Readit News logoReadit News
type_enthusiast · a year ago
A really interesting read. From the discontinuation notice[1] that the article links to:

> Perhaps it comes down to this: indirectly, our own personal benefit for writing PlantStudio software and our other projects includes all the other wonderful free stuff on the internet, and it would cost us trillions of dollars if we had to pay for the creation of all that diversity ourselves. We don't mind using guilt to effect change :-) but this time, with products under free license, it will be guilt to go do something positive in the world to pass on the gift, rather than a one-for-one exchange with us.

That's a wonderful sentiment from the humans who put a lot of effort into building this software (and eventually decided to give it away).

[1] https://www.kurtz-fernhout.com/press.htm

umlaut · a year ago
One of the authors commented that the source is GPL'd and on GitHub... and here it is! https://github.com/pdfernhout/PlantStudio
bbor · a year ago
Beautiful, thanks for sharing! Looks like I've found side project number 301: Three.js PlantStudio. Combined with the botany-focused image segmentation / mapping models they've got now, you could even work off people's real plants...
msephton · a year ago
If you do it please include bonsai :)
andai · a year ago
This is wonderful. Just a few hours ago I was inspired to install ancient versions of Office and Photoshop.

Word 97 is 5MB and it starts instantly. I mean there is no perceptible delay whatsoever. And it starts fully rendered and fully interactive. Same goes for Excel.

They do everything I need, and they do it better than the new ones.

The strangest thing is that while new software continues to get worse, old software continues to get better (it runs faster and faster).

samplatt · a year ago
If it (Excel) could only work with >64k rows, I'd never need to upgrade.
kevin_thibedeau · a year ago
Sounds like you need a database and not a spreadsheet.
dominicrose · a year ago
The newest Excel is really fine on many points to be fair. Startup performance is not the priority, but it's fine on a good machine.

It's true that software in general have grown in complexity. Some software pull giant trees of dependencies, because they can. As teams grow and time passes, mistakes are made...

ninalanyon · a year ago
I wish that old versions of successful software were automatically open sourced.
buescher · a year ago
The article covers everything I miss about desktop applications in a nutshell. Mostly that wild sense of discovering what you can do with a computer that you might not have tried to do at all or left to experts. But also not least that you can still run it decades later.
wobfan · a year ago
Exactly this. This is what got me into computers when I was about 6. Way too early to understand stuff, but I just loved (and it evolved around this until about 14 I guess, when I started to use computers increasingly to get some stuff done) to poke around with colorful icons, spaces, expert settings, finding hidden options and panels - not initially understanding what they do but finding it out in the process.

I am increasingly put off by the current user interfaces which are based on modern, flat, designs, and tailored for users that don't need a lot of settings. All these exciting stuff from earlier days is omitted. I get that it looks better and works better for most of the people, but software just lost the excitement it once had for me. (back in the day, everything was better, haha)

bbo8 · a year ago
Just looking at this UI makes my eyes relax.
msephton · a year ago
Love this. Nice work documenting it.

I looked long and hard for something like this for Bonsai. I eventually found a Japanese app, but I'm yet to put in the effort to get it running. I don't think it worked in Whisky so I need to go deeper. https://www.jfp.co.jp/bonsai_dl/

sirjaz · a year ago
We need to kill SaaS. We can thank Salesforce for pushing it.