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Episode: 2836
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Title: HPR2836: Interview with Wendy Hill
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2836/hpr2836.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 17:42:38
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---
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash
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Donate.
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Hello and welcome to archive public radio. My name is Annie, I'm the French guy from
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Switzerland and in this episode I'm going to talk with Wendy Hill, a battery used of
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free and open source software in her job as a photographer. Let's go.
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Wendy Hill is a photographer and by that I don't mean she takes pictures of her kids
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on Sundays at the baseball game. Although if she was to do that it would probably turn out
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to be great pictures. No, Wendy is a professional photographer and to run her business she's
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using free and open source software. Wait, no Photoshop, no Illustrator? Has that
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possible? Well, let's find out. Good evening Wendy or good afternoon for you actually.
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Hello.
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How are you?
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I'm doing pretty good today.
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Wendy, well you don't really start by talking about what kind of photographer you are. What's
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the main subject of your photography?
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That's a really great question because when most people think about photographers they think
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about people photographers, which most of the photography that the average person the
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average studio does, I guess you would say does people photography but there are so many
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other realms of subjects, typically dies into still life and to break that down. It's
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a little bit more. It would be food and product is what I focus on the most.
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Yeah, so nothing I have actually nothing moving.
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Yeah, I mean I do like taking pictures of my kids. I have four of them but they definitely
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have photographers, kids syndrome. So as soon as the camera comes out they're like oh my
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gosh, I'll go away. So I love the stuff that doesn't move because I can spend a lot of
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time just focusing on the light and how it looks. I love that intricate detail that I can
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add because I've got so much time to focus on exactly what my light is doing.
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Yeah, so it's kind of a sculpture. I mean you yourself, you choose how you place the
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different components in your picture or do you have guidelines and do your clients want
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to see that? It really depends on the client. A lot of the clients that I'm currently shooting for,
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I have template and total creative openness. I can do what I want. I have a few guidelines
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for some of the staff but you'll get some jobs where you have very set guidelines. The client will
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come to you with a drawn picture or an overall goal for this image and you have to meet that.
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So it really depends on the type of jobs you're doing but especially when I'm doing stuff for myself,
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I find it really relaxing. You know, have a glass of wine and stay with the light and create a picture.
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Yeah, it's not just a point in shoot. Exactly. Okay, let's start the war just right now. Are you using
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Canon camera or Nikon camera? I prefer the Nikon cameras and I like my Nikon because of the
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interchangeable lenses. A lot of the glass that I use is really old, quote unquote, old Nikon glass,
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usually from the early 80s and I can put it on my camera without having to have any adapters.
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So I guess you have many lenses to take the picture of your job. How many do you have actually?
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Goodness, I lost count. There's at least 12 or 13 lenses. Wow. Yeah, that's the difference between
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the professional and you know, so when I make me with I have like three lenses and I'm pretty happy with
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that. But you can do a lot of great things with three lenses but I'm a fan of the prime lenses,
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the lenses that don't zoom in out because I love the look that you can get with them. They have a
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very unique analogy. Yeah, I can understand that. I mean, as a, as an amateur photographer,
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I'm very happy with the three I have because I'm pretty sure I don't even use them as they're
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supposed to be used. But anyway, let's get back to the subject of this interview and that's
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open source software in your job. What kind of software do you actually use? Can you just go over
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your workflow, for example? Yeah, there are four main programs that I use and the first one is
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DisplayCal and it has to be one of the most important programs as it color calibrates my screens.
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So where I'm working with images, I'm working with colors and you know, clients want their food
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and their product to be color accurate. So my displays have to be color accurate so I can adjust
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things properly. And that is an open source program that can be found in many of the repos
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and they may get extremely easy to install from their website.
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The second program I use is called RapidSoto Downloader. Oh my goodness, it is amazing and it
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saves me so much because as I stick my SD card in, I can tell it that I want my images labeled
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and the folder that they're going into with a job code. So not only does that help me with a business,
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all of the images for a particular business I have labeled in their folder in the months that I
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shot it in the year that I shot it, which makes me able to go back and pull things if I need to
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reduce something or if I need to, they need something, recent out to them. And then even for
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taking pictures of the family and events that I do personally, it makes it easier for me to go
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back and find those things. Yeah, there's so many ways inside that program that you can set up
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your folder structure and the naming structure of not only your images but videos.
