| I've seen this fork mentioned around a couple of times so I've decided to read the articles on https://ansel.photos/en/news/. I'm not trying to deny that his motives are right, but the way and how often he bashes on darktable developers is really off-putting. I'll only cite a couple but they're easy to find: > a handful of guys with more freetime and benevolence than actual skills > So I fixed the whole logic [...] You might think that was a problem solved and a job well done, but that’s leaving Darktable’s geniuses out of the equation. If you want to work alone I guess you can have that sort of negative attitude... but to me it clearly says "don't use or contribute to this software". It's easier to spot mistakes after others have already made them, and then come up with better approaches. And it's easy to find yourself complaining about what is basically a prototype somebody else made and spared you the effort. It can definitely pump your ego up. I'm saying this because one-man forks almost never lead to popular adoption, and almost always lead to abandoned forks, even if the new developer is technically gifted. I'm somewhat reminded of KWinFT (KDE fork) that has been somewhat recently renamed to Theseus' Ship. I understand that you acquired a repulsion to design by committee, but when dealing with large projects you can't do it all by yourself, so you need to start learning how to deal with people. But who knows, maybe it's possible to find other like-minded contributors who are not so easily thrown off by the immaturities of a project's leader. |
As far as Darktable/Ansel goes, he's right. Darktable's UI and philosophy is pretty horrid. I shouldn't have to know seven different algorithms to apply a denoise filter. The vast majority of professional photographers are artists, not computer scientists. I want the application to pick the best one for me. All commercial applications these days take it one step further with some pretty good AI tools, too.