Just curious... Are open-source graphics tools like Gimp, Krita, Inkscape and Scribus now considered mature and feature-rich enough to replace Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and Indesign for professional publications at Red Hat?
I helped a daily newspaper in Bangladesh migrate their photographers to Gimp. However, the graphics staff refused to consider Inkscape/Scribus, they claimed they were missing too many features required for print like CMYK colour support. Of course, this was 3 years ago.
I have a question for you. Since Red Hat is the biggest Linux company, I'm curious as to what proprietary applications are used? I assume that most people at Red Hat already uses Fedora/Redhat desktops, LibreOffice and Thunderbird/Lightning email/calendar. What about other corporate software that often defaults to proprietary brands? Does your marketing dept use Gimp/Inkscape or Adobe? What do Red Hat folks use for project management, CRM and ERP?
Just curious... Are open-source graphics tools like Gimp, Krita, Inkscape and Scribus now considered mature and feature-rich enough to replace Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and Indesign for professional publications at Red Hat?
I helped a daily newspaper in Bangladesh migrate their photographers to Gimp. However, the graphics staff refused to consider Inkscape/Scribus, they claimed they were missing too many features required for print like CMYK colour support. Of course, this was 3 years ago.