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Freeware for Windows -- Where Did It Go?

Talahamut asks: "The other day, I was planning on recording a radio show by running my stereo's output into my PC. Oooh, that sucks - WinXP's Sound Recorder limits you to 60 sec. recordings. Oh well, I'll just go online and grab a little WAV recorder. 30 minutes later, I'm frustrated because all I find is crippleware (time-limited, of course...) that records every format under the sun from any sound stream imaginable. What happened to the small home-brewed Windows utilities that used to be so easy to find online years ago? All the freeware sites I checked had nothing but commercial crippleware. Is there no place to find simple programs like that anymore?"

26 of 308 comments (clear)

  1. download.com? by eviljolly · · Score: 4, Informative

    Try going to www.download.com and searching under programs with freeware licenses.

    1. Re:download.com? by MrResistor · · Score: 4, Informative

      Obviously it's been a while since you've tried to find anything on download.com that was both free AND useful. The combination is pretty much non-existant these days.

      As mentioned by others, most of the freeware developers have moved on to Free platforms, BUT a lot of that stuff has been ported to Windows. TheOpenCD has a good listing of Open Source stuff that's been ported. Check the forums if you don't find exactly what you're looking for, as a lot of apps don't get included on the CD for various reasons (space, duplication of functionality, etc).

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    2. Re:download.com? by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, there are a couple of free IDE's for the .Net world.

      Microsoft offers a *FREE* ASP.Net development IDE called ASP.NET Matrix available at www.ASP.Net. It's geared towards code writing, so you don't get a great WYSIWYG HTML tool, but you can do some pretty cool stuff with it.

      For a Windows Form IDE, look at SharpDevelop which is currently in Beta release .99b :-). It's open source (GPL) so if it doesn't work, you can fix it. I haven't looked at this one in a little while (beta .95), but it looks like the development team is rolling right along, and in fact, I'll probably download a copy of it today for evaluation. I'm a VS user, but actually write *a lot* of C# test code fragments in TextPad.

      I'm sure there are others, but I've actually used those two IDE's (well, three if you count TextPad :-) and would recommend them.

  2. GNU/* and *BSD by H4x0r+Jim+Duggan · · Score: 3, Informative

    I guess most hobbists have moved to GNU/* and *BSD.

    When making free-as-in-cost, they may as well be doing free-as-in-freedom. And working with other developers that share code is nice.

  3. Nonags... by sxyzzx · · Score: 5, Informative

    www.nonags.com

    1. Re:Nonags... by Da+Fokka · · Score: 5, Informative

      My favourite freeware site is:
      http://www.pricelessware.org/
      Selected by readers from the alt.freeware newsgroup.

  4. Searching found by Foo2rama · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use http://www.versiontracker.com to find all my software... I found these gems all freeware for you. Pocket voice recorder Sound recorder And the total search with "shareware" is Hope this helps

    --


    ---In a time of Chimpanzees I was a Monkey.
    1. Re:Searching found by RevAaron · · Score: 3, Informative

      The first place I usually go is versiontracker, though sometimes they say have the program type- free, commercial, shareware wrong. Another awesome site, but with much more limited use is tinyApps. They keep track of various small, simple and free apps for Windows. Comes in handy a lot. Usually, if I need some app quick, I don't want to deal with a huge bohemoth- just give me something simple.

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
  5. http://www.pricelessware.org/ by pancakeunicorn · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.pricelessware.org/

    1. Re:http://www.pricelessware.org/ by phildog · · Score: 5, Informative

      http://www.pricelessware.org/ - I'll 2nd this recommendation

      http://www.tinyapps.org/ - I've had some good luck here too.

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      slashsearch.org - slashdot search. powered by google.
  6. It's called TUCOWS by eggstasy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ever heard of TUCOWS? You can search for software there, and order by license.
    AudioGrabber 1.83 is freeware, and is rated 5 stars. I used to use it to rip CDs, but the description claims it can do exactly what you need.

    1. Re:It's called TUCOWS by DeadSea · · Score: 4, Informative
      Some more resoureces:
      1. Open Directory: Freeware - Lists hundreds of sites offering freeware.
      2. Nonags - Better that tucows for Windows stuff because it doesn't list nagware.
  7. Audacity by Dave114 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It may be a little bit overkill for recording a radio program (although I've used the software for that before), but why not try the (open source) Audacity?

  8. 2 answers in one by samjam · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://freshmeat.net/projects/audacity/

    Freshmeat.net lists MANY software applications as they are released, and as good search capabilities if you login.

    Audacity is one of the best non-complex sound recorders and mixers going, using wxWidgets works and looks right under linux, windows and probably more (you look).

    Sam

  9. It's not limited to 60 seconds by lightspawn · · Score: 4, Informative

    It just looks that way because of a bad, bad, bad UI.

