

- GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT MAC OS X
- GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT PROFESSIONAL
- GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT FREE
- GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT MAC
Anytime I am on Mac I find myself saying “wow, this is pretty, but I’m still using the same tools that Mac inherited from the Unix community, so why pay so much just for pretty”.

Anytime I am on a Windows machine I find myself crippled because the development tools suffer (unless you are willing to constantly pay money for the latest MS dev tools and still get sub-standard products). That combined with having some of the best development tools made me wonder does Mac or Windows really have anything to offer me. I have always felt that Linux had decent enough (not necessarily best) desktop. I am also not politically motivated, just pragmatic. I have felt this way about Linux since I started using it back in college (over 10-15 years ago). As long as it works for you, it really doesn’t matter whether you build your killer social-media-photo-sharing-Facebook-tweeting app on OS X, Linux, or Windows. All you need these days to build great things is a browser, a text editor, and the programming language or tool of your choice.

I’m just as productive on Linux as I was on OS X, and there’s no reason you couldn’t be too if you wanted or needed to switch.
GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT MAC OS X
In a shift from what David saw a few years ago, and despite being largely panned by critics, I find the stock interface in Ubuntu 11.10 to be just as nice as Mac OS X Lion. Perhaps surprisingly to some people, Linux hardware support has improved to the point that everything worked perfectly out of the box, just like on a Mac. When I wanted to do some real work, getting my development environment running for our applications was just as easy as on a Mac. Switching was a matter of copying over a couple of directories and configuration files and connecting Chrome and Dropbox to sync. Now, I use Google Chrome (web browsing), Terminator (terminal), and Empathy (IM). I basically used three programs on the Mac: Google Chrome (web browsing), iTerm (terminal), and Adium (IM). Something crazy happened when I switched: absolutely nothing changed.
GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT FREE
I can’t say that there’s a dramatic reason why I switched (it’s not some political statement about free and open source software) I just wanted to use some hardware that was impractical to get from Apple. Recently, I switched to using a Linux desktop as my primary computer. It's beautiful work.Over the last 20 years, my primary computing environment has gone from Windows 3.1, to Mac OS 6/7/8/9, to Windows for about a decade, and then back to a Mac a couple of years ago. And it all stays crisp, because the buttons use SVG icons. When you use your browser's zoom functionality, the whole thing grows, including the buttons. One neat thing that you can do with GraphSketcher that you can't do with other apps is resize the UI. GraphSketcher also supports layers and imports SVG files that were created in other applications. In case you're wondering, that screenshot isn't blurry - it's showcasing GraphSketcher's built-in Gaussian blur functionality. You can change opacity, set the fill or the outline to any solid color or gradient, align items on the canvas, shift Z-order (bring items to the foreground or send them to the background), and lots of other functions. Other than that, GraphSketcher gracefully handled just about anything that I could come up with. The feature list does say that it supports "curved paths," but I couldn't figure it out, despite previously having worked with Inkscape, CorelDRAW, and Illustrator.

The one thing I couldn't get it to do was curves.
GRAPHSKETCHER OMNI WINDOWS EQUIVALENT PROFESSIONAL
GraphSketcher is a professional graphics designer editor.
