Slashdot Mirror


The Latest And Greatest Console Applications?

An anonymous reader writes "While the 'Linux on the desktop' battle has yet to be won, KDE and Gnome are making great progress. There are too many apps to list on the cutting edge of software development for the X environment. But what about those of us stuck with old machines? Or who just want to work with the console? What console-based apps, that are undergoing just as much development as their X counterparts, do you use? Things like instant messengers and bittorrent clients, for example..."

26 of 618 comments (clear)

  1. One word . . . by micromoog · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:One word . . . by Draoi · · Score: 5, Funny
      Thank you for re-introducing me to NetHack. It took me five years to wean myself off that, and now I've found a MacOS X version. There goes *my* working day ... :-)

      As they say on the site;

      Thank you for the latest release of gradewrecker. My GPA just went in the corner and shot itself.
      -- USENET posting, author unknown
      --
      Alison

      "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein

  2. mp3blaster. by Slayk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's a slick little console mp3 player with playlist support. It is quite nice to have when I do something to b0rk X.

  3. BitchX by TypoNAM · · Score: 5, Informative

    When it comes to IRC gotta love BitchX. :)

    --
    This space is not for rent.
    1. Re:BitchX by Juanvaldes · · Score: 5, Informative

      irssi is where it's at ;)

  4. Screen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Man, how many times has screen saved my butt? Multiplies the usefulness of any console appplication by five.

    1. Re:Screen. by BinLadenMyHero · · Score: 5, Informative
      I use screen 24/7, it's awesome. But it's a utility, not an application.

      Vim to edit text

      Mutt for email

      elinks to browse the web

      MPlayer to play any media file (even videos in text mode)

      mICQ for ICQ (also centericq for a multi-protocol IM client)

      BitchX for IRC

      lftp for ftp

  5. Bleeding Edge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The version of ls that comes with Fedora Core 2 is 5.2.1. Incredible software! Would use again! A+++++!!!!

  6. Screen.... by deadmongrel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One of the most under used console app is Screen. http://www.gnu.org/software/screen/ I am not a sys admin but Screen is still pretty handy.

    1. Re:Screen.... by FullyIonized · · Score: 5, Interesting
      And one of the most underutilized features of screen is multi-user sessions. I have used this to do XP-style programming with a colleague who was working 900 miles away

      The way I did it:
      Start up screen with a temporary screenrc file that contains:
      multiuser on
      addacl other_username
      detach

      Note that I have the screen session detach. Type "screen -ls" to get the screen session name (for the other person), then type "screen -r" to reattach. The other person ssh'd into my machine and typed "screen -x session_name". It is possible to script all of this to make it easier.

      We then talked over the phone (headphones highly recommended) while we could simultaneously edit in a vi session. It was hilarious because we'd start yelling at each other "No,no, let ME type." Still, these sessions are always among my most productive programming sessions because we catch each others mistakes and program the parts of the program that we have expertise in.

      --
      Sigs are bad for you.
    2. Re:Screen.... by Q2Serpent · · Score: 5, Informative

      Kibitz does the same thing (it comes with expect), but it's tons easier to get a newbie into the session - when you type "kibitz ", they get a message in their console that says "type 'kibitz -number' to kibitz with ".

      Extremely useful for collaboration on the command line.

  7. Naim by primal39 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    naim is a great, free, GPL'd instant messaging client. Very featureful, intuitive, and in my opinion one of the best examples of ncurses programming out there.

    --
    Eschew Obfuscation
  8. Well ... by mios · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... some folks start X from the command line, soo ...

  9. Re:fortune! by Ricwot · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's a program that is viable for enterprise systems, we just rename it to fortune-500

    --

    Any spare gmail invites could do better than ending up at rjw16@st-and.ac.uk

  10. Nmap by sharp-bang · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This continues to be my port scanner of choice; although it has a pretty front end, it really doesn't need one.

    --
    #!
  11. centericq by ultrabot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Centericq rocks. I use it for icq, and occasional peep at irc channels. No need to stress the mousehand, and it also has a very small footprint. It's apt-gettable, so there's no excuse to not try it :).

    One advantage of text based apps is the fact that no window management is required, so minimal keyboard driven window managers like ion and ratpoison can be used optimally.

    --
    Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
  12. Bittorrent clients by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Informative

    My old linux text-only boxes exist do do my bulk downloading for me.

    Bittorrent itself is the best client, the btdownloadcurses.py script. Building just the ncurses app without needing the bloat of X to link against was a bit annoying. Thankfully emerge can pull it off with "-qt -gtk -gnome" use flags.

    Another good client is called ctorrent, written in C, a console app. It segfaults when the d/l is > 2gigs (I think thats why), and sometimes doesnt redownload failed segments.. I had to drag some downloads to a windows box and finish them up with the real client. Shame about the bugs, it's a very light and fast app, I hope it's finished.

    An old P200/MMX, a big hard drive, and all my downloading is done via ssh, and my real computer is never bogged down with such tasks. wget, bittorrent, ncftp, etc..

    Also, it makes throttling it easy. At the gateway, I just throw all traffic from my "grunt boxes" IP's into a lower queue. Torrents no more grind my connection to a halt, it's much more effective than trying to mark packets for other reasons (size, etc).

    dircproxy is a cool lil app too, I can keep connected to IRC and bounce from machine to machine. It doesn't handle DCC's all that well, it always seems to clip them.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  13. plugins for lynx... by rivaldufus · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm working on a Java plugin, a Flash plugin, and a google bar - as well as a popup blocker and an anti-spyware plugin.

  14. Re:Why? by mattrumpus · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've got one good reason. At some places of work IM clients are banned and its easier to pretend a text based client is real work...

