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Introduction To Inkscape And Its Future

WarriorC writes "Bryce Harrington, Inkscape's founder, wrote an article introducing his brainchild and where its development is heading (see: Illustrator-killer). Some screenshots of the latest CVS version are included." It's also a nice glimpse into an "unorganized" but nonetheless successful open source process.

3 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. Speaking of Vector Graphics program by JoeShmoe950 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Another interesting Vector Graphics program is Flash 4 Linux; http://f4l.sourceforge.net/ Although in Alpha, it is quite usefull. Its a flashlike program (very similar interface to flash studio), and it is quite far along. It does animations and everything (I believe it doesn't have full flash script abilities yet). It can create flash files.

  2. Trivial? by th1ckasabr1ck · · Score: 5, Interesting
    "...one of Inkscape's distinguishing features is that it stores its drawings in a web-friendly XML format"

    Isn't that a fairly easy change to make to current open-source vector-drawing utilities? Serializing the output to XML instead of a binary format doesn't seem like the first feature you should mention when describing the advantages your program has over others... Then again, it is open source.

  3. Correction about "brainchild" by Bryce · · Score: 5, Informative

    Bryce Harrington, Inkscape's founder, wrote an article introducing his brainchild and where its development is heading

    Quick correction - I was one of several people that founded the Inkscape project, but I definitely can't claim credit for the application itself. As mentioned in the article, it derives from Gill and Sodipodi, so if it is anyone's "brainchild" it would be the developers of those projects. That said, Inkscape as it is today is the amalgam of a number of people's ideas and hard work, so it is most definitely a team effort. :-)