Author: Muaad Elsharif (Page 278 of 325)

Open source design

Anyone how decides to pursue a career in graphic design is faced with an obstacle! Many courses don’t teach graphic design! They teach adobe products!

They don’t teach you how to design a logo, they teach you In design. Or how to edit a picture, they teach you PhotoShop!

You become an Adobe customer

Over time you are used to the adobe Eco-system and so consumed into it you can’t stand seeing anything else, or worse! Anything not done the “adobe way”!

The tools need to be sorted like this, the monitor must flicker in that pattern. And the worst in my opinion are mac designers as they don’t accept change at all!

I’m not running from door to door trying to convert people to open source! I just want to do my daily job (Using open source please!) The problem is that the designers don’t accept to tolerate anything done differently! And open source is different!

It’s not like PhotoShop! No one said that! Gimp is a separate package that does the same things differently and possibly better!

Gimp Logo

Inkscape is not like Indesign and it shouldn’t be. It’s a different software doing the same task.

Inkscape Logo

Why do they care if the output is the right size and format? Ready for printing without a glitch?

What gets on my nerves is that most of these judgmental people O have to deal with use cracked software! I don’t think they saw an Adobe Photoshop label before or ever saw across the registry process being done!

Imagine someone working for 10-15 years with a cracked software without guilt or remorse, then without a spec of shame looks down on open source software!

Respect FOSS please!!

Please, respect FOSS

FOSS stands for free and open source software. Many people tend to have a negative attitude towards FOSS, always criticizing it and doubting it’s ability to fill in for propriety software. 

Let alone to replace it or to operate as competition!

The Free Software Foundation logo


We don’t use opensource because it’s free! The fact is: FOSS gives everyone an equal chance to use it’s software!
It’s sad to see some companies who make the software and call it industry standard. And it’s users attack you for using other free / open source solution!
There is an important fact they forgot! As long as the software gets the job done with no problems. People are going to use it!

Commercial software

Products like Microsoft Office and Photo Shop are fantastic! I respect the effort put into them and they are worth the price tag slapped on them, and there are amazing open source tools that are available free of charge for the public that deserve a break!
Everyone should be able to make sensible choices based on their needs and capabilities. Regardless if it’s a free choice or an paid choice.
And to those hackers who download illegal software and troll on open source users and people who support software by buying it, shame on you!!!

What do you think of this post? Please let me know in the comments section below!

Benefits of clean installs

Over time your system gets overloaded with problems and dead shortcuts, the installations and removal of software, some hidden malware you aren’t aware of. Even with cleaning solutions like Iobit advanced cleaner and Ccleaner. You still have some things you can’t clean. You will notice over time a slower boot and a general drop in performance. That’s time to consider a clean install.

What is a clean install

A clean install is the process of erasing your system and installing it again. It’s clean because all the cruft and mess will go when you format your drive (hopefully not taking away precious data) and it will return your computer’s snappy fresh performance. Much like restoring the factory settings, an option available in the late Windows versions: Windows 8, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10.

But what if your computer isn’t OEM and it doesn’t have a recovery disk? Then you have to clean install your system.

The benefits you will gain from clean installing your computer

I got rid of many unneeded Visual C++

This was somewhat of a problem to me! I had nearly 10 Visual C++ and I couldn’t find a way to remove them, even the pages I looked recommend leaving them as-is. Now all of them are gone!

Office fonts and data.

I used to have Office 2010 demo and it installed hundreds of fonts, and removing them by hand was a hassle! Not to mention the tons of registry cruft left down by MS office.

Every trial is now reset to zero.

Some of the tools I experiment with are trials, after I clean install the system all of them can be used all over again!

Registry is smaller and healthier

It’s all about the registry, as it’s where the program’s data are stored. And when removed it doesn’t gain back the size, even defragging it won’t do much good.

I installed much less software (only the necessities).

I was surprised by the amount of tools installed which of I NEVER use! I try to keep it to a minimum. And use tools that do more than one function. I don’t install Gimp and Inkscape for instance because in Windows I have Fast-stone viewer and LibreOffice draw could do the design work, if it’s more than that I have to use Inkscape.

I recovered even more space

More space as the Windows.old is gone, and other things that I don’t need and can’t clean.When I upgraded to Windows 10 there was the Windows.old folder which is supposed to take you back to Windows 8.1. I then discovered it was just a dummy and had to clean install. I saved a lot of space because of that and because of cutting down my software list.

In theory start-up time should be faster.
And it is faster! It has improved between the old 8.1, Windows 10, and reinstalling 8.1.

Solved the Swow drama I had when I was “interested in games”

I had to copy tons of DLL files to make some games work. And that was a mess! I almost ruined Windows over copying some files by mistake.

All the tricky settings you changed once and forgot how to return (and feel too lazy to return)

As I was doing some PHP work I had to Install the Xampp server on my computer, it wouldn’t work so I had to change a lot of settings to make it work, formatting meant that it went back to default on it’s own!

The first actual clean install I had in a while

Since starting the dual boot thing I haven’t clean installed! I installed Windows 8, Windows 8.1 was a store update, and Windows 10 was an upgrade. Even when I clean installed Windows 10 I was being forced. And not actually doing it to gain any benefit.

These were the benefits I found and could think of, do you have any more benefits to add?
I’m sure that the factory option is also good and will probably do the same good, but my system isn’t OEM and that doesn’t apply to me. If I could get a chance to try that option I’ll make sure to note of it.

How should often to do this reset?

That’s a tricky one! It depends on you mostly, if you have a slow changing system then it won’t be necessary for two years at most. On the other hand if you tend to install and uninstall software a lot. You might want to do that yearly (You will enjoy it!).
Have a nice day 🙂

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