THE LINUX APPS THAT WILL REPLACE MY MAC APPS | I list the apps I will be using on this channel.
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- Опубліковано 13 чер 2024
- ! I JUST LIST APPS IN THIS VIDEO. NO DEMOS IN THIS VIDEO. LONGER APP DEMOS WILL COME SOON !
00:00 - INTRO
01:13 - VIDEO EDITING
03:24 - PHOTO EDITING
06:08 - 3D MODELING & MOTION GFX
06:56 - COMPOSITING & VFX
08:12 - PUBLISHING
08:59 - AUDIO PRODUCTION?
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Here's the cheap PC I got from Amazon to start this Linux journey with -
amzn.to/44xP4zw
It's a KAMRUI with AMD Risen 7. Not a bad little system for the money.
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(That link and all of these are affiliate links)
MY PC DISPLAY: amzn.to/44V2aXK
MY CURRENT LAPTOP (yes its a Mac): amzn.to/3WX83Sw
MY KEYBOARD: amzn.to/3wL2Ja7
MY MOUSE: amzn.to/3WSyh8w
MY AUDIO INTERFACE: amzn.to/4bRJPwZ
MY MIDI KEYBOARD: amzn.to/4bO0GAQ
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Thanks for joining me on this journey!
#Linux #linuxmint #opensource
10:29 - List of apps:
Kdenlive - video editing
Dark table - photography
Blender - 3D modelling
Inkscape - Graphics editing
Gimp - Graphics editing
Natron - compositing and vfx
Krita - raster graphics editing
Scribus - Publishing
Libra Office - document editing
Obsidian - markdown document/note taking
vim (soon) - plain text/markdown editing for note taking
Ardour - audio/audio workstation
Awesome! Thank you for this!
@@LinuxCreativeProject You don't need the apps to be open source to use them on Linux. For this reason, Davinci Resolve is a much more preoessional option for video editing and VFX, so is Reaper for audio rather than Ardour. Geany and Sumbline Text are much more sane code editors than Vim or Emacs, the latter two are for hipsters. Logseq is an actually capable open source alternative to Obsidian for note taking.
And good choice with Linux Mint. Arch is also for hipsters, no need to waste time on that,
I think, people are getting pissed off with Apple, as they are with Microsoft.
Right? Exactly. Let’s see where we can go with this channel, and show other creatives what is possible.
I know I am getting pissed off with them. And adobe as well now.
It seems that these companies no longer innovate with their software.
They just add dystopian crap, spyware and other rubbish that we dont need. Its time for a change.
I have used Linux for the past twenty three years but I have been relying on Windows just for Civilization V and VI. I am glad to see Linux now getting some traction as I was preaching for it in the metaphorical desert. Good luck in your discovery, man.
Thanks for the support! It’s extremely helpful and reassuring to have long time Linux users like yourself a part of this journey. I’m already learning so much.
Both those games run on Linux. Use Proton instead of native builds for online play.
@@rustybroomhandle Yes I have realized that last year and I found the start of Civ VI quite temperamental at time as I run it now native. I am not a big fan of online play despite having a Steam account.
25 years!
Love Civ VI too!!
This is great! I also recently moved to Linux as my main OS (using all of the open-source engineering applications to get work done), and it's really exciting. Once you get familiar with the new workflow everything just becomes second nature, and it's sort of reassuring to know that I won't just lose access to software I need if I miss a subscription or don't have internet to check my license.
Yes! Exactly that’s my thinking too. There’s a liberation to doing this kind of thing. Thanks for joining this journey!
After Microsoft's recent event launching Copilot+ and the future of Windows, I more than ever before want to make the switch but lack the motivation to figure it all out myself. It's heartening to see someone else doing the same and the way you present is welcoming and accessible. I hope you keep it coming - subscribed 😊
Thank you so much! And good point about the recent Copilot+ announcement. We’re at an interesting crossroads with this stuff. Thanks so much for watching and subscribing! Much more to come!
The biggest problem I had with Linux, when I started, was the file system. But, I persevered with it. Now I'm a semi-pro. Ditch MS and Apple. Play around with Linux on an old laptop, then make the switch.
@@Sonya_Makepeace that’s great! That’s a similar mentality to what I’m taking with it.
I was already getting fed up with Windows a few years ago and dove into it without any idea, other than some quick UA-cam tutorials. I've ran through all types of distros, from Linux Mint to Gentoo, but I've learned it's mostly about the package manager and the availability of packages that you should consider as the reason why a distro matters to you.