    Record 60 seconds of silence. Now save them as a file, and import it into the current sample. Voila! a 2-minute sample, which you can record over. Repeat as necessary.

  10. Re:or perhaps by erebus24 · · Score: 4, Informative
    or perhaps you should search better :
    Total Recorder Standard Edition costs just $11.95 (USD). Most other recording packages cost more and deliver less. Additionally, all new program updates are available to purchasers at no cost!
  11. AnalogX by Reddog0176 · · Score: 4, Informative

    AnalogX.com has some pretty good software. http://www.analogx.com/contents/download.htm

  12. Free Alternatives by apirkle · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you're using Windows, you should probably be using all of these programs (if you need them). Most of them are pretty stable and mature.

    Audacity - Sound editing (so this post is on-topic!)

    Mozilla FireFox - Web browsing.

    The Gimp - graphics/photo editing

    Sodipodi - Vector graphics (SVG) editing. It's no Illustrator, but the basics are there, and they're pretty nice.

    OpenOffice - Not quite ready to replace Word/Excel/PPT, but it's great if you (or your employer/university) haven't already shelled out for Office.

    FileZilla - FTP client

    Gaim - AOL Instant Messenger client

    PuTTY - ssh client

    There's a bit more elaboration and links on my blog.

  13. Excellent Freeware Site by todsandberg · · Score: 5, Informative

    Excellent Freeware Site
    http://www.snapfiles.com/freeeware/ (used to be webattack.com)
    I used to be addicted to freeware and this was one of my favorite places to get a fix.
    All the software is well categorized.
    I can often find what I'm looking for here.

    http://www.nonags.com is good too.

    Tod

  14. Try this one by mrdogi · · Score: 3, Informative

    ScanRec is one I've found rather useful. It isn't an end-all/be-all recorder, but it does have a rather useful feature. It was created with a VOX control originally to be used for recording ham sessions. So, it would not record constantly, but only when anybody brodcast. It will create a log file detailing what times it did the recordings. Anyway, I've used it for radio/TV stuff in the past, and I've had few problems with it (other than recording in a format that Media Player didn't really like.

  15. Its changed, not disappeared by RhettLivingston · · Score: 3, Informative

    Probably over half of the programs that I run on my Windows machines are GNU or open source programs (Perl, Python, PHP, MySQL, GIMP, grep, awk, sed, and even things like Bash). There are very few major GNU/Linux programs that don't run fine under windows these days either because they were written to be portable in the first place or because CYGWIN does a pretty decent job of emulating the unix libraries.

  16. Re:Was there really lots of freeware? by HeghmoH · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is a fascinating article about the effectiveness of crippling shareware versus relying on goodwill at http://www.scrawlsoft.com/products/common/hardnose .html.

    The short summary: He did a study using a Windows shareware program. Upon installation, it randomly chose whether to be crippleware or simply remind the user to pay when starting and quitting the program, with a 50% chance of each. It did this in such a way that reinstalling wouldn't randomly choose again, so most people didn't even realize there were two "versions". The crippled version sold over five times as many copies.

    Granted, this is a single example and may not be representative of all situations, but it's the best study I'm aware of so far. It puts the "people who will buy it will pay for it anyway, don't piss people off by crippling the product" position in serious doubt, at least in my mind.

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  17. Another vote for Total Recorder, & why it work by aquarian · · Score: 3, Informative

    I find Total Recorder very useful too. Just paying $12 for it is easier than trying to find free programs to do the same thing. What's your time worth? I searched for weeks to find something that would record streaming radio broadcasts on Windows (Linux can do this all by itself, with a few command line untilities piped together). Anyway, Total Recorder was the only thing I could find, free or not.

    A problem with developing this kind of software is needing proprietary libraries, etc. So virtually all software of this type is non-free. Total Recorder gets around this by recording the output of the sound card. Methinks Java could be used for this and it could be cross-platform, but so far no one's bothered.

  18. ...and OnlyTheBestFreeware.com by SchnellDavis · · Score: 3, Informative
  19. Re:It is linux's fault by exhilaration · · Score: 3, Informative

    PricelessWare is better. Actually, I think that's the best site for Windows freeware on the web - everything is reviewed.

  20. Re:Opensource Ate Freeware by ameoba · · Score: 3, Informative

    Freeware OGG to WAV decoder?

    I have to assume you're doing this in windows, since under Linux, if you had the ogg libraries you'd already have a decoder and be doing this with a simple shell script.

    So, take just about any decent audio player (such as winamp) that reads Ogg Vorbis and use it to write out WAV files instead of playing to the soundcard (on Winamp it's called the "Nullsoft disk-writer pluging"). Problem solved; you make a playlist, press play & a few seconds later, you're finished.

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