Here's what I found when I was trying to do this:
https://krita-artists.org/t/how-to-set-white-balance-according-to-a-specific-point/52297/
Flamekebab
When I tried to use Krita a few months ago I couldn't set the white point in the levels tool. I looked it up and the tool apparently doesn't exist. That makes it awful for processing scanned artwork in my workflow.
Soooo, The GIMP.
Wow, that may be the most apt description I've heard for Joomla in a while. Well, my memory of what Joomla was like nearly twenty years ago.
Same. I want to play it but until it's available in some sort of convenient package at a price point I can justify, I'll play something else.
The lack of UHD drive is pretty funny.
Ooh, hardware encoding? Now we're talking!
You'd hate my IDE at work. It's bright pink.
That'll certainly make it easier to pay the CEO.
The approach they took with the framing device really confused me. I very much enjoyed the Desmond arc, until it ended abruptly, never delivering on what it promised.
The following games seemed to be a scattered mess that I found difficult to follow.
I very much enjoyed being able to exit the Animus at any time, have a wander around, talk to friendly characters, and take a breather. I found the Animus concept worked well for me as a way to suspend disbelief. Why can't I go over there? Because the person I'm playing as never did! Oh, I died? Well that didn't happen, so let's rewind that and get back into synch.
There's some good stuff there, but it's such a fragmented mess that it feels hard to retain and contextualise.
Why can't we have some present day sections that advance the overall plot? Feel free to write the protagonists being defeated, or having to flee, or whatever if it's needed to keep the saga going. Let them win sometimes and lose others.
In general the framing device makes me like the series a lot more than I otherwise might. It allows for all sorts of fun things (such as the reason for things like the cyclops to exist).
Luckily the feck attribute is too obscure to be in the line of fire.
Windows ARM devices, eh? I guess it's time for another round of "how long until Microsoft give up on anything that's not x86?"
It's a working title, despite having run for nearly thirty years.
I am so here for this.