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First Ten Programs on New Install?

reddigitaldragon asks: "Some people re-install once a year, but if you're anything like me your machine is formatted at least once a month. After the OS is in, then come the favorite/must have/most used programs to install. My first installations for Windows (I use it; get over it): Trillian, Winrar, Firefox, Winamp, SmartFTP, Azureus, NMap, GKrellM, PowerDVD. What are your First 10 installed programs?" What are the first 10 programs you would install on a Windows machine? How about for a Unix machine?

35 of 1,659 comments (clear)

  1. forget winrar by WhiteDragon · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use 7-zip, it is free (speech and beer) and reads and writes most archive formats, including zip, rar, tar, tgz, etc.

    --
    Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
    1. Re:forget winrar by notasheep · · Score: 5, Informative
      Thanks for the 404 link, "idiot boy". :) Here's a link that isn't broken: link that works

      --
      Your mind looks a little cramped. Why don't you stretch it a little?
  2. linux/openbsd/freebsd by quelrods · · Score: 4, Informative

    bash less enlightenment wget vim screen nmap phoenix/firebird/firefox Eterm xmms

    --
    :(){ :|:&};:
  3. A list by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Informative
    Heres my list:
    • Putty - A free (GPL) SSH terminal emulator
    • Winzip - Yeah, you know what this is
    • VLC - Free media player
    • OpenOffice.org - I should stop doing these descriptions, its not as if youve heard of these things before!
    • GIMP for windows - Yup, the infernal/eternal image editor
    • Editplus - Possibly the best editor ive found, not free im afraid, costs around $25
    • Sharpdevelop - Free (GPL) .net IDE, requires the .net framework and SDK
    • Bloodshed Dev-C++ - Excellent free (GPL) C and C++ IDE, using the Windows GCC port
    • Thunderbird - Mail client
    • Firefox - Web browser
    • Adobe Acrobat Reader - PDF Reader
    • PDFcreator - GPL PDF print driver for windows
    • MessengerPro (Clickatell) - Non free SMS sender for windows, company does good bulk buy sms rates, i buy 500 at a time for less than $5
    • Lavasoft Adaware and Spybot - For the essentials in life
    • Topstyle - Free version of the excellent CSS editor for webdevelopment, if anyone knows a good free alternative, im open to suggestions :)
    • SmartFTP - Great free for personal use FTP client, not found a better one yet!
    • MySQL-Front - Old version of the MySQL windows front end, much much better than the new one you pay for. Source isnt open and the old developer discontinued development, possibly one of the best advertisements for why OSS is good :(

    Thats about it, everything I install after a reimage of my machines!! Other things get tagged on, but those are the core!

    If anyone has suggestions for alternatives, im open. But they have to be good! Im currently looking for a new .net IDE as sharpdevelop has a few bugs, and since its written in c#, i cant help fix em :(

    As for UNIX, I use OpenBSD so its got a pretty sane base install. I usually drag in a few custom admin scripts ive developed over the years, and my .profile for ksh, but thats about it. The box then gets configured for its custom job.

    1. Re:A list by ichthus · · Score: 5, Informative

      SmartFTP - Great free for personal use FTP client, not found a better one yet!

      I haven't tried SmartFTP, so maybe it's better, but I really like FileZilla. It does sftp too - great for crypto xfers.

      --
      sig: sauer
  4. My choices by avij · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think you missed Windows security fixes, Adobe Acrobat and WinSCP.

    --

    Follow your Euro bills at EBT
    1. Re:My choices by Lemmeoutada+Collecti · · Score: 4, Informative

      After Windows and Drivers, and before it touches the network:

      1) Anit-Virus
      2) AdAware
      3) Firewall (if necessary... if it's for home, it's behind 2 already)
      4) SP xx (From a CD)
      5) Security Updates (From CD)
      6) Mozilla/Firefox/etc. (From CD)
      7) Zip/RAR Proggie of the week (From the CD)
      8) The Windows CAB files
      9) From here on it depends on the purpose of the build, but the machine can now join my network

      --

      You can have it fast, accurate, or pretty. Pick any 2.
  5. Mine? by grub · · Score: 5, Informative