Currently, on Fedora 40 on my desktop and I'm enjoying it but considering giving NixOS another shot, though perhaps I'll try on my laptop instead.
I recommend any of the UniversalBlue Fedora based distros, they have been extremely helpful in their Discord with any problems people have and in general their stuff has been user-friendly and simple (since they are based on the pretty user-friendly and simple Fedora after all). Linux gaming on a niche handheld? No problem, they have a very secure and featureful gaming distro that works great with both my desktop computer and a bunch of nicher handhelds. They also have some good distros aimed at general usage
Your layout/coverage is perfect for my (lack of) skillset. Most channels assume a baseline level of understanding and go from there. Its getting to that baseline that most new users struggle with most.
Thanks for the feedback! These are good things for me to keep in mind as I make more videos.
List of Linux apps I recommend:
VSCode - for coding
Godot - Game/App Engine
QCopy - Clipboard Manager
Flameshot - Screenshot tool
MaterialMaker - an Substance Desinger alt.
ArmorPaint - an Substance Paniter alt.
LibrePaint - an ASprite clone
MarkText - for Markdown
LMMS - for Making music
Audacity - for cleaing audio
OBS - for recording screen
Kdenlive - video editing
Blender - 3D modelling
Inkscape - Vector Graphics editing
Gimp - Graphics editing
Great list! Thank you!
I'm impressed that you are giving it a go.
One BIG thing with open source software is that you keep control over your work.
Wirh proprietary software you need to maintain licenses to access your own work.
Exactly! That was one of the big motivating factors for me to start this channel. Thanks for being here! I appreciate the support.
great to see linux getting more lover than just for server usage.
Exactly! There is a ton of great stuff going on in the Linux and FOSS space for creatives. I’m excited at all the possibilities.
Problem is people here are giving you OPENBSOURCE apps only vs WHATEVER app is the BEST for the job Opensource or NOT.
Video Editing: Da Vinci Resolve, or Lightworks
Office: WPS Office & Softmaker Office (for smoother PPT transitions) and Google Dos and MS Office Web.
3D Rendering: Blender, Natron
Adobe Photoshop: Krita, GIMP, and Webbased ones
Those are great suggestions, thank you!
Its going to be a steap learning curve!.. not only learning a new OS but new software aswell...just take your time and enjoy!..
Thank you!
Great stuff!
Thank you!
Very interesting!
Thank you! I hope you’ll check out my future videos.
And that's is good way to switch to Linux❤❤
Thank you! It’s exciting
To make it more feeling like MacOS desktop, install Plank, and then move your current menu bar to the top of the screen. It’s great!
Oh nice! I’ll give that shot! Thanks!
@@LinuxCreativeProject I think you'll love it! And something not many know... if you want to adjust the preferences of the Plank app, hold down your Control key and then right click on it anywhere with your mouse, then choose Preferences... instead of trying over and over on the very end of the menu bar! LOL Enjoy!!!
@@LinuxCreativeProject how was it for you?
Having that setup on my mint installation too. And I love how you can move things in the menu bar on top - like getting the clock into the middle. It's the little things. ;-)
That’s awesome. I’ll give it a try at some point.
Davinci Resolve is a good option for video editing on Linux, though it isn't FOSS.
Definitely! I agree! I will definitely run that on Linux at some point.
Natron is cool! A little unstable sometimes, but an awesome tool. One anoying limitation is that it cannot use audio files AT ALL. I've start to use Resolve Studio for motion graphics on Linux (once I switched from AMD to NVIDIA card).
That’s good to hear about Natron! Other than the sound part. Once I can use Fusion again I will for sure
If you need to edit pdf's look into stirling pdf.
Ok cool! Thanks for the tip!
It's Proprietary, but REAPER as a DAW is just awesome.
It’s definitely on my list of apps to explore! Thanks for watching!
@@LinuxCreativeProject I recommend Bitwig. Probably the most powerfull DAW on Linux.
Reaper may be proprietary but its cost is so reasonable (and you can try it free literally forever, until guilt gets you bc it's so inexpensive) and its capabilities are IMMENSE. It's far more than a multitrack recorder; I also use it as an editor (Audacity doesn't even compare imo) and you can even do minimal video editing on it. Reaper is impressive; been using it for 14 years.
I will change to Linux in August for sure in a new computer, to Pop_Os or to Linux Mint. Goodbye Spyware OS.
