


I’ve been getting great results in the last few weeks with darktable, and it gets better every day, the more I use it. With the recent releases, leading up to 3.6, I have finally reached a point where the only limitation to the kind of editing I need ( I do not do extensive Photoshop type manipulation of images, most of what I capture is nature or people, where I want the result to look natural, and realistic). One more massive thanks to the darktable team and community. I do not think there would be a charge for publishing an app to the Microsoft repository - based on my brief checks, but it does require some vetting of the app, by the repository admins.īut these other approaches, are only possibilities for now, and in your case, the organisation would have to most likely also enable permission for these other install methods, to be used within the business. There is also a possibility via the Microsoft Package Manager (winget), so if the app is published to the Microsoft repository, users can securely obtain a copy this way, and also have it installed at the same time. Via the Microsoft Store - my gut feeling is that there may not be an associated publishing cost, cost for this, for an app that is also free - my wishful thinking. When I do have spare time, I’ll have a deeper look at the other two methods, which may provide a secure way to distribute the app, to windows users. With darktable, for windows users, what’s important is to download from the authentic links, via the darktable official site, and if they want to they can also check the hash (SH1) as additional due diligence.Īt this time, there are no workarounds, I am aware of, to redress this issue.
