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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

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  • Thanks, I’ll probably just go back to Snapseed, unless one of those is a standout for design, privacy, power and simplicity.

    I actually really enjoy mobile editing in Lightroom, the only mark it misses now is privacy.

    I have LR installed on my laptop, but never use it. Obviously, there are drawbacks. I wouldn’t want to draw paths in Photoshop on my phone, but for quick crops and color corrections, I work faster and more efficiently on my phone. I also can do it in my spare moments, rather than sitting down to dedicate an evening to editing.



  • OhmsLawn@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world[Gamesfromscratch] Did Adobe Just %#@$ Up?
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    1 month ago

    I care, but I don’t know how else to edit my photos on my phone and seamlessly back them up.

    I use Lightroom on a Google Pixel. It costs $10/mo for a terabyte of storage and an editor that’s constantly being updated. I’m not arguing that it’s the best option, I just don’t know any solid alternatives.

    If anyone else has a solution this use case, essentially the same as someone who wants to leave Google Photos’ storage/editing suite, I’d be happy to ditch Adobe.

    Edit: a word


  • “Former President and Convicted Felon Donald J Trump” should be the way he’s introduced to any discussion or article now. It’s an even-handed introduction, not all-in, not by a long shot. Stinking incompetent decrepit treacherous fascist rapist felon Donald J Trump would be closer to all-in. Follow up references should be “Mr Trump” as normal.








  • It’s all happening in the same place. Basically, pressure builds, the land deforms, then it vents. AFAIK this is fairly normal, and wouldn’t be much of an issue, if it wasn’t so close to populated areas and critical infrastructure. Geology professor Shawn Willsey has been producing some really good coverage of the topic.

    It doesn’t seem like it’s building towards an explosion, or anything. It’s just extremely inconvenient and frightening to the residents, whose homes are at risk. It’s also a major threat to public safety, given its proximity to the power (and geothermal heating) facility.