Nice!!! Keep me updated when you make the switch. Hopefully by then I can upgrade my Linux workstation. I’m starting with this cheap pc to get this channel started
Just go with Linux Mint. Don’t waste time or heartache. 💪🏻
Isn't Blender also doing compositing and keyframe animation these days?
Ardour ][ is good, I just have a miserable time to get my soundcards working right in Linux... I have some RME cards, and a Digi003, but the best I get is, them running as a 2 channel generic soundcard... I do need my multiple inputs.. but that is basically what's keeping me from fully changing to Linux...
You're right Blender does have compositing capabilities. I'll chat about this more soon. And I totally get what you're saying about audio. I'm actually just downloaded Waveform and am kicking the tires on it. Seems really cool so far. But my audio needs seem a lot more simple than yours so I totally get it being a stopping point. Thanks for watching and for your comment!
Do you have another channel dedicated to Photography? If so, its not often i see many photographers switching to Linux. Im in the same boat, but migrating from Windows. I havent used Linux in a year or two but i want to give it a shot and use it exclusively as before ive always dualbooted for Photography applications.
I do have a photography channel. I haven’t uploaded much lately but will soon. - youtube.com/@craigbergonzoni?si=ohOkezTpvpTOIpQD
@LinuxCreativeProject
Ah ok, yeah I follow your other channel then. I just thought it was funny because I'm leaving Windows for Linux and looking for decent photography applications on Linux, then your Linux channel was recommended to me and thought your face looked familiar. 😅
lol that's awesome! Thanks for watching both channels!
I might have missed it but what flavor of Linux did you decide to install?
Right now I’m running Linux Mint (Cinnamon)
Is it possible to add FX (Strokes, Gradient Overlays etc) to layers in GIMP ? I'm trying to move from Photoshop.
Not in the current stable release but some non-destructive adjustments like that are coming in 2.99/3.0. But you’ll probably need a combo of Inkscape + Gimp (and maybe some Krita mixed in) to replace Photoshop. It’s a tall task but the reward of being free of that subscription is worth it for me
I actually like Krita more for editing things. Plus, it has all the layering tools as non-destructive for editing.
@@LinuxCreativeProject There is Photopea which is web based and it seems to get good reviews, people put it above GIMP and even Krita sometimes.
With people moving on to Linux from MS, Adobe and other apps user will surely get a hit slow and steady. I am a Photoshop user on MS but... I don't know what will i do. I don't want to upgrade or build up a New PC. I don't want to upgrade MS Win 11 23H2 to 24H2. This is a serious thing which is coming slow and horrible. We need a company out there that can do a Photoshop thing in Linux. Affinity is gone Adobe ways of doom. Everything is falling bit by bit.
Great points. We are definitely at a cross roads. It’s going to be bumpy for a bit but hopefully some of these apps and more will give some people a viable alternative.
I rely on facilities on MacOS such as indexing of my file system so that finding stuff is very fast and efficient. Is there similar for Linux? I’ve used MacOS, Linux, and Windows continuously for many years but haven’t dug into this for Linux. Hard to get out of MacOS without having facilities like this available to me on Linux so hopefully I’m just ignorant about this aspect of modern Linux. Thanks.
I totally get what you mean. I'm going to explore these things and see what's possible for sure. I'll keep you updated. Thanks for checking out the channel!
locate is the command you are looking for
For note taking I really like Joplin and sync it through dropbox.
Very cool! I’ve heard of Joplin. I need to check it out more
If you want to use Resolve on Linux you can, if you install a VM with GPU pass thru. If you search for tutorials to work out how to set that up.
Thanks! I’ll give that a shot.
But Resolve native work on Linux. you don't need a virtual machine.
For audio, JACK is an interesting thing. I don't know much, as I don't work in that field, but I heard that it's very good for audio recording side.
Audio production on Linux is HORRIBLE. It’s very much overly-complicated, and it takes getting several pieces of software started up and working together in the right order to make it work. If you’re coming from MacOS, don’t expect to find anything that even remotely resembles the ease of use of Logic. I love Linux and use it daily, but there’s just no comparison there…
Thanks for watching and for the feedback! It’s going to be a fun experiment to find out.
@thesullivanstreetproject I hear you for sure. My expectations are modest and realistic but I’m still excited to explore it. I appreciate you watching and commenting!
Or Audacity
I'm optimistic that realtime multimedia will quickly improve on Linux distributions as they update to Pipewire. I've been using it as my only audio stack for a while now, and it's nothing like the struggles of JACK and PulseAudio.
