Well, not really in the same league otherwise the whole world would be using it, but certainly a good tool for limited hobby use.
Exactly. My needs are great now but will be comparatively small 10 years from now. So GIMP has that long to improve.

Well, not really in the same league otherwise the whole world would be using it, but certainly a good tool for limited hobby use.

There's one more finesse to this - if GIMP knows you have RawTherapee, it will act like Camera Raw does for Photoshop - you open a raw file in RawTherapee and when you are done making edits, it passes the open file over to GIMP where you can keep working on it.
Im having real problems with my raw conversion. My Gimp came with Darktable and its refusing to load nef files from my D750. I downloaded Raw Therapee best I can tell in the right place and Gimp refuses to show it in the plugin list even though it shows it while loading presets when you open the program. What brick do I need to hit the darn thing with to make it work right? This is beyond aggravating.
The Affinity suite is free now.Affinity photo is a one time $70 purchase and is also a very good alternative.
When I shoot digital RAW, I edit with RawTherapee and mostly keep it at that. If I want to add something that's quicker to do in GIMP afterwards, I just take the exported JPG or TIFF from RT and open it in GIMP. IMO there's very little benefit in trying to integrate the workflow/tools.Im having real problems with my raw conversion. My Gimp came with Darktable and its refusing to load nef files from my D750. I downloaded Raw Therapee best I can tell in the right place and Gimp refuses to show it in the plugin list even though it shows it while loading presets when you open the program. What brick do I need to hit the darn thing with to make it work right? This is beyond aggravating.
Affinity Photo is pretty much dead now since it became a "free" subscription product.
consensus is
Sometimes software is free because the developer wants to upsell you add-on premium features. This seems to be the case with Canva/Affinity.
This is for sure the case, but I think an additional rationale is that they try to grow the userbase and thereby position themselves more firmly in the market. Of course, this goes hand in hand with the argument you mentioned.
Another item not present on your list is that the project is community-based and a collective of developers sees merit in maintaining it without payment, as is common in the open-source domain. This applies to GIMP.
I can’t help but think that having polished, comprehensive software for cheap or free is a bigger threat to open source programs than it is to Adobe in the short run. I haven’t used GIMP in a very long time but it has always been known to be a bit janky and feature incomplete compared to Photoshop. The cost of photoshop and Adobe’s later move to cloud and AI made using and developing GIMP attractive. Now? I’m not sure how GIMP is going to attract more users when compared to the likes of Affinity and now Resolve.
I think that GIMP’s best long term outlook is that it allows developers to add features or workflows that aren’t available in more mainstream releases. I’m not quite sure what those could be at this point but it is an advantage of open source software.
Won't AI allow newcomers to start their own editing sites pretty easily and compete with Adobe and others?
Photoshop is really deep. It’s the kind of thing that you don’t know what you don’t know about it until you get some training. As you learn about it your horizons broaden. All that’s to say I don’t know how you could vibe code anything but the simplest of editors if you are pretty new to it. Even if they did they would be held back by the limits of the program which would echo their lack of knowledge. What is much more likely is that they would simply tell an AI system to do stuff for them instead of figuring out how to manually manipulate the image.
You could do that but what you would get back would no longer be a photograph. It would be an image generated by the ai as prompted by the original photograph but no part of the original image information would remain
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