Ask Slashdot: What Software Can You Not Live Without?
An anonymous reader writes "Whenever I install a fresh operating system on my computer, I immediately grab a handful of programs that I simply must have. After that, I generally wait and install other pieces of software as I need them. My list of known, useful programs has dwindled over the past few years as projects died, ownership transferred, and functionality changed. At the same time, I've begun to have use for certain types of software that I've never needed before. It can be time-consuming and risky to install and evaluate every single option. So, I'm curious: what pieces of software do you find the most useful and reliable? Don't feel the need to limit yourself by operating system, platform, or hardware. If you're so inclined, a brief description about what makes the software great would be helpful, too."
Pacemaker firmware.
For Windows, I always install Agent Ransack. My job requires I work with a file type that doesn't lend itself to the standard file search. Agent Ransack really excels at finding needles in haystacks. I also use Beyond Compare on every work PC. After that, it USED to be the gchat app from google, but with them moving to Google talk / hangouts, I've changed over to Pidgen.
Always the first thing I install. It even works on all major OS. Keeps beta version at bay ;)
Decode your health
sudo apt-get -y install build-essential
And also:
sudo apt-get -y install vim
sudo apt-get -y install git-core
sudo apt-get -y install tcsh
sudo apt-get -y install python
sudo apt-get -y install python-setuptools
sudo apt-get -y install libboost-all-dev
sudo apt-get -y install gdb
sudo apt-get -y install valgrind
If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
Solitaire
Unable to use an computer without it, runs fine under wine ..
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On a new Android phone, the first thing that I do is root it and install Titanium Backup.
Then there are a few other apps that I must have, though the specifics aren't as important as the functionality:
VNC client: I like Jump (which was a Amazon Free App of the Day a while back) because it has ssh integrated. It's a pain using middle and right mouse buttons, though, and it doesn't use public key authorization for ssh (though I think the iPhone version does).
Terminal: I like KBox (http://kevinboone.net/kbox2.html) so that I can write and use some scripts.
SSH Client: I think I use SSH Droid.
Hacker Keyboard: Having a keyboard with both numbers and symbols active at the same time as letters is really nice, even if it does use up half the screen.
apt-get install task-desktop task-file-server task-laptop
CLI tools: vim, curl, wget, aptitude on Debian based distros.
GUI tools: Chrome, (Libre/Open)Office, Thunderbird. Any other is as required at "runtime".
Pick your programs, install them all silently, with good defaults, and check(and install) updates for all with very effort.
On my regular Linux desktop and laptop systems, I just want the basic apps, and then have it get out of the way so that I can work:
emacs, xterm, OpenSSH, and twm (with a few patches I've added).
The only big apps that I use are Thunderbird and Chromium.
I make sure to not install Gnome or KDE.
The fat client lives...
fat?
Office 2003 was fat.
Office 2013 ate the OS and shit out Windows 8. Yeah, it's that morbidly obese. Should have named the release "Fat Bastard", but I heard that's being reserved for IE12.
Feedback: VLC is my first install regardless of OS. Damn thing just runs anything I throw at it. Used it for years now.
It's just an excuse to have an open thread and chat. If that's not your thing, that's fine.
Firefox and Opera are on my list of good ones so far.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
That would be Thunderbird, followed by Calibre and Skype. I don't care for Evolution, so Thunderbird which is nice and simple to use! Calibre since I have a Sony Reader which uses epub format, since Calibre can convert just about any eBook format to just about any other one, as long as they are not DRMed, it also keeps my eBook library nicely organized. Skype is because one son lives 800 miles away and another 6,157 miles away right now, and Skype works with MS, Apple and Linux OSes so we can keep in touch and see each others faces once in a while!
CRAN, and PYPI. I pretty much have everything I need with the 3 repositories.
They are the Alpha and the Omega.
Since I switched to Macs, its basically Excel, Eclipse and Firefox. And gcc, which I get by installing the Xcode command line tools.
I mostly use mac & linux via ssh
Windows:
Irfanview - Always first thing I do.
Putty
Powerarchiver
All major browsers
Openvpn client
Mac:
All major browsers
Textwrangler
Snapndrag (best screenshot tool ever)
Textual
Remote Desktop (Mac & windows)
Tunnelblick (openvpn)
Adium
Linux:
Random tools as needed
Sure, GCC, Linux, sendmail, SCCS, any many more are essential to the open software stack I would die for. But the importance of a modern, full-featured, open browser simply can't be overstated. Without Firefox, the web would be a much less trustworthy world, and I'd be much less willing to take part in it.
The first thing I install is a system monitor.
I like to keep a close eye on CPU usage, memory usage, disk usage, and network usage. Without that information it feels like I'm flying blind. It is often important on a new system when I don't know what is running and consuming resources.
We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
-- Anais Nin
Emacs.
I learned one editor in the 80's, and it's still as or more powerful than anything else out there. Runs on every OS, in every environment, edits every kind of text file, even things fancy new IDEs like Visual Studio don't know what to do with and fall back to treating as plain text. Integrates with source control, and has more powerful editing abilities than any other editor I've ever encountered.
In recent years, it's even trivial to install: "apt-get install emacs".
But it has a steep learning curve, something that's out of style.