The Windows SW Subscription/Drug Addiction model is out of control !!!
Right? Things are getting crazy. It’s awesome to have Linux and other open source tools to fall back on.
Gimp have skin to make Gimp look like a Photoshop with Photoshop shortcuts
Very cool! Thanks for the tip!
Blender has a video editing and vfx
Yes! Good point! I don’t think I would use the build in video editor but the VFX and compositing seem amazing. I need to dive more into that. Thanks for watching!
Have you tried Reaper for audio?
Not yet! But I intend to. I just also started trying Waveform. It’s not open source but there’s a free version.
olive is another linux editor, still in alpha but it works well for light video editing
Good point! I’ll talk about Olive soon and I will be following the development of that app extremely closely.
Need a replacement for notes and finder
I’ll talk about this soon. Thanks for the suggestion!
@@LinuxCreativeProject finder has metadata like notes on a file Linux does not, plus it has preview, Linux has no comment metadata to a file
Linux Mint Nemo has a quick look function just like MacOS. Note just use Obsidian.
@@soloflo I have not seen anyone else do scrubbing in the file system like the Mac, Linux is also missing the comment data for the file, didn’t like obsidian on the iPad ….
It all falls apart when you work with other people who use Adobe or Steinberg software... Microsoft Office.
I can only speak to Microsoft Office, but I found that OnlyOffice on Linux (it can be installed as a Flatpak) has almost direct translation with Microsoft Office, and has opened ever single file I've thrown at it exactly as it was in MS Office. LibreOffice (which is bundled with most Linux distros) is a fine office suite, but OnlyOffice is the best when it comes to MS Office compatibility imo, hence why I use it a lot.
I totally hear you. There are some realities like this that I will definitely address in a future video. Thanks for watching and commenting! I’m excited to have you here
@@LinuxCreativeProject LibreOffice and OnlyOffice are great substitutes if you install Microsoft core fonts. Worst comes to worst, you can just make a web app for the 365 online version of office.
As for Adobe, you can use the built in pdf viewer, or Okular or LibreOffice to edit and sign. Again, if you must, you can make a web app for the online version of acrobat.
@@LinuxCreativeProject Have you looked at MuseScore for notation? I sadly don't have much time to try stuff these days. I'm on Dorico for Mac and iPad. My Linux laptop is fairly basic (Lenovo 300w) so something lightweight would be nice. It's a cool laptop otherwise, pen support and touch screen.
@FrankJonen Great tip about MuseScore. I'll check that out!
The problem in considering Linux for any photo/video professional is that Adobe really cannot be matched. Particularly now with all the new AI tools the suite has. It equates to better commercial work; and faster. GIMP and Darktable are nice for amateurs only.
There's definitely no replacing the Adobe suite exactly but from what I see so far I can get some cool creative work done with these tools.
Why not just use davinci resolve for editing and compositing?
It won’t work on this cheap PC I’m running at the moment but when I can run it, I will
Audio editing - Reaper is awesome.
Thank you! I need to spend some time with Reaper for sure
@@LinuxCreativeProject Reaper is highly customizable, including the look and feel of the entire interface. There is a paid and free version. The only difference is the bag screen when you launch the program. I have the paid version, but to each his own.
You may also want to look at Zorin OS. Once again, there are paid and free versions. The difference is how much free software is loaded during installation, and how many of the user interfaces come with Core vs Pro.
One cool thing is Zorin 17 and up allow you to directly install most Windows programs from their .exe or .msi files. If it can, it will suggest Linux alternatives, or you can just go ahead and install the Windows application. If they work, this is a good alternative for that rare Windows program that just doesn’t exist in the Linux universe.
Great info about Reaper! And I'll have to check out Zorin OS. I've heard the name but didn't know anything about it.
Plasticity 3D.
Nice! I’ll check it out. Thanks!
3DCoat 2024. Very mature 3D application.
I've been using MacOS since 2008 and Linux since 2004. I haven't found replacements for MacOS or Mac apps in Linux.
I get that this is definitely the situation for some people. One of the intriguing parts for me is that nearly every app I mention in this video has a Mac version as well, so it’s not just about trying Linux, it’s also about being more open to working with FOSS applications (that happen to also be cross platform)
Audacity for audio editing
I’ll definitely talk about Audacity soon! I’ve tried it in the past and will revisit it. Thank you!