• AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    4221 days ago

    The only question is will they unsubscribe. If they won’t then it doesn’t matter. Their happiness is irrelevant to Adobe.

    • @fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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      220 days ago

      It’s industry standard so they can’t unless they want to be unemployable.

      It’s why Adobe is doing this shit to begin with.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        21 days ago

        And therein lies the problem. People have started whining an awful lot without a single change in their behavior. It’s akin to the old joke “we’ve tried nothing and we’re all out of ideas!”

        • @three@lemm.ee
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          421 days ago

          It’s a tough situation for the users; a lot of Adobe products are industry standard.

        • VodkaSolution
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          221 days ago

          Productivity is important for workers, means money (not in a greedy way, just as income)

          • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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            521 days ago

            Totally. For professionals there’s no choice. That’s a good point. I was thinking more along the lines of all the creative cloud subscribers for home use.

  • @sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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    3021 days ago

    Not sure I consider this futurology, but I definitely consider people that willingly use Adobe products silly.

    • LughOPMA
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      1721 days ago

      Not sure I consider this futurology,

      Yeah, its borderline. But I posted it as the the excuse/reasoning centers around AI. Microsoft’s plan for ‘Recall’ are a huge invasion of privacy and stem from use of AI too. It’s the topic of AI & privacy that merits discussion.

        • @Scipitie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          21 days ago

          I have to fullheartily disagree! From my point of view this is an exciting dystopia - the same way Russian roulette is “exciting”.

          I wouldn’t have thought that we as species speedrun the shadowrun tech dystopia in addition to the expected corporate oligarchy one - on not, not instead!

          This feels like doing 200mph on a highway and someone telling me that they now can - and in fact started to - alter my breaks on the fly. “boring” just doesn’t cut it anymore for me.

        • @GlitterInfection@lemmy.world
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          321 days ago

          This is a fantastic list! Thank you for sending it my way. Saved for later exploration and I commented with my latest free (though only partially open source) app suggestion.

      • @sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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        221 days ago

        Yes, though for certain things, Adobe products are the industry standard and there’s no way to escape that. For others, it just requires learning new apps. There was a great discussion about GIMP the other day for example.

        • @GlitterInfection@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          Has GIMP improved much in the last five years?

          My partner uses Adobe products for one of his jobs, and he had installed their cloud software on one of my laptops on his user account. Which forced it on all other user accounts, too.

          I found that it installed horribly challenging to kill or remove daemons that would relaunch and reinstall their spyware bullshit if you didn’t kill all of them in the right way, and it was spamming me a pop-up asking for my password to install other things, which I couldn’t prevent.

          I was able to stop it after many attempts and then got my partner to uninstall that junk from my laptop.

          That was all still more user-friendly than the last time I tried to use GIMP.

          • @31337@sh.itjust.works
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            21 days ago

            No, not much. I use GIMP and Inkscape occasionally for simple things like quick and dirty mock-ups, changing backgrounds, and adding transparency. They’re good enough for that. I’d bet a professional could learn to become efficient at using GIMP, but I don’t think it’s as intuitive or feature-rich as Photoshop.

            • @GlitterInfection@lemmy.world
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              321 days ago

              Drats. I give it a go every handful of years because I want it to be great, but that’s my experience every time, too.

              I still hold out hopes, since Blender used to be the same way. When I last tried Blender, their keyboard shortcuts and scene navigation were clearly developed by someone who thinks that using emacs is a good idea, and that vi never should have been improved.

              But they’re a serious pro tool now that has a foothold in the 3D industry which I would not have predicted back then.

          • @sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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            21 days ago

            I started using GIMP just before Adobe Creative Cloud came to fruition, so I’m biased. I found things frustrating and hard at first, but I switched to Linux and had no choice but to learn. I don’t doubt that it could be better in many ways, but most criticisms I read about GIMP are that it doesn’t do things the way Adobe Photoshop does.

      • @Prandom_returns@lemm.ee
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        21 days ago

        Affinity Suite.

        But they have recently been purchased by a different company, so everyone’s waiting to see how that pans out.

        Gimp is good for begginer/pre-amateurs, but the core of it is rotten and not fit for any serious work with color.

    • magnetosphere
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      221 days ago

      I’ve never given this much thought, since it’s not closely related to my work or hobbies, but now that I have, I agree completely.

  • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    320 days ago

    Funnilly enough my standalone Substance Designer purchased in 2018 before they were taken over by Adobe works fine and doesn’t have any TOS changes.