It's not like I'd die without it, but I wouldn't' get into any of my accounts. I also use a lot: Firefox, TextWrangler, Xcode, clang, quicksilver, Mac OS X, ...
Last version of LibreOffice
Gimp
inkscape
and a buch of font.
All linux come with ssh and telnet, who need more.
Ceci n'est pas une Signature !
I agree. Very powerful although I wish it wasn't so tied to a really old Ubuntu release.
vi or vim, must have, everything else is gravy
Firefox Chrome
MS Security Essentials
Malwarebytes
LibreOffice
Filezilla
Gimp
After that it depends on what I'm purposing the system for.
If it's for my use, I'll install VirtualBox along with a copy of my XP VM for some legacy software that doesn't play on any later versions of Windows
"Do the Right Thing. It will gratify some people and astound the rest." - Mark Twain
A computer is unusable without a pr0n collection installed, so VLC a lot of good movies a good picture viewer and pictures, and lastly a good joystick :)
On any new Mac (and NeXT) since the 90's. I've seldom launched an app any other way in years.
'Your brain is God.' -- Dr. Timothy Leary
Firefox and Opera are on my list of good ones so far.
You can't live without having both of them ??
There are two kinds of editors; emacs, and lesser.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
Adobe Lightroom - does 95% of what I would do with photoshop, works on raw images and simplifies my workflow tremendously. I almost never use photoshop anymore.
Ubuntu, Windows 8.1, Libreoffice, Adobe Reader, - self explanatory.
Firefox with Adblock plus and Better Privacy and HTPS Everywhere installed.
KeepassX - Password manager. Multiplatform, much less buggy than Keepass2 (note to develepers: please take it out of alpha status!)
F.Lux - warms up the color of your monitor in the evenings so that it doesn't interfere with your circadian rhythm, hopefully improves sleep. (hey - it's free!)
Videolan (VLC) - excellent video player (despite the crappy name)
Sandboxie (paid $$) - Sandbox your browser and various other programs
FastOne Image Viewer - excellent, free sildeshow software
Secunia PSI - makes sure your programs are kept up-to-date
If your editor doesn't have its own church, how can it be a serious piece of code?
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
You misspelled "Faget"
Emacs is a necessity for me.
For editing local and remote (via tramp) files.
Run simple shells, compile, grep, diff, clean directories. All within emacs.
Every time you level up, and try something new, there is some pleasant surprise, like TRAMP mode.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
The very first thing I install on a home machine is an antivirus/antimalware app, since it's Windows after all. Followed by Chrome to download and install drivers/apps for my peripherals (printer, videocard, dsl camera, scanner, etc..). Once that's done comes Thunderbird, Mozbackup (to transfer my old emails/addons) and VirtualBox (With Ubuntu, Edubuntu). Followed by Photoshop and Premiere. Then Steam, Origin and World of Warcraft. The rest I do like you, install them as required.
It's better to burn out than to fade away
From productivity to timewasters, I'd be bankrupt if I had to pay for all the free software available to me due to it being being part of a Linux distribution. Yes, I know that much of the same software has been ported to proprietary systems such as Microsoft's and Apple's, but with Linux I know that from the ground up I can depend on the software in the base distro being free.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
This list is part of a much longer list that I maintain and sometimes publish.
* 7-ZIP -- Create/Extra ZIP and many other other file compression formats, very powerful. Note can open some installer EXE and MSI files (see Microsoft Orca for more MSI options) (free, open source, Windows, there may be Linux/Mac variants). http://www.7-zip.com/
* CCleaner -- System optimization, privacy and cleaning tool. (free, closed source, Windows) http://www.ccleaner.com/ **Alternate Tool** BleachBit -- Free cache, delete cookies, clear Internet history, shred temporary files, delete logs, and discard junk you didn't know was there. (free, open source Linux/Windows) http://bleachbit.sourceforge.n...
* Greenshot -- Good Screen Shot tool with simple annotation options. (free, open source, Windows) http://greenshot.sourceforge.n...
* IrfanView -- Image Program View, convert, crop, optimize, sideshow, batch Processing etc (free noncommercial, closed source, Windows) http://www.irfanview.com/
Instantbird -- Multi Protocol Instant Messaging (IM) Client - AOL, MSM, Yahoo, etc (free, open source, Linux/Mac/Windows) **Alternate Tool** Pidgin - Multi Protocol Instant Messaging (IM) Client - AOL, MSM, Yahoo, etc (free, open source, Linux/Mac/Windows) http://pidgin.im/
* KeePass Password Safe -- Good Quality secure password manager, stores passwords encrypted. (free, open source, Windows Linux/Mac with Mono) http://keepass.info/
* LibreOffice -- Power-packed Open Source personal productivity suite for Windows, Macintosh and Linux, that gives you six feature-rich applications for all your document production. Excellent replacement for other Office Suites, can open many different and sometimes odd file types -- (free, open source, Linux/Mac/Windows) http://www.libreoffice.org/
* Mozilla.org FireFox -- Web browser for more security then Internet Explore (free, open source, Linux/Mac/Windows) http://www.mozilla.com/ http://www.mozilla.org/
* SpeedCrunch -- fast, high-precision and powerful cross-platform desktop calculator (free, open source, Linux/Mac/Windows) http://www.speedcrunch.org/ & http://speedcrunch.blogspot.co...
