![]() However, the last time I tried it, Paint3D was unable to run multiple simultaneous instances. For me, Paint is better for that than Paint3D because Paint requires fewer UI interactions to do what I want, plus I'm used to it, so it's faster. For me, I do little more than crop and annotate screen shots and other canned images. ![]() For some people, the 3D animation effects that Paint3D can generate may make it better for them. But what do you guys think? Is this just a case of us not wanting to get rid of old habits?īetter is entirely subjective. I also think the old version of Paint should not go away completely for people that still want to use it, hence it moving to the store. ![]() Yes, it’s “app-ified,” if there is such a word, and it does more than what a lot of people need with the inclusion of these goofy 3D features, but can’t those just be ignored? ![]() So this caused me to fire up Paint 3D and play with it a bit, and I started thinking that, okay, maybe this isn’t so bad, that I could more than likely get used to it. So naturally, this sparked a debate, with some people claiming that it *should* be removed because it’s so old and Paint 3D is better, while others claim it does no harm to stay because it’s still a great, fast tool to use when you want to do really simple graphical operations on an image or photo (like cropping). Yesterday as I was reading an extremely long thread on Reddit about the Windows April 2018 update, there was also a sub-discussion about the warning you now get when you run Paint about it eventually moving to the store.
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