    Well, I use my PC as a game box with some browsing only (with SSH if I need to access one of the unixish machines) so here's my stuff:

    10 : Spybot Search & Destroy (Excellent spyware killer)
    9 : Spyware Blaster (Recommended by Spybot author to run concurrently)
    8 : Some form of browser.
    7 : PuTTY (SSH client w/ tunnelling)
    6 : Thief (awesome game)
    5 : Thief 2 (more Thief!)
    4 : Darkloader (allows one to run custom fan missions in the Thief games)
    3 : System Shock 2 (creepy sci-fi rp/fps)
    2 : For those days I feel like a slug-fest? Doomsday and the ol' Doom games. (adds real 3D and all the video card eye candy to Doom/Heretic/etc. A MUST HAVE!)
    1 : Half Life You know it! (still has one of the best stories of any game around)

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  6. The OpenCD by Siener · · Score: 4, Informative

    When installing a Windows PC, it's a good idea to have The OpenCD handy. It includes (among other things) CDEx, Mozilla, GIMP, PuTTY, TightVNC and WinPT.

  7. Don't reformat: use Knoppix/Partimage/NFS by Saint+Stephen · · Score: 5, Informative

    Do yourself a favor: next clean install, apply XP-SP1, then Clean=(Delete LocalSettings\Temp, Windows\Temp, Defrag) & boot Knoppix and backup your partition with Partimage (to a network location mounted with NFS), if needed.

    Then apply all Windows Updates, and image again. Then install your drivers, and "core apps" (be very conservative), and tweak your profile a little, and image again.

    Then restore one of these three images as needed, and update as needed. Install your games on a separate partition.

    It gets tricky if you actually use your XP partition for real work (MSOffice, VStudio) instead of just for video editing and games and use the much superior Debian Sid for web browsing, email, and programming. Unlike games, its hard to put apps on a separate partition and simply "install" them with a .reg file or something. Imaging with 3 or 4 gigs of apps to back up takes a long time and gets to be a pain in the ass.

  8. Re:For me.. by Mr.+Bad+Example · · Score: 4, Informative

    Might I suggest that you burn a firewall program onto a CD? Then the next time you reload your machine, you can install the firewall and *then* connect to the Internet.

  9. I don't reinstall, I update by Vaevictis666 · · Score: 5, Informative
    I have a hard drive image (Ghost, but anything would work about as well) that I revert to every few months. It has all my essentials, configuration, and such. Windows is on its own partition, My Docs is mapped to D: partition, so the only thing I need to back up is Docs and Settings (I could map that to another partition too, but it's nice to have it be cleaned out as well).

    So now I just do my mini-backup, revert to ghost image, apply pending windows/app fixes and upgrades (with a text file on my desktop to keep track as I do them the first time), install any new "needed" software, clean up stuff etc, and then make me a fresh image of that for next time.

  10. That's funny, I don't install Gator... by plover · · Score: 5, Informative
    The first programs I install on my own box include these:

    I install Mozzie first, then I download and run Spybot Search and Destroy and run the cleanup/immunize functions, and then I install AVG. Nothing else is an "absolute" but I usually install them. (I don't install Visual Studio on other people's boxes, of course!)

    --
    John
    1. Re:That's funny, I don't install Gator... by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 5, Informative

      Office & Design
      - OpenOffice.org
      - AbiWord
      - GIMP

      Internet & Communication
      - Mozilla
      - FileZilla
      - TightVNC
      - WinHTTrack
      - PuTTY

      Multimedia & Games
      - Audacity
      - CDex
      - Crack Attack!
      - Sokoban YASC
      - Celestia
      - Really Slick Screensavers

      Utilities & Other
      - 7-Zip
      - SciTE
      - WinPT
      - NetTime

      Source: TheOpenCD

  11. On MacOS X by numbski · · Score: 5, Informative

    Fink
    Sendmail
    Bring Perl Current
    SpamAssassin and SpamAssassin Milter
    Microsoft Office (Yuck! Please get us an Aqua Native Open Office!)
    Mozilla Firefox
    RealMediaBurner (as close to Nero as you're going to get)
    BitTorrent
    MultiDesktop
    CarbonCopyCloner

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

  12. Re:Most important of all on Windoze Boxen... by Kenja · · Score: 4, Informative

    Maybe if you stop laucnhing all those "hotgirlz.jpg.exe" attachments and downloading warez you wouldn't need to install an antivirus program right away? Beleve it or not, but a virus will not just sneak into your system. It has to be put there.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  13. Forget 7-Zip by cybermace5 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't like 7-Zip, there are some compatibility issues I've found with encrypted Zip files, and the user interface is really clunky.

