
Well I spent about a month going through that laptop trying to find that location and just could not locate it. I am still much the noob with linux for this reason.Īt any rate, recently I purchased a vinyl cutter and did a search to see if there were any linux programs that might run it.Ĭame across InkCut, which I gather is an extension for Inkscape.Īcording to the instructions on the inkcut site, I am supposed to extract the files into the inkscape extensions folder and it gave what the path should look like.

At least until you get under the hood a bit. Some time back I installed ubuntu studio on an laptop I have and love it as it windows like and almost feels the same. At least coming from years as a windows user and system admin. The quartz-wm window manager included with the XQuartz distribution uses the Apple Public Source License Version 2.While I have used various distros of linux for some time and like them quite a bit, I still find the linux landscape very confusing and often times not very user friendly.

The X.Org software components’ licenses are discussed on the Please re-install the latest XQuartz X11 release for Leopard after installing a system software update to OS X 10.5.x Leopard.Īn XQuartz installation consists of many individual pieces of software which have various licenses. Because of this, you may experience conflicts after doing a Software Update from Apple. Since the XQuartz X11 package clobbers Apple's X11.app, their software update will clobber the XQuartz X11 package. OS X Software Updates have included some of the work done by the XQuartz project, but for various reasons, Apple cannot ship the latest and greatest version offered by the XQuartz site. Together with supporting libraries and applications, it forms the X11.app that Apple shipped with OS X versions 10.5 through 10.7.


The XQuartz project is an open-source effort to develop a version of the X.Org X Window System that runs on macOS.