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So that can be individualized to exactly how you want things. And then after you download
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your pictures, you don't have to spend the time going through each one and sorting them out.
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It's done for part. So you mean I wouldn't have to look through
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pictures that are called images 001, 002. And that's because that's actually what I have right now,
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like a bunch of files named the same. And yeah, you have to look at them all when I want to
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grab one. I'm going to have to have a look at that. Yeah, it's amazing. I'm so glad that I found
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that program because that's how my images were at first. They were all the standard naming format.
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And then it's hard to go back and find what you want. And now I can be like, oh, I want the pictures
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of my kids from last month. And it's really easy for me to go into the folder of this year,
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the folder of last month, and then the folder that's called kids. Yeah, pretty easy.
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Yes, absolutely. So then there are two programs I use for editing. The first one is dark
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table. And it is an amazing raw photo editor. So in a raw photo editor, you're not making permanent
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changes, but you can adjust everything from white balance and sharpness. And there are incredible
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tools that are built into dark table that I don't even know all of them. I mean, it is amazing,
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the stuff that they have packed in there. And it's available to everybody for free.
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That's an equivalent of Lightroom. Yeah, so it would be like using Lightroom in the Adobe Suite.
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So it's got all of those things that you can fine tune your raw images. And the wonderful thing
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about shooting in RAW is you have so much more adjustment and flexibility on the back end.
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So there's time, especially in a hurry, where you try to shoot it right in camera,
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but sometimes things happen. You bump things and your aperture gets adjusted, or you bump
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something and your white balance gets adjusted. And at doing, when you're shooting in RAW,
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you can go into thing like dark table and fix it. The image isn't permanently messed up.
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Okay, so that was the third one, and you see the was four?
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Yeah, the last is Gimp. And I use Gimp for image layering. That does a lot with food.
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When the food that I typically get, if I'm shooting it in my home studio, it's from a company that
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does pre-packaged food. So the colors aren't always great because it's been cooked once,
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and it's been froze, and then I get the food. So in order to have the best color representation
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in an image, then I take and adjust the greens and adjust the reds in order to make everything
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look good and not together in different layers inside Gimp.
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Okay, do you get to keep the food after the photoshoot?
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Yes, I do. This is the stuff that I shoot at home. I pick up the products from the client,
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and I bring it home and shoot it. And of course, the way I do all of my photography,
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I want the food to be edible when I'm done so that it can be ate. I don't want the waste
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of food that you've manipulated, so then it's no longer safe for anybody to eat.
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Okay, so it sounds like a dream job. I mean, taking picture of food and then having to get it
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to that sound absolutely wonderful.
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Yeah, it's a lot of fun. The hardest part about the stuff that we get at home,
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that I get to take home, shoot in my home studio, is like, said it's been frozen.
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So if you look at it, just normally, you know, you cook it and you plate it, you eat it,
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it looks fine, but when you're preserving it forever in a still image, it can be heavily
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screwed, and so that's where things like Gimp come into, where I can really find two things,
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and make things look their absolute best, because if you're looking at it,
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spinach that's been cooked and frozen, reheated, it's really not a process,
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feeling it starts to turn this really ugly gray color.
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So have you always used three other pencils software in your job,
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or did you use proprietary software before?
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I used on proprietary software before, but that was before I moved into the professional
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around. Before I was using the Carell Suite, I can't even remember what it's called.
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It wasn't Photoshop, but it's named something kind of like that.
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So you use proprietary software before, and then you've done professional,
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and then you've done two open-source software. I would have thought it would be the other way around.
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I know it was kind of funny the way I went at it. Well, I've been using the proprietary software
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before I moved to Linux as my daily desktop, and when I moved to Linux, the proprietary software
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that I was using wasn't available on the system, and so I started looking for other options,
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and that's when I found the things like Rapid Photo Downloader and Start Table and Gimp,
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and as I was learning those programs, is the time that I was transitioning from just shooting
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for fun, into shooting for clients, and so I was able to take and build that workflow
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why I was also building my professional business. You never had a problem with the software.