* UltraEdit -- Probably the absolute best most powerful text editors around, edit huge files, FTP, column mode, and more (shareware, closed source, Win/Mac/Linux) http://www.ultraedit.com/ **Alternate Tool** Noteppad++ -- Good Text / Source Code Editor replacement for Microsoft Windows Notepad/Wordpad (free, open source) http://notepad-plus.sourceforg...
* VLC Media Player -- One of the best media players out there. Highly portable multimedia player for various audio and video formats (MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, mp3, ogg, ...) as well as DVDs, VCDs, and various streaming protocols. It can also be used as a server to stream in unicast or multicast in IPv4 or IPv6 on a high-bandwidth network. (free, oen source, Linux/Mac/Windows)
http://www.videolan.org/
I don't use it, never used it, and never plan on using it, not even sure it really exists, but I feel my life would be incomplete without it.
screen and vlock. Most everything else I need is installed by default.
Wish I could +1 this.
~ People that think they are better than anyone else for any reason are the cause of all the strife in the world.
I don't do any coding these days, so I basically get by with Firefox and Skype. I'm thinking of getting rolling again in the creative field though, so if anyone wants to recommend decent video editing software for Linux and/or Windows please leave a comment.
Windows
Firefox
Filezilla
Putty
VirtualBox
My current OS is server 2008 R2 Standard Edition.
Winrar.
AcdSEE32 bit 2.42 (Yes. OLD AS THE HILLS)
Bullzip PDF Printer.
WinSCP (ftp program)
Foobar2000
Office 2010 (outlook required for work)
A whole whack of registry and hacked system files.
Good list. It overlaps many of mine:
Vim
7-zip
Python
Visual Studio
BeyondCompare
Sysinternals
Firefox, Chrome, and Opera
grep (I use a really ancient one from Borland C - I've tried GNU's version but simply don't like it)
git, Tortoise Git, and msysgit
OpenOffice or LibreOffice
Adobe Acrobat and Flash (sadly)
and last but not least (drum roll, please)...
Classic Shell
Note that my list contains a few key things that only run on Windows, notably Visual Studio and the ancient Borland grep. I keep hoping that the "GNU/Linux System" will catch up in both regards, but I'm not holding my breath. ;-)
Skipping past the inane flamebait responses about how much Windows sucks and just answering the question since I am required to use Windows for work.
* Wizmouse - Gotten a little quirky lately, but scrolls any window under the mouth without the window needing focus
* Ninite Updater - Best way I've found to "forget" about having to update many individual apps
* MWSnap - Great, simple and free screenshot tool. Hasn't been updated in ages but still works great
* Mouse Speed Switcher - Automatically changes numerous mouse settings whenever I switch devices
* SecondCopy - Numerous options for automatic/manual backup
* EditPad Lite (JG software's version of notepad on steroids)
* FastStone Image Viewer - Replaces the abortion of an image viewer that MS includes in the OS.
* Handbrake - duh
* AnyDVD - because sometimes I still do get physical DVDs
* Chrome - Often better than IE (though not always)
* Chrome extension: Empty New Tab Page - Fixes horrible security & privacy issue with Chrome startup showing recent tabs
* FireFox - Annoying, bloated and slow, but useful with extensions such as Adblock Plus, BetterPrivacy, DownloadHelper, NoScript, RequestPolicy
* Last Pass - password manager
* Xmarks - bookmarks synchronizer
* MS Office - Open/Libre just doesn't cut it for interacting with the real corporate world
* Thunderbird with Lightning extension for Google calendar - email & personal calendar
That's pretty much it for "must have". Things like Skype didn't make it onto the list because although I use them frequently for work, I'd still be productive without them.
Multi-platform:
Firefox, Chrome
OS/X:
Terminal, Outlook, Word and Excel, Dropbox, Evernote, Geektool, todo.txt, Rido
Android
Feedly, Maps, Beat the Traffic, Evernote, bar code scanner, my grocery store's app, Rido, Sonos
Windows 7:
Putty, WinSCP, Notepad++, Rdio, Sonos Linux: vim, terminal, ssh, keystore, apt-get, yum, the list goes on.
Only the dead have seen the end of War. - Plato
Firefox
LibreOffice
GIMP
Audacity
Pidgin
VirtualBox
Clawsmail
VLC/Mplayer
Audacious
Openssh
Lots of other things, but those seem to be a primary "core" for me (Linux, of course).
But generally...
Winders:
Firefox (Used to be chrome - but I'm in a de-Google-ing phase)
7zip
UltraVNC
1Password
Notepad++
Sublime Text
VLC
Balsamiq Mockups
Mumble Client
X-Mind
Unity
Eclipse
Steam
Dropbox
HexChat
Paint Shop Pro 7.02
Paragon HFS+ for Windows
VMWare Workstation (Stability & enterprise compatibility wins)
FRAPS
SecureCRT
hg/TortoiseHG
JDK
Mac:
As windows minus Notepad++
sub VMWare Fusion Pro (Stability & enterprise compatibility wins)
sub Pixelmater for PSP
sub Snak for HexChat
Paragon NTFS for Mac
Remote Desktop Client for Mac
MenuMeters
Hazel
Linux:
(Debian if mine, RHEL/OEL if for the current day job)
- Just what's needed for the boxes purpose
What no virus scanner?
