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My personal top 3:
Video Editing - Kdenlive isn't bad in and by itself but it seems really slow to work with, and getting any kind of smooth preview seems impossible even with proxy clips ... the other day I bought a GoPro 3D camera, and I can cut, preview, rotate, reframe and encode with their Android app on my potato phone from 2021, and it feels snappy (I was surprised, really). Yet on my i7 laptop with Kdenlive, much simpler tasks feel much more sluggish on average ...
CAD - I use OpenSCAD for 3D modeling and I love it, but sometimes a GUI-Based CAD program would be nice. I'm sure FreeCAD is powerful but the UI/UX aspect makes it hard to unlock that power. I'm a bit conflicted about it because I really don't want to play down the efforts of the FreeCAD dev team, and it seems like everyone and their mothers talk badly about their UI/UX. But on the other hand I tried a couple times and got really frustrated, and I'm usually not one to shy away from steeper learning curves. Supposedly you can do CAD in Blender but I never really figured that out.
Laser cutting - While most slicers for 3D printers work on Linux, Lasercutting seems a different story. You can still use older versions of Lightburn but it's not FLOSS and it seems strange to pay for a license if the support for your OS has been discontinued 2 versions ago (or one, not sure right now). I want to give Rayforge (https://rayforge.org/) a try soon but until then it's LaserGRBL or the program that came with my laser cutter on a virtual machine.
Honorable mention: A linux phone would be nice.
Regarding laser cutting: Some fablabs have been using Inkscape and just print the vector graphics to the laser cutter. Have you tried this?
Hmm not sure whether my cutter directly accepts SVG, I have to check ... in fact I'm using Inkscape to assemble everything and then just use the application to generate gcode ... not sure whether I can skip that step because the SVG doesn't contain any info regarding cutting speed, laser power etc ...
Davinci resolve has acceleration support on Linux, but it’s not for the faint of heart.
Doubly so with vapoursynth.
Honesty, Windows sucks too. As sad as it is, I color grade some video on my iPhone because it just works with HDR, in basically any format.
Oh I've never heard about that one ...
The problem with Davinci I encountered was that very common encodings like x264 or x265 don't work with the community edition and I can't justify getting the pro version from an economic standpoint ...
It's basically video editing in Python, that can be piped directly to ffmpeg or whatever encoder you want.
...It's finicky. And poorly documented.
It's not fast and does a lot on CPU, but it's extremely powerful. As an example, I have a script for transcoding high ISO footage that, frankly, blows Davinci's filters out of the water. And I have another for fixing up an old DVD that I just couldn't have done with Davinci.