    Instead, use the other free alternative, IZArc. It handles everything, plus 7-Zip, actually. The user interface is very clean and contains at least as many features as WinZip. Gets a full recommendation from me!

    --
    ...
  14. Textpad by turnstyle · · Score: 4, Informative
    I've long wished for WinBBEdit, but I've been quite happy Textpad user for years.

    A fine text editor!

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  15. On windows? Here's the whole interoperability kit by rwa2 · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Cygwin - get the POSIX environment on!
    2. PuTTY - the only terminal I've found that handles colors and stuff right.
    3. TightVNC - get to some other computer
    4. OO.o
    5. vim - I'm not even a VI guy, but it's fast and has nice hooks into explorer and I'm too lazy to deal with registering TextPad or whatever. JEdit's also nice, but way too slow for casual use... I usually go straight to emacs for that kind of editing.
    6. Mozilla / Firefox / etc. - and the plugins:
    7. Winamp - get the groove on
    8. MPlayer - it handles just about all the codecs
    9. MultiDesk - usable multiple desktops for Windows... like getting that 10% productivity improvement for having dual monitors without having to pay 100% more in displays. If only it had a visual pager...
    10. Windows PowerToys - because every little option matters
    Usually hit windowsupdate several times first, of course.

    More on Linux and MacOS X later, I guess...

  16. Re:My First 10... by Soko · · Score: 5, Informative

    Myself, I prefer to roll those into my install CD via slipstreaming. (Google for "XP slipstream hotfix" for more) That way, I get as much protection as possible OOTB.

    Slip-streaming isn't possible though with those confounded restore CDs from OEMs though. Grrrr....

    Soko

    --
    "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  17. Re:You forgot some essentials! by RazzleFrog · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nobody in their right mind installs either of those crapware apps. Quicktime Alternative and Real Alternative work great.

  18. Re:My First 10... by pnutjam · · Score: 5, Informative

    I user partimage from the Linux Rescue CD, you can get it here. Works like a charm and it's free.

  19. Re:My First 10... by hummassa · · Score: 4, Informative

    google for slipstream.
    Now, serious: 7-zip is better and is Free Software.
    I always install Mozilla and the PuTTY family.
    Cygwin if I think I will use the machine a lot.
    VIM !!!

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  20. Comments + Links! by Famatra · · Score: 4, Informative
    Some links to your great suggestions, and some comments at the end :)

    • Putty - A free (GPL) SSH terminal emulator
    • Winzip - Yeah, you know what this is
    • VLC - Free media player
    • OpenOffice.org - I should stop doing these descriptions, its not as if youve heard of these things before!
    • GIMP for windows - Yup, the infernal/eternal image editor
    • Sharpdevelop - Free (GPL) .net IDE, requires the .net framework and SDK
    • Bloodshed Dev-C++ - Excellent free (GPL) C and C++ IDE, using the Windows GCC port
    • Thunderbird - Mail client
    • Firefox - Web browser
    • Adobe Acrobat Reader - PDF Reader
    • PDFcreator - GPL PDF print driver for windows
    • MessengerPro (Clickatell) - Non free SMS sender for windows, company does good bulk buy sms rates, i buy 500 at a time for less than $5
    • Lavasoft Adaware and Spybot SS - For the essentials in life
    • Topstyle - Free version of the excellent CSS editor for webdevelopment, if anyone knows a good free alternative, im open to suggestions :)
    • SmartFTP - Great free for personal use FTP client, not found a better one yet! (I have, Filezilla it is excellent AND fully GPL, none of this non free shit, bub. :-) )
    • MySQL-Front - Old version of the MySQL windows front end, much much better than the new one you pay for. Source isnt open and the old developer discontinued development, possibly one of the best advertisements for why OSS is good :(
    • Editplus - Possibly the best editor ive found, not free im afraid, costs around $25

    VLC -, like you mentioned, Free media player is a great media player, it blew me away. Better then Window's media player, and I know that my porno viewing habits are not going straight to Bill Gates.

