26cb87aa2dfaaa63c71cc4e5dfe40c75f8005353

It was reported that several brushes added in 1998 may have problematic copyright with unclear/unknown licensing. And basically nobody knows anymore where these actually come from, with which authorship or origin, at least not for sure. It is even possible some come from commercial software. So let's at least get rid of the ones where the origin is the most doubtful. Thanks to Americo for discovering these issues.
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------------------------------ GNU Image Manipulation Program 2.9 Development Branch ------------------------------ This is an unstable development release, an intermediate state on the way to the next stable release 2.10. GIMP 2.9 may or may not do what you expect. Save your work early and often. If you want a stable version, please use GIMP 2.8 instead. GIMP 2.9 replaces earlier GIMP 2.x versions. It is advised that you uninstall them before installing GIMP 2.9. If you want to keep your older GIMP 2.x installation in parallel to GIMP 2.9, you have to choose a separate prefix which is not in your default library search path. Otherwise your previous GIMP installation will start to use the new libraries. You have been warned. If you think you found a bug in this version, please make sure that it hasn't been reported earlier and that it is not just new stuff that is still being worked on and obviously not quite finished yet. If you want to hack on GIMP, please read the file HACKING. For detailed installation instructions, see the file INSTALL. 1. Web Resources ================ GIMP's home page is at: http://www.gimp.org/ Please be sure to visit this site for information, documentation, tutorials, news, etc. All things GIMP-ish are available from there. The automated plug-in registry is located at: http://registry.gimp.org/ There you can get the latest versions of plug-ins, using a convenient forms-based interface. The latest version of GIMP can be found at: http://www.gimp.org/downloads/ 2. Mailing Lists ================ We have several mailing lists dedicated to GIMP user and development discussion. There is more info at http://www.gimp.org/mail_lists.html Links to several archives of the mailing lists are included in that page. Gimp-user-list is a mailing list dedicated to user problems, hints and tips, discussion of cool effects, etc. Gimp-developer-list is oriented to GIMP core and plug-in developers. Gimp-gui-list is for discussing about GIMP interface to improve user experience. Most people will only want to be subscribed to gimp-user-list. If you want to help develop GIMP, the gimp-developer mailing list is a good starting point; if you want to help with GUI design, the gimp-gui list is where you want to subscribe. 3. IRC ====== And finally, for the real junkies, there is an IRC channel devoted to GIMP. On GIMPNet (a private free software oriented network) there is #gimp. Many of the developers hang out there. Some of the GIMPNet servers are: irc.gimp.org:6667 irc.us.gimp.org:6667 irc.eu.gimp.org:6667 4. Customizing ============== The look of GIMP's interface can be customized like any other GTK app by editing the ~/.gtkrc-2.0 file or by using "themes" (ready-made customizations). For downloadable themes and further details, see http://art.gnome.org/themes/gtk2 . Additionally, GIMP reads the file ~/.config/GIMP/2.9/gtkrc so you can have settings that only apply to GIMP. Included is a set of keybindings similar to those in Adobe Photoshop. You can find them in the ps-menurc file. To use them, copy this file to ~/.config/GIMP/2.9/menurc. You can also manually change the keybindings to any of your choice by editing ~/.config/GIMP/2.9/menurc. Have fun, Spencer Kimball Peter Mattis Federico Mena Manish Singh Sven Neumann Michael Natterer Dave Neary Martin Nordholts
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