leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
leolambda's comments
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
As someone who likes to think that I do have as many "commits/participation" as many others, I would appreciate it if people would focus on the core argument:
It is hard to get people to use this software, who would otherwise benefit, because of their perception of the name, and it's easier to change the name once than change those perceptions every single time.
If you have problems with THAT, I'd love to discuss them, but please leave "SJWism" and whatever out of it - that's not really what's at issue here.
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
It's not a "crusade" in any sense. It's one issue on a GitLab that someone decided to link over here (not one of the people who made the issue, I think). It is about "political correctness" only in that it's genuinely hard to get some people to even consider using this free software because, and ONLY because, of its name.
I think you should rethink your idea of a crusade if you think this is what that word means.
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
That's a conversation I've had, in real life, with a professor and a professional photographer.
Literally, the only thing holding them back was the name.
How is that zero value?!
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
You're arguing in bad faith and it's making you look silly. Stop it.
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
As it is, we're likely to either fork the project (which is underway at the moment), or build a GIMP keybinding compatibility layer for Krita; the second is less preferable because it would require quite a lot of hacking to make the more advanced features work, and would almost certainly not reach 100% parity.
As you note, either one will be a good deal of effort; another reason we wanted to at least ask the maintainers if they would be willing to accept a patch with the name change, instead.
Now what was your point, other than to insult some people whose argument you almost certainly didn't read?
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
Oh right. I forgot filing an issue presenting a calm and reasoned argument for changing one string of text to another was the same as "destroying" a project.
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
So, yes, people are currently talking about forking it.
leolambda | 6 years ago | on: Consider Renaming Gimp to a Less Offensive Name
I, for one, use it every day. Have you taken a look at the discussion? Your questions are pretty thoroughly addressed, which, along with your final line here, make me think you're more interested in your desire to use ableist slurs and the holy right of software maintainers to ignore any and all criticism without consequences than anything else.
Let us be clear: Nobody in this issue thread cares _at all_ about whether it was "meant" to convey the same meaning as the word "gimp". It is factually true that people find it awkward to recommend in professional settings because of its name, and sometimes the name makes adoption impossible.
Obviously nobody can force the maintainers to do anything, but we can _ask_ them to change a superficial component of their excellent software to make it much more useful, which is what this issue was.
leolambda | 7 years ago | on: Putting This Blog on IPFS
leolambda | 7 years ago | on: Putting This Blog on IPFS
Hosting a node is not quite like being an onion endpoint, because the bandwidth load gets shared out very quickly.
Hosting a _gateway_ is a big bandwidth commitment, but I pay for lots of bandwidth for just that reason.
leolambda | 7 years ago | on: Putting This Blog on IPFS
leolambda | 7 years ago | on: Putting This Blog on IPFS
It's also available at regular-old https://leotindall.com/
leolambda | 7 years ago | on: Putting This Blog on IPFS
Second, public IPFS gateways aren't the intended way to use the network. It's meant to be built into browser software, so each user acts as a mirror of what they're currently reading. Latency is high because the gateway is run by a nonprofit and they don't pay for ultrafast hardware for the public gateway.
Opening an issue is not forcing. It's asking. Do we at least agree there?