    One you didn't mention is Filezilla which is a good GPL ftp program instead of SmartFTP if you want to try another one out. (I must confess I use LeechFTP since I haven't gotten use to Filezilla just yet, although if you are into hosting files Filezilla is even better).

  21. Auto-Install DVD of Windows XP Pro by Kevin98003 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just finished creating an automatic install DVD of Windows XP Pro. On this DVD it installs Windows XP Pro, installs my programs silently, and automatically installs all patches and hotfixes. This saves me a bunch of times from doing this the manual way. Right before I wipe Windows and reinstall, I move all my important data to my second hard drive.

    For more information please visit the MSFN Unattended XP CD at http://unattended.msfn.org/index.htm.

    In keeping with the direction of the first post, here is my list of my first 10 installed programs...

    1. Hotfixes and security updates galore!
    2. .NET Framework
    3. Windows Media Player 9
    4. DirectX 9.0b
    5. Office XP with Service Pack 3
    6. TweakUI
    7. Winamp 5.0.3a (no video codecs)
    8. K-Lite Mega Codec Pack
    9. WinRAR 3.30
    10. ETrust Antivirus 6.0

    I have a bunch of other installed programs on the DVD, but I thought I would share only a couple. ;)

    Cheers!

  22. Re:My First 10... by CatKnight · · Score: 5, Informative

    How about the first 10 things you UNinstall from a fresh WinXP install?

    1) Drive Indexing Service
    2) System Restore Service
    3) MSN Explorer
    4) MSN Messenger
    5) Games
    6) ISP Services (who uses prodigy anymore anyway?)
    7) Outlook Express
    8) Internet Explorer
    9) QoS Packet Scheduler Service (I never figured out what this even does...)
    10) Extra services (like WMP auto DRM retrieval, MP3 player auto detector, etc)

    --
    The Stone Age did not end for lack of stones, and when the oil age ends it will not be for lack of oil. --Bjorn Lomberg
  23. Re:My First 10... by semifamous · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use a thing I found over at Neowin.net that some of the guys have put together.

    Autopatcher contains all of the current hotfixes and lets you change some other settings. It's great! Check it out if you have to reinstall Windows in the near future... One of the best parts for people who set up multiple puters is the ability to set all of your options as the Default settings before you burn the CD so that you don't have to check and uncheck all of your options on each computer.

    So that's number 1 in my list of the first 10 things I install.

    Then:

    Firefox
    Winamp
    Miranda
    UltraVNC
    StrokeIt (because Mouse Gestures are too cool to be limited to Internet Browsing.)
    Filezilla
    OpenOffice.org
    Media Player Classic
    Slowview

  24. HOSTS file by Naito · · Score: 4, Informative
  25. top programs. by Foresto · · Score: 4, Informative


    NETWORKING

    * Mozilla Firefox
    * Firefox extensions: RadialContext, User Agent Switcher, bookmarklets, Magpie
    * Filezilla (an ftp client that looks a lot like CuteFTP)
    * Klipfolio (a news ticker / rss viewer)
    * Trillian (an instant messenger, with the microscopic skin)
    * PuTTY (a set of SSH clients)
    * Cygwin/X (a port of X11, including an X server)

    MEDIA

    * BSplayer (a media player that handles DivX files well, even on SMP machines)
    * foobar2000 (an audio player, uglier but leaner than Winamp)
    * AC3Filter (a DirectShow filter for decoding AC3 audio)
    * Subtitle Workshop (for converting between subtitle files of different formats)
    * HACP (a lightweight cd player that understands CD text and online CD databases)
    * IrfanView (an image viewer similar to ACD See)
    * XnView (another image viewer)
    * Exact Audio Copy (an excellent CD audio extractor)
    * Real Alternative (a replacement for Real Player, without the bloat)

    UTILITY

    * Ad-Aware (for finding and removing spyware from your computer)
    * Spybot - Search & Destroy (another spyware removal program)
    * AVG Anti-Virus (not crashy like Norton AV, but updated less frequently)
    * IZArc (an archive & file compression utility similar to WinZip)
    * pdf995 (for easily converting your documents to Adobe PDF files)
    * ListXP (a lightweight raw file viewer modeled after Vernon D. Buerg's list for DOS)

  26. Partimage works fine on NTFS by waferhead · · Score: 5, Informative

    I reinstalled my sons Win2k box, (dual boot Linux) applied all patches, defragged, and shut down.