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Other photographers would use proprietary software for that, but so you grew your business
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at the same time as you were growing your knowledge of the software.
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Yeah, absolutely, and I think that makes it easier. Once a photographer gets a very set workflow,
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it's hard to move from that, and it's even harder to move from that when you have clients that have,
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you know, you've got a deadline. You get this food, this product, you know, whatever, even if it's
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a family shooter, a wedding that you're doing, they want those images back in a timely manner,
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and if you have those deadlines, it's hard to experiment. So because I was learning the open
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start software at the same time that I was becoming a professional, that helped on that level,
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because I wasn't trying to completely change my workflow while trying to meet the demands and
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keep clients happy. Yeah, so both training and the job at the same time.
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Do you think the open source software that you're using at the same level as those
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proprietary runs? I just can't say this word. There's no open source ones.
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Yeah, do you easily manage to do what you want with them? And do you think you would be more
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efficient with open source software? The only downside that I have right now for the software
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I'm using is that GIMP does not have non-destructive editing that Adobe Photoshop has. So that means
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if you put a gradient on and then want to change it, you can't do that in GIMP. It's set the way
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it is when you click. Okay, they are working on changing that. There's so much work on the back end
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right now that is going to bring non-destructive editing to GIMP, but that does mean it takes me
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sometimes more time to make changes to a layer. Or the biggest issue is I have more layers
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than I need to inside an image, because if I go to make a change on one, I want to make a duplicate
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before making that change, because I don't want to mess up the previous layer and not be able to
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do it differently if I don't like how that effect came out, especially if I've made four or
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five changes and then decided, well, I want to go back and adjust that. So then I have other pictures
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where I've saved one version to make it a major change, like merging all the layers together to
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make them one, and then do some additional fine-tuning. I don't want to have to lose all of the work I've
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done in the additional layer, so I'll save it unmerged, then save a version of it merged,
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and that's the biggest advantage right now of some of the proprietary software, but I can work
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around it, but I'm super excited for the development of the non-destructive editing in GIMP.
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And did they announce deadline for that, or is it still like it's going to come one day?
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It's going to come one day. They don't have an official deadline, but since GIMP 2.10, that
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version of GIMP really set a lot of the groundwork to get non-destructive editing in,
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and I can't say his name. I think he is German, but he's a developer that's doing a lot of the work
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on non-destructive editing, and I follow him on Patreon, and it's amazing, you know, a lot of the work
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that he's doing in one, getting the CMYK color profiles added to GIMP. So what that means is it
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cyan, yellow, magenta, k, I can't remember, but it's black, yeah, and that is what
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publishers will use. That's the color profile that publishers will use. So if I want to send
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something to a magazine, I typically need to submit it in a CMYK color profile,
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and right now the only way to change that is through proprietary software,
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and GIMP is getting that. So they don't have a deadline yet, but it's easy to see that they're
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making great progress in hitting some of those goals. You said that, for example, you talked about
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the CMYK profile. Did you ever have a real problem with a client, for example, when we would want
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an Illustrator file or a Photoshop document as the final product? So most of the businesses that
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I work with are really small businesses. So they're wanting just the finished JPEG or PNG file
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that hasn't been an issue for me, and usually can save things in GIMP that you can open up
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in other programs. So you could save it, save certain things, bring it into IncScape,
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and export it as an SVG. So if they had a layout that they needed for a magazine or something
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like that, I could bring that into IncScape, drop the image into the layout that they needed,
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or make sure that the image is shot to the layout, and then be able to send that image off to
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whoever it needs to go in order to have that layout printed.
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Okay, so no big problem there, because that's often what the arguments from people who use
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non-open software, but my clients want, I don't know, what document or anything like that,
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and I can't provide that. It's cool to me that you don't have that kind of problem.
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Have you ever said to yourself, okay, I'm fed up with this open source nonsense,
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let's use Photoshop and I like everybody else, and I'd be much happier in my life.
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No, not really. I mean, sometimes I'm looking for new ways to get inspiration, and all of those
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are done on Adobe software, and so I have to convert that into the software that I'm using,
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but for the most part, I really don't, I don't think I'm missing anything in the Adobe suite,
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that is anything that I need to do my job and to create the images that I like to create.