Correct. Learn to firewall and distrust everything on the internet, and you will have a lot less issues with viruses. On Windows I still occasionally get around to installing one of the free ones + MSE even though its balls.
I'm sure I'm forgetting something, but whatever they might be they get installed as I notice they're missing
sorry this post is messed up ... see next post down for better formatting .... i could not delete it after posting.
Basically, i could live without any software at all.
But if you insist, perhaps i would respond : "Linux"
aaaaaaa
Depending on the distro, some things I really need might already be there. So installing or checking if it is installed are the same to me. I often have no idea if it is default or my selection.
The first I will always install or at least check is mc
Espercially for a new install, I think it is easier then using cd, ls and what not as I will be going around a lot and copy files from other places.
vim will be already installed and so will be others, like bash, apt or yast or other software to install.
On the GUI I will always go for XFCE and add the plugins.
I use the NVidea drivers on my 4 screens that run not in xinerama.
Then mplayer and a gui for it. Last in the top of things I will check or install is yad as I have several scripts that depend on it.
I will then copy my scripts and run them one by one to see what is missing.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
There is some nice stuff to have, sometimes trivial and sometimes quite useful.
sshfs
openssh-server
GNU screen (some people will like tmux)
irssi (preferably it runs on an always-on box with screen and ssh server)
dtrx : perfect to extract archives from the command line. It solves the problem of tar -xzvf random_shit.tar.gz : the archive's content may or may not be in a directory, such as random_shit/. So if you extract the archive right away, you run the risk of polluting your current directory with loads of crap (like 10 directories + 105 files at the root of the archive). If you do mkdir random_shit, cd random_shit and tar -xzvf ../random_shit.tar.gz, you run the risk of having wasted your time : if files were at the archive's root, all is fine. If they were in a random_shit directory, now your data has been extracted to a random_shit/random_shit directory and you have to do mv random_shit/* . then rmdir random_shit. .zip, .tar.gz, .tar.bz2 and all others.
I used to do the mkdir random_shit method, or to open the archive in a graphical archive manager before deciding what to do. But dtrx automates this! and works equally for
When I used Windows I liked some command line stuff too : set the DIRCMD environment variable to /O, have the console default to 80x43 and right-click to paste (I think, not sure that worked), and have Windows versions of wget and less.
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Yes, I end up putting MS Office on pretty much first thing - but also OpenOffice/LibreOffice because that's where I have my billing set up. I'd do without MS Office if I didn't have to work with others.
My other must-haves are MATLAB (not my first choice, but it's what my company uses), Pyzo (a scientific-oriented Python distro), jEdit (cross platform editor), Putty (Windows has no ssh), Firefox (I'm addicted to Tree-Style Tabs), IrfanView (on PC only), Inkscape, GIMP, an RPN calculator (XCALC on Windows, RPN Calc widget on Mac), VLC, Dropbox, CrashPlan (cross-platform backup), TeamViewer (cross-platform remote control replacing LogMeIn), Skype, Tortoise Git (on Windows), and finally WizMouse (on Windows, which has odd scroll wheel behavior without it IMHO).
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
MediaWiki. Before I created my note-taking wiki, my ideas went off in all directions.
I'm also pretty heavy into R/C/C++/zsh/ZFS/git right now.
I use OS X, Windows, Linux, iOS, and Android, so exceptions/substitutions are made when an app isn't available for a given platform.
DropBox - Because that's where all the stuff I'm working on at any given time is.
Firefox - Because I'm a same-browser-on-everything kinda guy, and I'm too stuck in my ways for that to be Chrome.
LibreOffice - Because I'm a same-wp-on-everything kinda guy, but not so stuck in my ways that it has be OpenOffice.
Manga Studio - Because I create comics as a hobby, and even on the machines that don't have stylus input, I like to be able to open the projects I'm working on, and work on lettering or coloring. I don't use the GIMP because I think it's worth buying myself nice software sometimes, and I don't use Adobe Creative Shite anymore because that doesn't have to mean wasting money.
CyberDuck - Because a simple drag-and-drop ftp client is handy for getting my stuff where it's going.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
vim is the better editor - there's absolutely no reason to choose emacs over vim
At home: firefox, chrome, quicken, picassa
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
* Launchy: I switch from my sitting desk to a standing desk throughout the day. Instead of using a glitchy duplicate Start button, I use Launchy to run things. Now I don't use the Start button very often anymore, even when it's on the screen.
* Dual Monitor, for duplicate task bars. It's glitchy, though. Crashes a couple times a day, but at least it's not a destructive crash. I should write an AutoHotKey script to restart it when it crashes...
* AutoHotKey: There are a few things I use this for, and it really comes in handy to do those little things that make life easier, like cheating in Cookie Clicker. Actually, its primary use for me is to move all my windows from my 2-screen sitting desk layout to my 1-screen standing desk layout with a simple key combo. But, it comes in handy when I need to quickly automate any repetitive task.
