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this post was submitted on 27 Nov 2025
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As a Linux desktop user for almost two decades, can you explain to me how this Affinity thing I have never heard of, can "transform desktop Linux"?
Based on tone, I doubt this is a real question but others may have the same one.
Moving to Linux can be difficult if Linux provides no viable alternative for software that you rely on.
Despite the availability of things like GIMP and Krita, Photoshop and other Adobe products are perhaps the most often cited software preventing user migration to Linux.
Affinity is the software most often cited as being a viable replacement for Adobe (on any platform). Currently, Affinity does not support Linux.
Therefore, the thesis here is that Affinity becoming available on Linux would make Linux a viable option for a material number of potential new users.
This would have implications for both the popularity of Linux as a desktop and Affinity as an alternative, weakening the hold Adobe has on professional media.
I think the significance is overstated. I do not believe the impact would be as spectacular as predicted here. But the basic argument is valid. It would be a positive development and everything that gets the ball rolling contributes to the eventual snowball.
Have you tried reading the article?
Sorry but no. With such a title it's very likely a clickbait, or a badly written one which the article doesn't actually interest me.
You should read it. It's something that could reshape the desktop software market.
(I didn't read it either)
It will let people create new wallpapers.