Re: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-15 Thread Florian W
Thanks to all the contributors that make Darktable exists, and yes also you
Pascal :)
I can only add up to other participants comments on how good and up to
closed and paid software quality it is, and how glad I am that such
software exists on Linux OS.

I hope I'll find the bandwidth to contribute again for some ideas I'd like
to see coming into the UI to improve ergonomics.

Cheers folks,
Florian

Le jeu. 15 déc. 2022 à 12:18, Maurizio Paglia  a écrit :

> Oh... by the way... I would like to thank Pascal Obry too :-)
>
> Il giorno mer 14 dic 2022 alle ore 21:07 Pascal Obry  ha
> scritto:
>
>>
>> Hello!
>>
>> I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
>> release, to send you a little message about darktable.
>>
>> This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
>> We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
>> certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.
>>
>> Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
>> in many aspects of the project.
>>
>> Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
>> directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
>> part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
>> internal better.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
>> performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
>> of your CPU.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
>> recovery algorithms.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
>> proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
>> that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
>> like black magic to me :)
>>
>> I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
>> this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
>> rawspeed and many RAW formats support.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
>> support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
>> lighttable filters and UI.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
>> doing magic with CSS.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.
>>
>> I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
>> they are in good shape for integration.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
>> method based on meta-data.
>>
>> I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
>> Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
>> more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
>> English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.
>>
>> I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
>> binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
>> the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.
>>
>> I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
>> viable alternative to FilmicRGB.
>>
>> I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in
>> our native language.
>>
>> I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
>> we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
>> Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
>> colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
>> dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.
>>
>> And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
>> list above. I'm sorry if I missed you.
>>
>> A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
>> wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
>> continue.
>>
>> Have all a nice end of year!
>>
>> --
>>   Pascal Obry /  Magny Les Hameaux (78)
>>
>>   The best way to travel is by means of imagination
>>
>>   http://www.obry.net
>>
>>   gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-key F949BD3B
>>
>> ___
>> darktable developer mailing list
>> to unsubscribe send a mail to
>> darktable-dev+unsubscr...@lists.darktable.org
>>
>>
> ___
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> darktable-dev+unsubscr...@lists.darktable.org
>

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Re: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-15 Thread Maurizio Paglia
Oh... by the way... I would like to thank Pascal Obry too :-)

Il giorno mer 14 dic 2022 alle ore 21:07 Pascal Obry  ha
scritto:

>
> Hello!
>
> I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
> release, to send you a little message about darktable.
>
> This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
> We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
> certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.
>
> Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
> in many aspects of the project.
>
> Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
> directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
> part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
> internal better.
>
> I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
> performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
> of your CPU.
>
> I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
> recovery algorithms.
>
> I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
> proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
> that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
> like black magic to me :)
>
> I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
> this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
> rawspeed and many RAW formats support.
>
> I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
> support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.
>
> I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
> lighttable filters and UI.
>
> I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
> doing magic with CSS.
>
> I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.
>
> I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
> they are in good shape for integration.
>
> I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
> method based on meta-data.
>
> I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
> Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
> more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
> English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.
>
> I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
> binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
> the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.
>
> I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.
>
> I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
> viable alternative to FilmicRGB.
>
> I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in
> our native language.
>
> I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
> we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
> Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
> colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
> dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.
>
> And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
> list above. I'm sorry if I missed you.
>
> A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
> wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
> continue.
>
> Have all a nice end of year!
>
> --
>   Pascal Obry /  Magny Les Hameaux (78)
>
>   The best way to travel is by means of imagination
>
>   http://www.obry.net
>
>   gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-key F949BD3B
> ___
> darktable developer mailing list
> to unsubscribe send a mail to
> darktable-dev+unsubscr...@lists.darktable.org
>
>

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Re: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-15 Thread Matthias Elsdörfer

Hello, Pascal and Darktable team,

I'm gonna be honest, Darktable is one of the best pieces of software
I've discovered in my life, right up there with RetroArch (I know, whole
different ball game, but still).