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So, even if Adobe was porting the suite to Linux, you would still use open source software.
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Yeah, I would still be using the same software that I'm using day in and day out.
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It works perfectly for what I'm using it for.
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If someone who would want to be a photographer was coming to you for advice, would you recommend them
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to use open source software?
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Absolutely. One of the hardest parts about getting started, especially as a professional,
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is there's all of this hardware that you need, and it's not cheap. It's not cheap to buy the camera,
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and you typically two cameras, one for your daily use, and one for a backup,
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and then there's lights and stands, and all of this hardware that you need in order to get your
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first client that adding the expense of software on top of that is just overwhelming.
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Yeah, so economical reasons to use open source software, and since the quality of the work
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is kind of the same, so why spend so much money on licenses then?
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Yeah, exactly. And following my mentor uses the Adobe suite, and a lot of the people that are
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kind of in that group with my mentor also use that same software, and it seems like every time
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there is an update for their software, they're all wondering, hey, is it going to work?
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What's changed is our workflow going to change, and not one thing I haven't had to deal with
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using the software that I'm using, and yeah, sometimes they change things,
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but it's been great ads to my software. It's not changing my fundamental workflow, and that has
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been a wonderful thing about using open source for my photography.
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Okay, well, I think we covered your photography job, unless you have something else to say.
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I don't think so, yeah, I think that pretty much covers the scope of that.
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So, we still have another subject to cover. But first, you said you were running Linux,
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so what made you switch from I guess Windows to Linux?
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I made the switch about three years ago, and we had Windows 10 running on our computer,
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and it was absolutely driving me nuts. There was, I'd go to start a program, and programs wouldn't
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work, because of an update happened, and I was frustrated with all of the constant problems.
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I couldn't sit down and use my computer, because I was always trying to fix my computer.
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And I know that was the early days of Windows 10, and there's always issue in the adoption,
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but overall, I was just frustrated and decided that I was going to look for an alternative,
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and then one of those people that, once I get started on the subject,
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it just research it and research it. And eventually, in that process, I found Linux,
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and this wonderful world of options that it opened up for me, and I never looked back.
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Welcome home. Fantastic.
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You use Linux as your daily driver. You use open-source software,
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but I also happen to know that you are also contributing to an open-source project. Can you tell me
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more about that? Yeah, I have contributed to LeBon2, which is an awesome little project.
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The last six months, this glass cycle of release, I've been so busy with work that I haven't
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really gotten to contribute with them, but I'm really looking forward to doing more. It's so much
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fun, not only to be a part of helping a distribution, but seeing all the fun things that happen
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in the background and making stuff better that other people can then use to make their lives better.
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And can you talk about your contributions or is this a secret?
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No, they're not secret. Mostly I work with the graphic side,
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so helping to set up themes and icons and working out some of those details in the previous release,
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where LeBon2 was moving from LXDE to LXQT. There was a lot of those graphical
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details that needed to be reworked out. They were making the transition, and so that's what I've
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spent most of my time doing is digging through the configuration files to find out what needs to
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be switched so we can make it look good. Cool, and you've achieved a great job, I think, on that.
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Thank you. Okay, so Wendy, where can people find more about your job or maybe about your contributions
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to LeBon2? For our LeBon2, we've been making some changes. There were some issues with the server,
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but you can typically find that information on the launch pad, where the overall
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LeBon2 puts their contribution list, and then you can find out more about what I do
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by just chatting with me. I'm typically in the Linux groups on Telegram,
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so you can find me in there and ask any questions. Okay, well, I think we have covered
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everything I had planned for this evening. Thank you very much, Wendy, for joining me tonight.
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Thank you, and thank you, dear listeners, for listening to this episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I will be back with more interviews in the near future. In the meantime, take care of yourselves. Ciao, ciao.
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This episode of HPR is raised under a creative commons, non-commercial biotribution license.
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The sound used in the opening and closing sequence is speaker X-clash by Daniel H,
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released under a creative commons, non-commercial biotribution license, and available on Javendo.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dog Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show,
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please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself,
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unless otherwise status. Today's show is released under a creative commons,
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attribution, share a light, free dot org license.
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