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2 yr. ago

  • How does someone starting design tomorrow get schooling and career experience (both of which almost universally require Adobe products) without using Adobe products?

    Watching YouTube videos, reading manuals, just using alternatives, and asking questions to other people in places like forums, stack exchange, and the like. The self taught route is a completely valid option when the whole world is-wrapped up in nonsense. My experience post school taught me more in 6 months in the field than schooling and prepping for certification exams ever taught me. If you watched that 2nd James Lee video he goes through what he did to switch to DaVinci.

    Where are these programs and jobs accessible to the entire market?

    LMGTFY

    Top search result

    Many of these programs are free and open source and available across all platforms.

    as far as jobs go, if it's like mechanics, you bring your own tools and do the job required. Even if Adobe products are provided, use alternatives when and as often as possible. Then when the opportunity presents itself show how you did your work without Adobe to those with purchasing power at the company. Change isn't going to happen overnight.

    Where the easy path that most will take?

    I never claimed that ditching Adobe would be easy. My opinion is that it is necessary for the health of the industry.

  • That's the other half of that saying. Hindsight is 20-20. (I could've sworn the tree planting idiom was more well known, sorry for not completely explaining it) Obviously the best solution is to not get in an abusive relationship . The next best time to not be in an abusive relationship is right now.

    Yes I know how many users the major centralized social media platforms have. I've chosen not to be on those platforms and with it the benefits that come with having those amount of users. Like I said though, I don't blame one for staying and I cannot pity those that stay because there are options.

  • I thought my answer would be obvious, but the answer was to not use Adobe from the start and the next best time to stop using Adobe is right now. It doesn't matter where you are at in your career. The answer isn't always easy to implement and it isn't what we want to hear. It's why many of us are here on Lemmy and not Reddit. We decided that not having the good things at Reddit was better than the shit we had to put up with over there.

    As far as the cloud goes, moving things back on prem is the best option to not be in that abusive type relationship. It's what I've been learning in my skillset in IT over the past 2 years in my spare time with some junk parts I had laying around, a few hard drives, and retired PCs I acquired that can't upgrade to win 11. My skills will be sharp as the momentum builds toward the tipping point of moving off cloud including running AI locally. My favorite thing has been learning pf/opnsense. If you're old enough to remember the PIX before Cisco it was originally created with off the shelf hardware. pf/opnsense feels like a return to that adapting to a lot of different hardware.

    Ultimately I don't blame someone for staying in an abusive relationship, but I can't pity them when there are options to get out. I just show them how to get out and the struggles that will come with my choices. Otherwise the next cloud thing will be User Operating Systems as a Service and that's going to be a whole 'nother shitshow. Imagine $20+/mo just to boot your computer/phone/tablet.

  • It's like the saying: The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time to plant a tree is right now.

    If James Lee's videos are a barometer on how artists and creators deal with Adobe, I'm convinced that a relationship Adobe is abusive. He went from defending and offering to help Adobe to cutting them out of his life over the course of 5 months. No one deserves an abusive relationship, but leaving or staying in one is totally a choice that has real consequences.

  • It's more likely a contractor rather than an Amazon employee. I'm willing to bet there's a rule in the contract that makes dispute resolutions more complicated and longer time to conclude than would be if Amazon hired the drivers themselves and bought their own vans.

  • Hopefully it doesn't turn into oops all devil's panties comics

  • The .edu emails in the mod list didn't spell it out enough?

  • 'Member when YouTube TV was $35/mo? Now it's around $83 I think

  • welcome to modern politics where if the other side is doing it, it must be bad.

  • In the USA taxes and titling cost different amounts depending on where you live. It's easier to calculate once you buy, especially if you are buying in another state than the one you reside in which is a big problem in my state where dealers don't stock EVs. I had to go to the nearest large city which is in another state from where I reside to get my Bolt EUV.

    You can calculate before you buy and each state usually has at least a chart to ballpark what you'll pay. The easiest way to calculate these taxes would be to not levy them against people to begin with.

  • Advertising cars would never be feasible on nationally broadcast TV under your system.

    They did figure out the problem though. Price set by the manufacture, show cost for delivery on the window sticker, then when you buy they car the title and tax are figured out for where you live. It's the fairest and easiest way of showing and figuring the price. If you can't figure out that window stickers are available online and the tax and title yourself before you buy, that's a you problem. It's not on the seller nor the manufacturer to post pricing for every state or municipality.

    If you want cleaner pricing, demand an end to titling and car taxes.

  • Except that not every place is next to the car factory. Delivery to Portland, Maine is going to be a much different price in comparison to Austin, Texas. Do you also expect the cost of titling and taxes be included in the advertised price? Do you know that those vary from location to location as well?

  • I've heard enough other horror stories to know not to publish anything under the MIT license. Granted they are different, but what happened to BSD should be enough deterrent to not use those types of licenses.

  • bullshit fee

    Do you think shipping and transportation of goods is free? Do you think truck drivers drive stuff around out of the goodness of their hearts?

  • That's my takeaway even after reading the article. MIT license bad.

  • If it waives the destination fee, then I don't see it as a bad problem depending on how much it would normally cost to deliver vs how many miles.

  • Doesn't really matter in the sorta short to long term. 3D printing makes building these things at home pretty dang trivial to the point where you'd have to outlaw hardware stores. Cat's out of the bag and I'm wing to bet it'll turn into another war on drugs