* KeyNote NF: It's a hierarchical note-taking app like Evernote used to be. It's lightweight and intuitive to use, although I'm still looking for something that works with mobile and web that isn't heavy like Evernote is now.
* LICEcap for capturing GIFs easily, cleanly, with a small-ish file size. Better than GifCam, and GifCam is pretty great.
If you are using Windows then start with ninite. It not only handles installation of a bunch of useful things, it also does the job of the package manager that Windows still doesn't have.
I think I literally couldn't manage without ssh. I always install tmux and vim on any machine I use, if they aren't already there. One of the varieties of KeePass is also mandatory for me.
--- SER
This is what I use every day:
TurboTax
LightRoom
Chrome
Thunderbird
KeePass
Google Calendar
I know this post was designed to create a Slashdot civil war, but I was always a Notepad++ lover until I saw someone coding in a modern IDE with vim keybindings. Now, in addition to using vi, vim, gvim and macvim, I use vimium in Google Chrome, and vim plugins for both Visual Studio and IntelliJ (Windows and Mac). It is just crazy how much faster you can code without going to the mouse. When I get on someone else's computer, I just die inside a little. Also, don't forget to remap your Caps Lock key to Esc. It's a registry setting on Windows and there's a little program called PCKeyboardHack on the Mac.
(Beyond rthe base install which includes GIMP, Firefox and LibreOffice)
- A desktop environment that actuially is usable
- Inkscape
- Scribus
- Apache, PHP, MySQL, Aptana, PHPMyAdmin
- Picasa
- K3b
- Xine and whatever I need to play DVDs
- Ghex
- Adobe Reader
- Printer Drivers
- Synaptic Package Manager
- Gparted
"Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
KeePass http://keepass.info/ is the first thing i put on a new device.
(I have not had to install a fresh OS of 10.x in years - knock on wood)
Firefox - lots of control thru add-ons
GraphicConverter - I shoot lots of digital pix and this piece of shareware does most of what I need to manipulate the bulk of them
BBEdit - just the best test editor
JAlbum - easy way to make web albums of hundreds of pix at a time
Transmit - most refined ftp client I've ever run into
LIttle Snitch - nice to know what's coming and going on your box
First and mandatory, install chocolatey http://chocolatey.org/ to easily and quickly install most of these software :
Notepad++ ...
GitExtensions (better than Tortoise Git) or sourcetree
P4merge (one of the best merge software)
ConsoleZ (a descent console for windows)
sumatrapdf (quickest pdf reader)
clover (tabs in file manager)
speedcrunch (a good calc)
greenshot (screenshots)
paint.net
foobar2000
vlc
windirstat
7zip
Sysinternals
Firefox
And do a bat file to install automatically all that with chocolatey!!!!!
Gedit
Scratch
Synapse
Xpad
Geany
Qt 4 Designer
Python
Gimp
Inkscape
Shotwell
Filezilla
Chrome
Thunderbird
Brasero
Clementine
VLC
LibreOffice
gnome-system-monitor
I'm running Bohdi Linux (E17), a few favorite built apps and functionality:
Terminology
Enlightenment File Manager
eDeb
Configure secondary monitor workspaces as tiling (awesome - could not live without - and one of the primary reasons I run Enlightenment) primary tiling workspace dedicated to Chrome, Terminology, and Gedit
Of course it's Enlightenment so I spend the next two-days configuring all of the fine details.
Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
If I'm configuring a laptop that I'll use for both work and vacation:
Default Folder (an add-on/replacement for the Open File dialog)
Graphic Converter (photo manipulation application)
Aquamacs (very well done MacOS version of EMACS)
HDRtist Pro (HDR processing application)
OmniGraffle (Mac equivalent to Visio, drawing package)
Aperture (Photo organizing)
1Password (Password safe)
DiskWarrior (File system maintenance)
Syncovery (front end to rsync)
This doesn't include the stuff I find essential that's built into Mac OS X (and its Unix foundations, such as ssh and bash.)
And for what it's worth, I've been using Graphic Converter and Default Folder for at least 20 years, back to Mac OS 7 days. It says something about the quality/utility of these two applications that they've "stood the test of time."
KeePass 2 is the one software I cannot live without.
I can't remember exactly why.
You are welcome on my lawn.
In order of importance for my work 1. Adobe Acrobat Pro (repeat the above line eight more times) 10. MS Word I can almost do all MS Word stuff with freeware alternatives, but almost. Acrobat alternatives? For pdf power users there is no alternative. None. I don't do graphics much but I can see that GIMP is no photoshop. It *seems* to me that Acrobat vs alternatives' gap is even bigger. But may just be because I don't do graphic works. MS Word
This tool is a nice command prompt replacement. It has two panes for directory listings. It has auto-complete, programmable macros, file search and a lot more features that I don't use but may still be useful. It also has a built in text editor/ file viewer that is nice for opening very large log files where some other windows programme might complain.
Chrome, Notepad++ and Eclipse if I'm doing any development work.
Another reply to be sure that no WINDOWS user missed it!!!!
