Top 10 Software Titles Every Home PC Needs?
eabell asks: "I'm buying a new mid-grade laptop computer, which I plan to dual-boot between Windows XP Home and Mandrake 9.x. Before its arrival in a few weeks I'm trying to think of what 'essential' software I'll need to make a usable home system. In general I'd like to spend as little money as possible (free is good). As far as my needs, think 'typical family PC' without an emphasis on gaming. I know I can get something like Open Office for word processing, presentation, etc. needs, but is there such a good thing as a good free virus checker? A good free email client? A handy web browser? What would you consider the top 10 (or so) pieces of software for a new home system, bearing in mind that I need software for both the Windows and Linux side of things?"
cygwin for the Windows-side of things, of course.
Opera has climbed into my "must get everyone using" category. I think it's a fantastic product and deserves a lot of attention.
Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
dual-boot between Windows XP Home and Mandrake 9.x. Before its arrival in a few weeks I'm trying to think of what 'essential' software I'll need to make a usable home system
Get Partition Magic : as you use get used to both systems, you'll be able to progressively shrink your Windows partition and make your home system more and more usable.
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
We must have differing views on what a "family" needs for their PC as I can't see most families doing C++ development coding in EMacs on their family PC :-)
A little family get-together around the PC to do some kernel tweaking before bedtime?
Warning, snippage included
CygWin the Linux-like environment for Windows.
PuTTY a free SSH client for Windows.
VNC remote controll software, NOTE: the location is no longer on the ATT Labs UK site.
GNU-EMacs for Windows. I usually install it, but use Vi more.
Dev-C++ a free C++ compiler. I use VC++ 6.0, but this is free, and I think it's pretty good.
For a home system? For a developer box? yeah. but for a home system?
But barring that, you deserver +5 Informative for mentioning nethack.
CygWin the Linux-like environment for Windows.
WS FTP Light a FREE, FTP client that works great.
PuTTY a free SSH client for Windows.
GNU-EMacs for Windows. I usually install it, but use Vi more.
Dev-C++ a free C++ compiler. I use VC++ 6.0, but this is free, and I think it's pretty good.
NetHack You MUST have NetHack installed on everything...
Sweet Christmas! The poster asked for a general family-type system. I'm not sure what sort of family YOU have, but these programs would cause my mother to die from fright.
Not that they aren't handy tools, but I don't think that is what the poster was after...
You beat me to it. Having personally used AVG (free edition) for quite some time, I find that it is as good as any of the commercial ones (I am virus free). I don't know that it checks Mozilla/Thunderbird mail though. Try installing your mail client first, or AVG won't pickup the directory. Good Luck.
Also, I have to ask what need you have for WinXP. If it is not a gaming machine (ie, you won't be playing Doom 3), then you can easily run WineX and then you won't have some issues inherent with any M$ solution.
Just a thought though.
"We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
Popup blocker too, and DOM viewer/editor. Whats more he could use a fatfs to store his profile for the linux and windows side and not miss a beat.
Bloat, mabe. But he wants it limited to 10. Mozilla can account for browser mail and popup stopping very compeditively. Hows the ford commercial go? If you havent looked at a mozilla lately look again.
Free AV does not mean it sucks..
:-) - If you notice most virus updates appear AFTER the virus is out in the wild, which is kinda pointless if you already have the virus on your computer.
.net' is more important than AV. But atleast - Get it for free - No need to pay money to the useless AV cartells.
Relying in AV software for your false sense of security is not recomended either, atleast not by me
Maintaining your computer and operating 'safely on the
// instant - "I for one welcome our new Decaff Coffee-Flavoured-Coffee Overlords"
Digital Photos are certainly now one of the top ten uses for family PCs.
I highly recommend using some Digiphoto Organization software, it's just leaps and bounds over storing photos as files in folders.
These packages help organize, view, and browse your digiphoto collection, then actually do something with the photos: format them for email, printing, web galleries, calendars, greeting cards, etc.
There are plenty of choices in Windows, but I don't know of any usable packages for Linux. Of course, for OSX there's iPhoto (free!)
I've been using Photoshop Album since it was released in February, and I've been very happy with it. Version 2 was released on Monday, and there's now a free Starter Edition - so there's no excuse not to try it!
Some other digital photo management software:
Don't go for the proprietary Quicken. I used it for 7 years and lost significant amounts of data twice due to file corruption issues.
GnuCash works much better, for my needs at least.