I think I've been using DT for almost 10 years now and it never ceases
to amaze me how you not only keep it maintained, but always evolving.

Absolutely fantastic work all around. I'm deeply grateful and wish you
(us all) long and sustained success with Darktable.

Sorry to hear there has been conflict among the dev team, it completely
went past me and I hope you've recovered and are able to move on from it
well.

Kind regards from Germany,
Matt.



Matthias Elsdörfer · Weitererzähler.
a.k.a. Matt Eastwood

Web Design · Fotografie
Copywriting · Kommunikation

Website  · Matts Fotografie

Phone: (+49) 170 - 7 555 701

On 12/14/22 20:58, Pascal Obry wrote:

Hello!

I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
release, to send you a little message about darktable.

This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.

Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
in many aspects of the project.

Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
internal better.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
of your CPU.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
recovery algorithms.

I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
like black magic to me :)

I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
rawspeed and many RAW formats support.

I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.

I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
lighttable filters and UI.

I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
doing magic with CSS.

I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.

I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
they are in good shape for integration.

I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
method based on meta-data.

I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.

I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.

I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.

I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
viable alternative to FilmicRGB.

I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in
our native language.

I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.

And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
list above. I'm sorry if I missed you.

A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
continue.

Have all a nice end of year!



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Re: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-14 Thread Andrew Greig

On 15/12/22 06:58, Pascal Obry wrote:

Hello!

I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
release, to send you a little message about darktable.

This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.

Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
in many aspects of the project.

Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
internal better.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
of your CPU.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
recovery algorithms.

I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
like black magic to me :)

I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
rawspeed and many RAW formats support.

I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.

I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
lighttable filters and UI.

I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
doing magic with CSS.

I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.

I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
they are in good shape for integration.

I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
method based on meta-data.

I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.

I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.

I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.

I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
viable alternative to FilmicRGB.
  
I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in

our native language.

I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.

And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
list above. I'm sorry if I missed you.

A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
continue.

Have all a nice end of year!


Thanks Pascal,

Your message is a wonderful way to show how many people are committed to 
assisting my photography, and yours, and theirs, through this open 
source project. I am very grateful for their work and I am looking 
forward to the Christmas release,


Andrew Greig

Melbourne, Australia

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Re: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-14 Thread Per Inge Oestmoen

Hello All,

I wish to express my profound appreciation of the great work all the 
mentioned ones and others do with Darktable. Darktable is an impressive 
piece of software, and it evolves to ever greater heights!


It is far, far superior to the (unjustifiably) more renowned proprietary 
competitors like Lightroom, and a MAJOR advantage is that there is no 
such thing as Product Activation or a need for a subscription or 
connections in order to use the program as long as one wants.


If I am to "criticize" the brilliant and hard-working independent 
software creators for something, it is the curious fact that it is 
rarely pointed out that Product Activation, subscription schemes and 
connection requirements introduce great vulnerabilities and destroys our 
freedom to use our own computers. Our data are never safe if a software 
company controls our software, and there is no freedom if the software 
needs activation, subscripions or permanent connections in order to be 
used.


I am certain that many more would use Darktable and the various flavors 
of Linux if these points were made and disseminated much more widely to 
the public.


Sincerely,
Per Inge Oestmoen, Norway


> Pascal Obry wrote:


Hello!

I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
release, to send you a little message about darktable.

This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.

Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
in many aspects of the project.

Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
internal better.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
of your CPU.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
recovery algorithms.

I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
like black magic to me :)

I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
rawspeed and many RAW formats support.

I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.

I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
lighttable filters and UI.

I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
doing magic with CSS.

I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.

I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
they are in good shape for integration.

I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
method based on meta-data.

I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.

I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.

I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.

I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
viable alternative to FilmicRGB.
  
I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in

our native language.

I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.

And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
list above. I'm sorry if I missed you.

A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
continue.

Have all a nice end of year!



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Fwd: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-14 Thread Bruce Williams
Agreed!
Thank you to all the devs who devote their time and energy to this project.
It is greatly appreciated.

