New Zealand (South Island)
Seth Kenlon is a UNIX geek, free culture advocate, independent multimedia artist, and D&D nerd. He has worked in the film and computing industry, often at the same time. He is one of the maintainers of the Slackware-based multimedia production project Slackermedia.
Authored Comments
I agree wit h Dr_Shavez. Save your brush mods as new brushes so that they become stand-alone entities, using the stock brushes as templates. It's arguable that your mods should never disappear unless you tell them to Reset to Defaults, but I guess upgrading Krita itself is effectively resetting things to defaults. So save the changes you want to keep.
I usually backup my $HOME/.kde/share/apps/krita directory, as well, just for safe keeping.
An old one? Mine don't look like that either. I think it must be either an early early version or else it's not actually an RPi. There are lots of other SOC boards out there, and many work in basically the same way (that is to say, they can run Linux). Then again, none of mine looked like this one https://opensource.com/life/16/3/how-configure-raspberry-pi-microcontro… either until I got an A+, which I didn't even know existed til I got one on clearance.
I am curious about the image, if for no other reason than for historical curiosity.