The first thing that a windows user should install to gain a LOT of time installing and updating software:
http://chocolatey.org/
http://chocolatey.org/
http://chocolatey.org/
http://chocolatey.org/
http://chocolatey.org/
http://chocolatey.org/
And the list of all the available software
http://chocolatey.org/packages
After, you could install your other software using chocolatey ;) (even using a bat script!)
In order to interact with a text editor running on the target, you need either A. an entire USB and video stack on the target or B. a terminal server such as SSH on the target. Which targets are you talking about that have A and lack B?
Geany on Linux; a nice little editor reminiscent of Notepad++.
"The wisdom of the Patriarchs was that they *knew* they were fools." --Master Foo
I have a bash script that installs a list of essential software on any new Debian installation. Here's the list:
- Google Chrome
- Firefox
- Zotero (http://www.zotero.org/)
- Matlab
- Blender
- CMake
- GIMP
- Audacity
- ImageMagick
- Skype
- MeshLab
- Open office suite
- CUDA
- TeXLive 2012 (http://www.tug.org/texlive/acquire.html)
- Emacs 24+
- build-essentials
- astyle (http://astyle.sourceforge.net/)
- Doxygen
- gedit
- sloccount (http://www.dwheeler.com/sloccount/)
- Subversion
- git
- Valgrind
- gdb
- VirtualBox
- Python
- VLC Media player
- ffmpeg
- mencoder
- Non-free codecs for multimedia (MP3, MPG4, H.264, and other modern video codecs)
- Eclipse
- Dropbox
emacs (apt-get ...)
Lilypond (latest development version from the site)
TeXLive (never use your distro's version of TeX/LaTeX -- always just install TeXLive)
Timidity (playback of the MIDI files that Lilypond creates and convert them to FLAC)
mplayer
Followed closely by the silence that it brings.
It's not about stupidity, anonymous troll. It's about time having some actual value.
Windows:
- microsoft security essentials
- windows firewall control (commercial)
- cygwin
- notepad++
- sysutils (procmon etc.)
- ultramon (commercial)
- launchy
- sharpkeys
- autohotkey
- visual c++ express
- 7-zip
Mac:
- little snitch (commercial)
- macports
- better touch tool
- keyremap4macbook
- iterm2
- alfred
- geektool
- menumeters
- caffeine
- xcode
Linux: ...)
- whatever distro-specific set of packages gets me all the dev stuff
- (if needed) whatever distro-specific repository gets me extra packages (say, epel)
- kde
- xfce
- various personal customizations done over the years (xmodmap,
Everywhere: ...
- firefox (noscript, requestpolicy, adblock, flashblock)
- emacs
- python / virtualenvwrapper / git
- bash customizations (powerline, bash completions, personal scripts)
- libreoffice and latex
- truecrypt
- virtualbox
- dropbox
- gimp
these are the baseline, beyond that it depends from what I am using the actual computer for
-- the cake is a lie
My list as close to the order they are installed. I would indeed suffer without them
Power Pro - tell me you know what that is and you'll be the first, I've used it since Win95
HOSTS file I drag around is set in place, not a program but a requirement of mine
COMODO firewall version 5.3.1767, as the newer versions almost require you to call for support.
Opera 12. - Browser - for as long as I can
UltraEdit - text editor
ACDSee - Graphic viewer
Agent version 1.93 Emailer/Usenet
Stunnel to allow an older Agent 1.93 to connect to a secure SSL connection
WhereIsIt - CD/DVD/BlueRay Data base creator and file finder
TreeSize Pro - better than a guess how large a directory or disk is
Agent Ransack - search program.
Bulk Rename Utility - an amazingly full featured program to rename files, Located in the directory below. My Cameras have stopped storing the date on the picture itself, this program adds the date taken to the file name for me.
I have one directory D:\MISGPRGS that I store stand alone's, programs that don't need to be installed or once installed fine on their own, that are too many to mention I don't require a lot of them or have even forgotten some that still there (210 directories now) but it's available to drag shortcuts to the desktop of my newest OS, As well as a few directories within, that are added to my path, Irfanview is there, Process Explorer, as is my Debugger (windbg.exe) and it's requirements.
BTW PowerPro is a jack of all trades type program. A bar of 8 boxes (at the moment), that takes care of the repetitive actions of using Windows. The same as AutoHotKey, and AutoIt. I believe all share the same history in the beginning, one splitting from the other. PowerPro started as Stiletto; a three button mouse program.
As a side note: I sent $25 to the author of PowerPro just before he released it as freeware, that was the third and finial time; for me to send money for software, they quit (no Zmodem), or go freeware.
I'm all setup to lose a system and be up in a few hours, until Win7 always had 3 or more OS's to fall back on. But still good to be up and running in a short time. Linux Mint is installed now for a dual system but (ducks) not a requirement for me.
Do notice no malware prevention other than the HOSTS file, and firewall, no AVG, NOD32 - Just a bit of common sense has kept me as in control as is possible any more.
One thing I miss very much is a very small program who's name I've forgotten (XP broke it) but it grabbed the strings from any program - I know Linux has this. but Windows is lacking in this department, I use Ultra Edit but it's not as easy nor as informative - no String command comes close.
there is only one thing I install on a box that already has windows. Linux!
Feedback: VLC is my first install regardless of OS. Damn thing just runs anything I throw at it. Used it for years now.