    --
    Who's with me?! I SAID... WHO'S WITH ME!!??
  15. Hey, JOE by robslimo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Pardon me, I'm a WordStar cripple from way back in the early '80s. Got my start coding asm in WordStar on a CP/M machine for a while, then cut my teeth on Turbo Pascal and Turbo C.

    The main draw of the WordStar keystrokes? Your hands never have to stray far from home row. It's incredibly sane.

    Joe's Own Editor (JOE) perpetuates the sanity in the 'nix world.

  16. Because.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm a linux newbie really, but even I can answer this...

    1. I might not have a 256M+ of RAM on my system needed to make the current linux GUIs run well.

    2. I might have 256+MB, but since my linux box runs as a webserver, I might not want to bog it down with a GUI.

    3. I might just PREFER CLIs.

    4. And finally, I am a 1337 h4x0r and don't want to use anything that you n00bs might be able to understand.

    I'm being serious so if you were going to mod me funny, don't mod me at all!

  17. For when you're not playing games... by Badam · · Score: 5, Informative

    After several attempts to live solely on the console, here are the best apps I've found:

    Links: a superior web browser alternative to Lynx that formats things correctly on your screen.

    Mutt and Pine: Two great email clients that allow you to work much more quickly than with any graphical client.

    Nano: My favorite text editor. I refuse to feel guilty that it's easy to use!

    Micq: a very nice ICQ client that works much better than the various AIM console clients that are out there.

    Finally, last, and well yes, basically least, Seatris: This is the best -- the best! -- of all the console tetris games. It takes me back to wasting hours in the various UC Santa Cruz computer labs.

    Um, Go Banana Slugs! Go Stevenson College! I think that takes care of this year's quota of school spirit.

    --

    Check out my blog: My Galaxy is Milky Way Adjacent
  18. startx by FedeTXF · · Score: 5, Funny

    The best command line tool is startx. It gives you all the power of a full graphical environment within the console.

  19. Snownews by asbradbury · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've found snownews to be a great RSS aggregator, and prefer using it to any of the GUI-based aggregators I've tried. Your mileage may vary, but I'd say it's one of the most useful console applications I've recently discovered.

  20. Re:Why? by _xeno_ · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Anyone else think this isn't so much a strength with the command-line app but a weakness with X?

    I really would like to see that feature added to X. You can (sorta) do it with VNC or Remote Desktop in Windows (sorta means "entire desktop only, not a single app") - it would be really nice if you could take a GUI-based program running on some other computer and "forward" it to your own computer, without restarting the application.

    IMO, that's a weakness of X - something that X should do, and not a strength of the console. They both should do it. As I'm sure everyone knows, screen is incredibly useful. Something like it for X would be really nice, too.

    --
    You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
  21. Personal Choices by Phil+Gregory · · Score: 5, Informative

    I live in text mode. Here's a selection of my preferred apps. Most of these are still in active development (though some are more active than others).

    screen. Simply indispensable. It slices and dices console sessions. Pretty much everything I do, I do in screen. I've a page elsewhere that describes everything screen does for me.

    zsh. My shell of choice. Think of all the good features of bash, ksh, and tcsh rolled together. (Without much of the ickiness, particularly the csh heritage.) Personally, the killer application of zsh was that fact that not only did it have context-sensitive completion but (unlike tcsh) it shipped with hordes of completion definitions right out of the box. Type 'dpkg -L fo<tab>' and zsh will autocomplete on the Debian packages currently installed on your system. With an ssh-agent running, type 'scp otherhost:fo<tab>' and zsh will ssh to the other system and autocomplete on the files available on that host.

    irssi. The best IRC client I've come across, certainly beating out IrcII, BitchX, and even epic. Multiple windows, extensible, tons of plugins available.

    bitlbee. This is actually an IRC-to-Instant-Messaging gateway. It allows me to use irssi and the IRC environment with which I am so familiar to also deal with those of my friends and family who insist on using the various IM services.

    snownews. curses-based RSS aggregator. I shopped around a bit before finding an aggregator that I liked. snownews does everything I need.

    mutt. Possibly the best mail client around, GUI or not. While pine is okay (and simpler to use), mutt is much more customizable and scales better to large volumes of email.

    procmail. Again, not exactly command line, but essential to my email usage.

    Emacs. My text-mode editor of choice. Feel free to substitute XEmacs or vi (preferably vim) at your own preference. I prefer emacs to vi, though I know a decent amount of vi, as any sysadmin should. I actually like XEmacs a little better than GNU Emacs, but GNU Emacs has better UTF-8 support.

    w3m. There's also links; I'm not tremendously familiar with it because w3m fills all of my needs and it used to be the case that w3m had better HTML support than links, but I don't believe this is any longer the case. Of note is the fact that w3m can do tabbed browsing, though it's not multithreaded, so you can't read one tab while another is loading. Also, if you run w3m with a valid $DISPLAY, it can even show images in the pages it displays.

    moosic. This is a music jukebox. The features that distinguish it from other such programs are twofold. First, it runs as a standalone server; you interact with it via a command line client. (In theory, a curses or GUI client could be written, but to my knowledge none yet has.) Second, it's customizable with regards to how it plays music. It has a config file where you tell it what programs to use to play various music formats (it does come with reasonable defaults). Someone elsewhere in this article pointed out mpd; I'll have to look at that, but it at least doesn't appear to support the various MOD formats.

    mplayer. It does more or less require some graphical output (X, framebuffer, whatever), but it's run and displays it status in text mod

    --
    355/113 -- Not the famous irrational number PI, but an incredible simulation!