    Booted into Knoppix, made a bz2 compressed image of both his installs in ~5 minutes. Burned to 2 CDs.

    Wrote it back to disk, worked fine. Took ~3 min to overwrite.

  27. Re:My First 10... by aldousd666 · · Score: 5, Informative

    two things here. One: the bzipped image is a file, just as 'easy to work with' as a .gho file, and Two: Ghost doesn't make disk images, it only copies files into that monolithic .gho. That's actually one of the primary differences between ghost and dd -- you don't get anything but allocated files with ghost, and for this reason ghost only supports certain filesystem types (though indeed they get most of the big ones, ntfs, fat, fat32, and ext2) but dd doesn't care what it's copying -- filesystem or not -- "Them's all just bits" God forbid that you would try to use a ghost image for forensic analysis, but dd, that's the good stuff for that. If you just want a backup of your working hard drive, ghost or a like alternative 'file' imaging program is probably what you're looking for. If you want the story that the unused portion of a hard drive can tell you, then dd it. Also, to my knowledge, bzip2 doesn't only 'not know enough about ntfs' it simply compresses an input data stream to an output datastream, so it's not supposed to 'know enough about' any filesystem at all, it doesn't know about ext2 or 3 or ReiserFS either...

    --
    Speak for yourself.
  28. Re:My First 10... by lga · · Score: 4, Informative

    You need to get yourself a copy of Windows XP 120 day evaluation edition. It's free to order from the website and you can activate it and update it online as it's a legitimate version with its own product key. It is licensed for 10 computers, so I figure I can install it 10 times in a row on the same computer instead!

    If you're in the UK you can order just about every microsoft product from free from this page. I can't find the US link, but search for windows xp evaluation edition.

    While you're there, order yourself a security update CD, it saves a hell of a lot of downloading. (I don't know why MS isn't forced to post these to every windows user.)

  29. Re:My First 10... by omicronish · · Score: 4, Informative

    How about the first 10 things you UNinstall from a fresh WinXP install?

    2) System Restore Service

    I used to wonder what System Restore does, but apparently it saves backups of your registry on your hard drive when various things happen, such as installing a hotfix or Windows Installer package. This has saved me a couple times when the registry got corrupted; a simple boot into recovery mode and copying over the HKLM registry file fixed things (of course, the problem of corruption still remains). Keep that in mind when you disable System Restore.

  30. Re:My First 10... by Frogbert · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's a huge index of all your files designed to help you search them faster, how often do you need find? Can you wait an extra 15 seconds or is it worth a couple of hundred meg of space on your disk?

  31. Re:My First 10... by Reteo+Varala · · Score: 5, Informative

    cp? *shrug* dd? Meh.

    cat's my tool of choice.

    cat /dev/hda | bzip2 > Image.bz2

    Image-based Backup and compression, without the hefty expense. Add in gpg to that chain, and it's encrypted, too.

    __

    Okay, back on-topic.

    1: OpenOffice.org
    http://www.openoffice.org

    2: Winamp
    http://www.winamp.com

    3: Mozilla
    http://www.mozilla.org

    4: SpywareBlaster and SpywareGuard
    http://www.javacoolsoftware.com

    5: Spybot Search & Destroy
    http://www.safer-networking.org

    6: Trillian
    http://www.trillian.cc

    7: 7-Zip
    http://www.7-zip.org

    8: Really Slick Screensavers
    http://www.reallyslick.com

    9: X-Setup
    http://www.xteq.com

    10: BigFix
    http://www.bigfix.com

    I know number 4 is two proggies, but I figure that they're closely related enough to be considered one solution.