I hope you're not running on Dell hardware...
Don't know about reliable but for people with e-readers it's a must.
I boot my old Mac in "target disk mode"(I believe it is called like that), that degrades the Mac into a simple fire wire disk.
During installation of my new Mac it will ask if and what to copy over from that fire wire mac disk pro. (That means it copies my User and all my Data and all the Apps that are not newer on the install DVD)
However as you asked about Applications: Open Office or Neo Office, Omni Outliner, Omni Gaffel, Parallels or vmware virtual machine (sometimes Virtual Box), "The Brain" a brain storming / knowledge management tool (runs on Linux and Windows, too) ... no new 17" Mac Book Pro in sight anyway :-/
Eve Online ofc.
The latest Java edition for that OS, Eclipse and IntelliJ, a few Apache tools, like Tomcat and Ivy, Maven, Ant, a Subversion and/or Git Server. Groovy and Scala, and since last year I'm playing with Squeak SmallTalk.
Standard unix tools, like vim and Apache httpd are preinstalled.
However if Mac OS X is continuing to mutate into an oversized iOS, my next Computer will run something else
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
cups-pdf is usually one of the first ones I put on./
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
For all, most platforms: Libreoffice, Speedcrunch (Calculator), 7Zip, Firefox with Scrapbook, and Thunderbird
Windows Utility: FreeFileSync, Nvidia Inspector, PSpad, and Speedfan.
Windows Multimedia: SMplayer, Virtualdub, Avidemux, CDex, Audacity, Winff (Ffmepeg front end),
Windows Games: Thief 2, Guildwars 2,
Graphics and Design: Rhino3D, Photoshop, Inkscape (Going downhill. Pixels is the only unit that makes not sense for vector, WTF), Irfanview (But and looking elsewhere)
Geekie: Arduino, Processing,
Very Geekie Gucs (Circuit Simulator)
Very Very Geekie, Salome (Science Pre/post-processing), Paraview/Volvire (Visualization), Code Aster (FEM)
Linux: Most covered elsewhere.
Android: Colornote (Postits), Papyrus (Vectror Notes), Osman (Maps), Quickpic, Androoffice, Realcalc, FBreader.
Android Music: DaTuner, Simple Metronome, GuitarTabviewer
Need for Android, but not made: Librioffice, Taskcoach
https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
Comment removed based on user account deletion
*Internet
Mozilla Firefox (MPL)
Mozilla Thunderbird (MPL)
Pidgin IM (GPL v2)
PuTTY (MIT)
*Productivity
LibreOffice (LGPL v3)
Sumatra PDF (GPL v3)
Notepad++ (GPL v2)
*File Utilities
7-Zip (LGPL v2.1)
WinDirStat (GPL v2)
Cyberduck (GPL v2)
*Multimedia
VLC media player (GPL v2)
foobar2000 (Not open, freeware)
Clementine Music Player (GPL v3)
MP3 Diags (GPL v2)
EasyTag (GPL v2)
or Mp3tag (Not open, freeware)
*Encryption
TrueCrypt (Semi-free, TrueCrypt License)
KeePassX (GPL v2)
*Misc.
WinMerge (GPL v2)
Redshift (GPL v3)
or f.lux (Not open, freeware)
thunderbird, skype, chrome, win rar, truecrypt and notepad ++
LibreOffice - latest version, not the old one from your distro
http://www.libreoffice.org/ (install with dpkg -i *.deb)
Dia https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Dia (poor mans visio)
Lyx http://www.lyx.org/ (easy latex editor) with modern-cv to keep my CV up to date
Metasploit, Nessus, ettercap, wireshark, nmap, etc. just for fun
Avidemux, ffmpeg and VLC media player for everything related to video and audio
Gimp and Blender (latest version) for photo editing and 3D-stuff
During my 15 year long career, I've gotten a lot of mileage out of:
Latex
Ghostscript
Octave/GNUplot
Emacs
Xfig
Firefox
In fact, there are only two proprietary programs I rely on heavily: The first is MS Office (can't budge on that, docx is unfortunately the language of communication at my workplace)....LibreOffice works fine in a pinch, but anyone who deals with templated documents in the latest MS format can vouch that its not 1:1. The other is Adobe Acrobat Reader. I very rarely use it, but if I'm making a PDF for widespread dissemenation to my students or colleagues, I like to run it through since I've had issues in the past with docs looking good in Acrobat but no in OSS PDF readers (or vice versa).
It may have been an old version I tried, but I was singularly unimpressed by Calibre.
It silently failed to convert some files, plus it insisted on copying every file I opened with it to its own directory.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
For all purposes:
Firefox, Chrome and Opera - I use separate browsers to keep home/work/porn separated. Install AdBlock on both Firefox and Chrome.
