But, I haven't spent any time customizing it yet and I've got surgery scheduled for tomorrow. I've got Kubuntu 11.10 installed on a little netbook I bought not long ago in a dual boot config with Win 7. That way, I've got more than one menu system I can use, as some have more features compered to others). But I suspect they'll have an update to fix that part (and you can always install more than one menu system, too - as I always install Lancelot along with the KDE menus on the task bar with KDE based distros). The only "quirk" appeared to be that games installed didn't show up under their own sub menu for some reason from what the reviewer found. I noticed a review of it yesterday and it looks like it's a nice distro: It's using a Kubuntu 11.10 base with lots of extra applications preinstalled and a fairly customized desktop and menu system. I'm going to try and give it a spin today if time permits. So, I'm glad to see Corel continuing with a Linux version after purchasing Bibble with their launch of Corel AfterShot Pro.īTW, since it sounds like you plan on using Kubuntu, you may also want to take a look at Netrunner 4.0 That's always been one of the weak areas with Linux (few Pro quality tools for Photographers, as Adobe doesn't offer anything like Lightroom for Linux). But, after I'm out, I'll see how it works (and on the surface, it looks like it will work just like Bibble Pro 5, and hopefully even better). I won't have a chance to run it through it's paces until later, as I'm going into the hospital tmrw for surgery. exe for Windows and try it that way if you don't have Ubuntu installed yet. deb for Ubuntu (i386 for 32 bit Ubuntu or amd64 if you installed 64 bit Ubuntu), or use the. Or, just download the trial and see what you think about ti and decide if you want to buy it or not. Then, download and install he trial version of AfterShot Pro and you can plug your user name and the license key you got when you bought it (it will be on the order confirmation page and you'll also get an e-mail with it), to make it a registered versus trial install. The pricing converts for other regions if you're in the U.S. This link, then select your region and you can add the download version of Aftershot Pro to your cart using the discount price ($19.99 in the U.S.), which is basically just a license key you can plug into a trial version of it to make it registered. But, I do have an account at Bibble Labs setup with the same e-mail address I used at Corel, so it may have checked for something I'm not aware of (it didn't appear to though, so I suspect the upgrade price will work for anyone). I installed it in Mepis 11 (a Linux using a Debian Stable base) on a PC that didn't have Bibble Pro already on it with no problems. Note that It doesn't appear to care if you've got an existing install of Bibble Pro or not, as the license key works fine if you plug it into a trial install of Aftershot Pro to make it full/registered in an OS without Bibble Pro already installed. deb for 64 bit Ubuntu or Debian based distros). deb for 32 Bit Ubuntu or Debian based distros, or the amd64. I just bought it this morning and downloaded the 32 bit and 64 bit. So, from outward appearance, it's a good deal compared to Bibble Pro (since you can get Aftershot Pro for the same price that Bibble Lite was selling for)Īlso, they have an offer where existing Bibble users can buy the new Corel Aftershot Pro product for only $19.99 right now. Bibble Lite was running $99, but Bibble Pro was running $199 (more features, and the Pro version allowed you to use the same license key on more than one OS). See more about it here:Ĭorel is selling AfterShot Pro for $99. Corel purchased Bibble Labs and has now released Aftershot Pro based on Bibble, and it's still cross platform with versions for Windows, OS X and Linux. It's based on Bibble Pro, which was one of the few high quality commercial products that offered a Linux version, with very fast raw conversion speed and lots of image management and editing features. In a commercial product, get Corel AftterShot Pro. The same plugins are also used by some of the other image viewing/editing packages (Gwenview, etc.) Make sure to install the kipi-plugins package for it, too (you'll see that package in the software manager for the distro you're using). It's in the Ubuntu repositories so that you can install it with a mouse click or two:
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