
There is others, but except for nuke, Houdini, davinci and piranha, these are the apps i´ve used with linux to produce my images for the past 5 yrs.

Of Piranha (cost more than ant but is more than just an app)īoth from ifx software /products Into the commercial app$, the choices are:Īnt for editing and post-production stuff Ww./features-gallery/features/įor vector graphics there is inkscape and xara xl (the same code corel used for corel xara), and for bitmap image there is gimp and krita. Here you can learn how it´s not easy to set up cinelerra, but after you tune it, it works perfect, if not it will crash a lot! /īlender 3D for both 3D stuff and also for greenscreen, motion tracking, as good as after effects for color grading, etc… blender is a powerful beast, but again, the learning curve is not easy for some. I havent usea the others, but for Treesize my alternative is Disk Inventory X. BUT it´s alien software, takes time to get used to it, and it may frustrate some end users. DaisyDisk is much better than Disk Inventory X. It’s a color wise boc graph which simulates diskusage. It shows the sizes of files and folders in a special graphical way called treemaps.
#DISK INVENTORY X ALTERNATIVE MAVERICKS FOR MAC OS X#
Disk Inventory X is a disk usage utility for Mac OS X 10.3 (and later). Get Disk Inventory X alternative downloads. It´s a beast, works with very high-res footage. Trusted Mac download Disk Inventory X 1.3. Into open source apps, the best choice is:Ĭinelerra for editing and some color work. If not, if you like to fine tune an app, sometimes to compile stuff, to go deeper into codecs´ use, etc, open source/free software may be great for you. If you want to go 100% linux, be aware that you may have to pay some good money for some good apps for an easy time as na end user.