-- Forwarded message -
From: Pascal Obry 
Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2022, 07:06
Subject: [darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...
To: darktable-user , darktable-dev <
darktable-dev@lists.darktable.org>



Hello!

I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
release, to send you a little message about darktable.

This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.

Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
in many aspects of the project.

Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
internal better.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
of your CPU.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
recovery algorithms.

I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
like black magic to me :)

I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
rawspeed and many RAW formats support.

I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.

I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
lighttable filters and UI.

I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
doing magic with CSS.

I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.

I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
they are in good shape for integration.

I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
method based on meta-data.

I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.

I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.

I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.

I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
viable alternative to FilmicRGB.

I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in
our native language.

I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.

And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
list above. I'm sorry if I missed you.

A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
continue.

Have all a nice end of year!

-- 
  Pascal Obry /  Magny Les Hameaux (78)

  The best way to travel is by means of imagination

  http://www.obry.net

  gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-key F949BD3B
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[darktable-dev] release 4.2 is coming...

2022-12-14 Thread Pascal Obry


Hello!

I'd like to take some time, while we are all waiting for the 4.2
release, to send you a little message about darktable.

This release cycle has seen lot of improvements as previous releases.
We had also some divergences with one developer and the signal sent was
certainly not good or worrisome for some of you.

Fact is that the team behind darktable is strong and working very hard
in many aspects of the project.

Some people gain more visibility because they work on GUI part that are
directly visible by end-users. But there is also some people working on
part of the code that you do not see directly but that makes darktable
internal better.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm and Ralf Brown for their work on
performances, tweaking OpenCL code path and OpenMP to use every cycles
of your CPU.

I'd like to thank Hanno Schwalm also for working on new highlight
recovery algorithms.

I'd like to thank Diederik ter Rahe for looking into Gtk issues and
proposing a very impressive framework for shortcuts. And to achieve
that, lot of code refactoring has been done. Some Gtk parts are looking
like black magic to me :)

I'd like to thank Roman Lebedev for the hard work in rawspeed. Without
this project darktable won't be there. Also Miloš Komarčević working on
rawspeed and many RAW formats support.

I'd like to thank Victor Forsiuk for working on image input/output
support and fixing a huge number of spelling typos.

I'd like to thank Aldric Renaudin for the continued effort on the
lighttable filters and UI.

I'd like to thank Nicolas Auffray for taking over the UI effort and
doing magic with CSS.

I'd like to thank Bill Fergusson for maintaining the Lua framework.

I'd like to thank rawfiner for checking noise profiles and making sure
they are in good shape for integration.

I'd like to thank Simone Gotti for working on a new lens correction
method based on meta-data.

I'd like to thank all the testers and reviewers (Chris Elston, Martin
Straeten, parafin, Mark-64, and others) making sure we do not introduce
more issues than we are fixing. Also thanks for Chris for reading my
English in the RELEASE_NOTES and correcting it.

I'd like to thank parafin and Bill Fergusson for creating the release
binaries for MacOS and Windows. And Andreas Schneider as maintainer of
the OBS platform for creating the GNU/Linux binaries.

I'd like to thank Sakari Kapanen for helping with color science.

I'd like to thank Jakob Andrén for the long journey at making Sigmoid a
viable alternative to FilmicRGB.
 
I'd like to thank all the translators bringing to us an interface in
our native language.

I won't name them, but also remember that darktable is Open Source and
we leverage on many other Open Source projects/libraries (to handle
Jpeg, TIFF, AVIF, HEIF, PNG... tether with camera, handle SVG,
colors...). I'm even pretty sure that there is far more code in the
dependencies we are using than in darktable itself.

And finally I'd like to thank all people that I have forgotten in the
list above. I'm sorry if I missed you. 

A darktable release is a huge amount of work and the darktable team is
wonderful. I'm really happy to be part of it, let's the aventure
continue.

Have all a nice end of year!

-- 
  Pascal Obry /  Magny Les Hameaux (78)

  The best way to travel is by means of imagination

  http://www.obry.net

  gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-key F949BD3B
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