Software

GIMP 2.99.8 is here but what's happened to 3.0? If only stuff would not break all the time

Keeping up with technology changes 'taking a toll on development'


GIMP 2.99.8, a development version with many new features, has been released, but 3.0 is taking its time due to system changes that break things.

The GNU Image Manipulation Program is a full-featured bitmap image editor with a long history, the first public release being January 1996. Version 1.0 came in June 1998.

It is appreciated for its extensive features (and free price) but development is slow. The current production version is 2.10, the first version of which came out in April 2010, built using Gtk 2.x. That said, GIMP 2.10 is regularly updated, most recently with 2.10.28 last month, featuring many bug fixes especially on Windows.

GIMP 2.99.8 in action on Windows 11

Version 2.99.8 uses Gtk 3 and is described as having "a huge set of improvements." In summary:

Another important change is that a new contributor, Lukas Oberhuber, has taken on development packaging for macOS, which was previously lacking, though the team says that more macOS contributors are still needed. A lot of work has also been done on the GIMP infrastructure for continuous integration, including testing and releasing.

Does this mean GIMP 3.0 is nearly done? No date is set for this and the roadmap only states that it is a "work in progress."

According to the release announcement: "Taking care of technology changes (Wayland on Linux and macOS in particular) these days is also taking quite a toll in our development efficiency as we spend a lot of time fixing things which just get broken because the underlining systems change."

A July post explained the difficulty caused by contributors who leave the project and invited users to contribute to funding for some key maintainers. ®

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