Fair warning LOOOOONNNNGGGGG reply ahead.
padfoot7726 wrote:
I'm quite overwhelmed.
Firstly, I tried downloading a trial of both cs3 and elements 5. Neither worked. I worked on them trying to find the answer to their problems for a week, but no luck.
I've also read some reviews of GIMP seriously considering it, but it seems like it has the same basic capabilities as PSP9. ( And seriously, even as worse than photoshop as PSP is, you guys are
really exagerating the badness)
In answer to your ORIGINAL question I started with Macromedia Fireworks, then Fireworks MX, then MX2004, then GIMP, then CS2 (pirated) and now have a LEGAL copy of CS3 (discount upgrade thanks to Adobe buying Macromedia). Moving from Fireworks to GIMP was a big learning curve. Once I got used to GIMP I only went back to Fireworks for doing GIFs. Then moving to CS2 from GIMP was about as bad. It was very frustrating until I got used to how to do stuff in CS2. Now I'm starting to feel more comfortable and have really forgotten how to use GIMP basically. I still prefer Fireworks for doing gif animations though. I just find it more intuitive to use than ImageReady.
supak0ma wrote:
if you make money off of it, buy it, otherwise just download it and chop!
This was my rationale for using the pirated version of CS2 (started out as just the 30-day demo but then got a keygen at about day 20-25). Since I wasn't using it for commercial purposes at all and only for PSC and/or my personal stuff I felt no-harm-no-foul in a way.
But then anon prize contests started popping up (a few times after I had already uploaded an entry) I felt it wasn't right to use a pirated copy anymore if I had even the slightest chance of winning a prize (no matter how slight the chance or how crappy the prize).
Also, about the same time, I started getting asked to do more image editing tasks for work. By then that I could do better/faster work in CS2 than I could in GIMP. Since I wanted to upgrade my Dreamweaver version I was able to basically con the boss into getting me the CS3 Master Suite.
So now I don't feel guilty at all. Not really chopping much anymore must be penance for all my past pirating ways.
Now, as a programmer by trade, I must say that I can see both sides of the pirating issue. I write software for my bread and butter and I'd be ticked at the pirates for keeping me from being able to feed my kids. Also, IMHO, the number of pirated copies are one reason why the software is so expensive now. If everyone paid then Adobe could make the same profit point they are at now with a lower price. Yeah it's a pipe-dream but it "looks good on paper". Try using the same logic for a BMW/Mercedes vs. a Geo Metro/Yugo and it doesn't work right? You definitely get what you pay for.
Back to GIMP. Like any tool it's only as good as the person using it. I originally got CS2 thinking it'd make things easier and I'd start doing much better in the contests. THAT'S obviously a ridiculous idea but the marketing/buzz around Photoshop basically gives those of us with no clue the idea that Photoshop really does take the hard part out of photo manipulation. Now that I know better I realize how naive that original idea was.
You CAN do just as good a job in GIMP as you can in Photoshop. It just might take a while longer to do it and you'll have to accomplish things differently. But if you truly know how to use GIMP then you can do it. I firmly believe that. Another "free" chopping tool is Paint.Net and it is coming into its own now as a viable low-end tool (with big potential).
There were some features in GIMP that I'd love to see incorporated into Photoshop (unless I just don't know how to do them). One neat thing was that you could save a selection as a path (that was editable). You could also stroke a selection (the "marching ants") quickly. Haven't figured out how to do either of those two things as easily in CS2/CS3.