![]() ![]() ![]() Only at that point, by now it was early in the evening could I log in. ![]() But that worked really well: everything was copied and ready for me. Then I wanted to transfer my user folder from the old macbook to the new one I was warned that that would take five hours. That took hours, even over my really fast glass connection. The out of the box experience was… Trying my patience a lot! First it needed to download and install 6.1 GB of updates before I could even start sending over my user files. I’ve been using it now for a bit, and here are my impressions… The 13″‘ screen was always a bit too small for me and I hated the touch bar with a vengeance. I haven’t noticed other projects making use of it, though, and it’s a bit unstable.Īnd then, since I still could get a good trade-in value, I decided to swap the 13″ M1 for a 14″. And after that an M1 mac mini for KDE’s binary factory. In 2020 I first got an M1 MacBook pro, to look into making Krita ready for the M1 cpu. That one was horribly slow, so then in 1015 I got a 15″ macbook pro. ![]() It started with a Powerbook Pismo which I got secondhand to investigate some problems Krita had with big-endianness (it had a powerpc cpu and ran Debian), during the first Krita kickstarter I got KO GmbH to buy a mac mini so I could work on porting Krita to macOS. Renamed to KImageShop, this was the start of Krita.For someone who really doesn’t like the company or the platform, I’ve had curiously many macs. His patch was never published, but did cause problems with the GIMP community at the time.Not being in a position to work together, people within the KDE project decided to start their own image editor application development focused on an application that was part of the KOffice suite, called KImage, by Michael Koch. Matthias wanted to show the ease with which it was possible to hack a Qt GUI around an existing application, and the application he chose to demo it with was GIMP. The origin of Krita can be traced to Matthias Ettrich’s at the 1998 Linux Kongress. The name “Krita” comes from Swedish, and means “to draw” or “chalk” and was taken after the names “KImageShop” and “Krayon” gave problems. ![]()
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