blender Foundation’s Sintel released online today

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

I’m hoping to do a more in depth review soon, but I couldn’t wait to post that the Blender Foundation’s third open movie project Sintel has been released online.  It is just a testament to what is possible with free and open source software.   It’s a huge accomplishment for the Blender Foundation and a huge inspiration to me personally to keep learning and expanding my toolset.

The movie is also a way cool business model based on making everything available for sharing, education and remixing via Creative Commons license.  Share it with your organization, your friends, your followers.  Copy it, download it, use it as your church service countdown video this week, do what you want with it just as long as you attribute it.

Congratulations for a job well done.  I am in awe!  I look forward to seeing more faith-based organizations taking advantage of the amazing free and open source multimedia tools that are available like Blender, Gimp, Inkscape, MyPaint, Alchemy and others.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRsGyueVLvQ

Finding Books to Get Started In Open Source

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Getting started into any new software can be a daunting experience whether open source or not.  For open source projects, you want to find mature projects that generally “just work” and shouldn’t give you many problems.  How do you know if an open source project is mature?

One of the quickest ways is to see if any books have been published for the project.  If a book has been written, that generally means that the product has a large user base that the publisher can sell into.  More users means more bugs found and fixed and therefore more stability.  It also means more feature requests and more developers to work on the requests which means a more robust and useful product.  Usually by the time there is a book out, an open source project has good documentation.  However, many times documentation can be too dry and technical for the average user.  Books are meant to be more readable and useful for those not willing to wade through the specifics of every feature.  Many times books are organized around concepts and projects rather than grouped by feature like documentation usually is which makes them more useful to average users as well.

Even better, because open source projects are invested in open source culture, sometimes the books are released under liberal Creative Commons licenses in digital form so that you can download and easily check out the book to see if it fits you before you invest in buying it if you choose to.  Again, open source culture isn’t just about software; it includes many things like books.  Here is an example of just such a book about Getting Started in Open Office.

Most books are available from Amazon or other online book sellers where you can buy them used or new.  So, as my mom says, let your fingers do the walking and see what’s available for a project you’re interested in.  If you don’t find a book, that doesn’t mean the project isn’t mature and useful (we’ll keep looking at more ways to decide maturity in future posts).  On the other hand, if you do find books available, then chances are really good that the project is mature enough for almost anyone to use.  Here’s a few links to books for several of the most used open source projects.

Open Office – an office suite similar to Micro$oft Office

Inkscape - a vector graphics editor similar to Adobe Illustrator

Gimp – a raster graphics editor similar to Adobe Photoshop

Scribus – a desktop publishing application similar to Adobe InDesign

Firefox – the best web browser (at least for now) ;)

Ubuntu – a user friendly and robust operating system similar to Mac OSX or Microsoft Windows

Various Open Source Media Software – covers installing Ubuntu, audio recording and editing, animation, video editing, font creation, graphic design tools, and much more

If you have other recommendations for good books for learning an open source software package, please post them in the comments.

New Site Design

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

Just hacked in a quick modification to the default Wordpress theme to give the site a more unique look.  Basically, just style (CSS) changes and simple image changes.  Created the main banner in the open source vector graphics software Inkscape.  Did the image modifications in the open source raster graphics package GIMP.  Let me know what you think if you get a chance.  All feedback welcome.

If you think it would be interesting, I’m considering doing a tutorial series on how to modify the default Wordpress theme so others can do similar changes.  It’s amazing how different you can make stuff look with just a few editing and color changes.