Hello one and all! Sorry for the exclamation but I'm excited to find an actual Kubuntu forum. I've been using a linux-based desktop off and on for the last 9 years or so, starting with Slackware 8.1. Believe it or not with all that time I've been more or less a desktop user throughout. I dabble with scripting and programming here and there since I left desktop publishing a few years back, but these days I spend most of my time arguing in my own head where to go next.
I've settled back into a comfort zone again after giving KDE and honest go over the last couple weeks. Since 4.6 it's been very impressive! I'm hoping this will end my flip-flopping back and forth between operating systems and distributions (it's been going on for too long, years!) and let me get back to what I wish I had done about a decade ago. That being the study of webdev and programming.
It might sound strange (especially with switching TO linux again) but I'm trying to get back into front-end web development especially with HTML5 and CSS3 on the up and up. Coupling that with JQuery and my interests in Drupal and their Zen theme framework...well, I have a lot to dig into, not to mention my transitions to Inkscape and GIMP and everything else available. It's a lot to tackle, but working in an environment I am more comfortable in helps a lot in making it sound like a not too big hill to climb. I just see a lot of potential in those applications, especially Inkscape and the like for web dev.
Overall I'd probably be comfortable with a Mac for all of this, and I'm sure many would look at me as a loony for moving back to Linux-based software now at the supposed "dead of the desktop" but I think I'll learn more this way; more than just a suite of software. More about color theory, typography, artistic styles and things of that nature; things that kill the idea of industry standard software being the only means to an end.
In case you can't tell I don't work in digital graphics or marketing full time anymore. I started in 1993 and lost interest a couple years ago. Spec work led me to a dead end with an ad agency leaving me a bit jaded with the industry overall. I just didn't want to sell "revolutionary this and industry leading that" anymore and the Adobe/Mac environment got old. I felt like I might as well have been stamping cans for a living for all the interest I had left. Then I discovered the dynamic medium of front end development and the rest has been history.
So, for now I'm setting up a Drupal sandbox on my laptop. So far so good, no issues so far. But now comes the fun part...picking an IDE/Editor. Wow...lots of choices.
I've settled back into a comfort zone again after giving KDE and honest go over the last couple weeks. Since 4.6 it's been very impressive! I'm hoping this will end my flip-flopping back and forth between operating systems and distributions (it's been going on for too long, years!) and let me get back to what I wish I had done about a decade ago. That being the study of webdev and programming.
It might sound strange (especially with switching TO linux again) but I'm trying to get back into front-end web development especially with HTML5 and CSS3 on the up and up. Coupling that with JQuery and my interests in Drupal and their Zen theme framework...well, I have a lot to dig into, not to mention my transitions to Inkscape and GIMP and everything else available. It's a lot to tackle, but working in an environment I am more comfortable in helps a lot in making it sound like a not too big hill to climb. I just see a lot of potential in those applications, especially Inkscape and the like for web dev.
Overall I'd probably be comfortable with a Mac for all of this, and I'm sure many would look at me as a loony for moving back to Linux-based software now at the supposed "dead of the desktop" but I think I'll learn more this way; more than just a suite of software. More about color theory, typography, artistic styles and things of that nature; things that kill the idea of industry standard software being the only means to an end.
In case you can't tell I don't work in digital graphics or marketing full time anymore. I started in 1993 and lost interest a couple years ago. Spec work led me to a dead end with an ad agency leaving me a bit jaded with the industry overall. I just didn't want to sell "revolutionary this and industry leading that" anymore and the Adobe/Mac environment got old. I felt like I might as well have been stamping cans for a living for all the interest I had left. Then I discovered the dynamic medium of front end development and the rest has been history.
So, for now I'm setting up a Drupal sandbox on my laptop. So far so good, no issues so far. But now comes the fun part...picking an IDE/Editor. Wow...lots of choices.
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