

It uses WINE? With all due respect to the hard work put in by CodeWeavers and countless others on WINE, WINE is not the answer. No source? Okay, that's understandable (I guess), and I have to admit, I still buy closed source games (for Linux).
PICASA LINUX SOFTWARE
Kudos to Google for finally releasing end user software for the platform that their whole business is built on! Thank you to Google for funding development on Wine and advancing yet another piece of open source software! All that being said. Let's hope to see Google Earth before Christmas! This project was only announced 4-5 months ago. Sounds to me like they had a hard time trying to get it to work on so many different distros, instead of just say. It's not like they're charging you $69 for the app. Reading their FAQ endeared the team that did this to me.Īs for Wine usage.
PICASA LINUX WINDOWS
They're probably also unhappy that this pre-beta version isn't 'up to par' with the Windows version, but they're working on improving that. Those programmers that worked on getting Picasa running on Google I'm sure would love some positive feedback to encourage them to continue working hard on it. Well, Linux wasn't written in a day, nor were the plethora of other desktop apps for Linux. Their forte is definitely not Linux desktop apps, but from the sounds of things, they certainly want to improve. They've released what, a pre-beta via their labs? And so many people on Slashdot are expecting it to be a polished product. They're making baby steps in the right direction. Don't like the way they've done it? Don't use it. The fact that they've invested so much time, money and effort into not only their own Linux app, but also back to the Wine community should be applauded. Google have no obligations to the Linux/OSS communities, period. The first one on the list is a major show stopper for me and nearly 50% of picasa users. You must be a microsoft developer to consider picasa "It is extremely well-polished and as stable as the Windows version." with some of those big show stoppers in there. # We do not support browsing to hidden directoriesįunny I dont have those problems in the Windows version. # The opening Picasa dialog has a spin loop and consumes a lot of CPU # Music playback during slideshow doesn't work You can't change colors of text while posting to your blog. # Blogging - the palette selector is truncated. # Dual head video cards don't work properly with Picasa for slideshows and timelines and so operate in a fallback mode. # On Ubuntu 5.10, the 'Ctrl-K' shortcut for keywords doesn't behave correctly. These notices come on the current desktop some users would rather they stayed on the same desktop that Picasa itself was on. Picasa pops up notices to let you know it's found new photos or has added photos to its library. # Picasa notices don't stay on a given desktop. See the comments in /opt/picasa/bin/wrapper. To work around this, you can create the directory /var/opt/picasa with permissions 1777, and Picasa will use a subdirectory of that instead of ~/.picasa. Picasa will warn you if it detects your home directory is on NFS.

Picasa uses many small files in the ~/.picasa directory, and if the home directory is slow, then Picasa will be slow. # If you have a remote home directory, the performance may be poor. If you bring up the media detector menu, you have to either start picasa or stop the media detector to get the menu to go away. # The system tray does not close with loss of focus I have tried it and I have ran into some of the below released bugs that the Picasa guys admit to. It is extremely well-polished and as stable as the Windows version. Google has stopped developing the Picasa for Linux software earlier this year, but the application was already well made at that stage, so for Linux users this is still a good graphics application to try, especially if they're already familiar with the Windows version.From your comments I would venture you have not. This makes it easy to try the software out on several different Linux distributions including Ubuntu, Debian and more. The Linux version is a native Linux app supplied in RPM or Debian packages.

You can share pictures easily by uploading them, emailing to friends, add pictures to your web site or even make up a CD gift. What is a joy to use with Picasa is the editing features when compared to more complex graphical applications like GIMP. The Picasa project is a Google piece of software that makes it exceedingly easy to edit your images and upload them to online hosting. " Instantly find, edit and share pictures."