MPC-HC - I'm fine with WMP for music, but for video I need MediaPlayer Classic
LibreOffice - Because you can't do everything with plain text files
Notepad++ - Because there's a lot you *can* do with plain text files
7zip - Handles every compressed file format I've ever seen, except for one really old Mac-specific one I had to use once
Steam - Because at this point I have too many games to abandon Steam, and it really is good at managing such a big library
For work only:
Thunderbird - I used to be able to use GMail's web app, but now that I have two work email addresses I need a full-fledged email client
Paint.NET, GIMP, and Inkscape - for image editing. Paint.NET is useful for making quick edits, like rotating an image. I'm usually done before GIMP would have started up
PuTTY - Best way to connect to my fleet of Linux servers
Komodo - Best IDE for when files are stored on a remote server, as is common with web apps
MySQL Workbench + SQL Server Management Studio - Best way to test database stuff
If using Windows 8, also add Classic Shell Start Menu. It makes it *better* than the W7 start menu once you tweak it right.
And for a first install, Ninite will let you automatically install about 90% of these. Very useful program.
I find WinDirStat a much superior file/directory size analyzer - it offers a tree view with details that is continuously updated as the directories are scanned in a breadth-first order, with indicators for which directory trees haven't yet been fully scanned, allowing for useful analysis to be performed almost immediately instead of waiting for the scan to complete. Then, when the scan is finally finished, you also get a graphical "pillow view" overview of the entire file system, color-coded by file type.
Everything is another great search tool - it only works on NTFS drives, but typically takes only a minute or so to scan a large drive for the first time, seconds to update it's database on subsequent launches, and lists all files whose name contains your specified word fragments literally as fast as you can type. Hit "a" and you will be faced with a list of hundreds of thousands of files before you can type a second letter. It also supports regex if word-fragments are insufficiently powerful for your needs.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
My list (that's the command I run on all boxes I have). I think it has just about everything an average poweruser/developer would want.
apt-get install vim-gnome ssl-cert apache2 php5 postgresql php5-pgsql default-jdk libclass-dbi-perl libdbd-pg-perl libapache2-mod-perl2 libdate-manip-perl octave nmap irssi uptimed rsync subversion cvs build-essential mysql-server mysql-client php5-mysql virtualbox wine texlive-full openssh-server screen openssh-client ntp jhead imagemagick k3b libk3b6-extracodecs mplayer dict dictd dict-foldoc dict-gcide dict-devil dict-jargon dict-wn htop audacious audacious-plugins cmatrix r-base rKward ecryptfs-utils libimage-exiftool-perl finger ant git eclipse javahelper transcode libav-tools ucspi-tcp-ipv6 chromium-browser maven2 mercurial meld lame gnome-disk-utility ffmpeg sshfs dos2unix opencl-headers handbrake-gtk libapache2-mod-gnutls ia32-libs
"If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy
Quite simply, Adblock Plus. It's made the internet a much less annoying and aggravating place.
So there I was, scribbling down some notes off the PC screen by hand, when I reached for the keyboard and Ctrl-S'd.
These are the basics I go with for starters:
AntiVirus Software of Choice (Vipre)
FreeCommander (similar to TotalCommander)
FireFox
NotePad++
Office/Email Software (Microsoft for main PC, or Openoffice/LibreOffice for other PC's)
PDF XChange Viewer
Dropbox
VLC
NetSetMan (awesome for quick changing of network settings for connecting to different networks)
then I start installing development software and other neccessary software for work.
-Virtuawin - mature, stable virtual desktops for Windows. There's prettier alternatives, but this is the I've tried that has never caused any crashing or other issues.
-WinCompose - Gives Windows users a Compose key for entering unicode characters (plus-or-minus, subscripts, extended math symbols, etc) using the same mnemonics as are standard on *nixes, rather than having to remember their code point or use a character map.
-Everything - File search by name, winnows down a list of every file on your hard drive just as fast as you can type the word-fragments that should be in the file name (NTFS only)
-WinDirstat - Directory size information - interactive tree-view is available instantly and updated as the breadth-first scan proceeds, pillow-view is added once the scan is complete.
-BabelMap - far more powerful alternative to Character Map, including the ability to search by character name or browse by code page
-SpeedCrunch - good calculator that keeps a long calculation history
-GraphCalc - excellent 2D/3D programmable graphing calculator. Open source, but apparently pretty much abandoned.
I won't bother much with heavyweight apps, since others have listed them many times. Except for
Code::Blocks - cross-platform IDE. Not the best I've used, but it's available on all the major OSes.
EasyMercurial - super-simplified, "grandma suitable" GUI interface for the handful of most commonly used version control functions, including graphical visualization of the branch/merge graph. Whether you don't use version control as not worth the hassle, or want to introduce budding developers to the wonders of source control without getting them bogged down in the details, you need this. And if/when you outgrow it your archives are all standard Mercurial, so you can seamlessly upgrade to the command line or a more powerful GUI.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
Are you that stupid that you can't figure out how to create your own .tcshrc file for the behavior you want in your environment?
Are you seriously fucking suggesting that one should manually create config to just make very basic things like tab completion and Home and End keys to work? That's just crap software.
operating system software that doesn't have source code.
I swear I will quit the computing field if I can't use source code any more, for example my OS kernel.
I will open up a Indian restaurant or something.
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
First things first:
aptitude so dependencies automatically get installed and uninstalled. Edit the configuration to not install recommended packages by default. Keep it lean!
Then:
openntpd (or some other ntpd) so the computer will know what time it is.
sudo so that I can log in as a regular user and still do system maintenance.
openssh-server (or some other SSH server) so I can log in remotely. I usually change the port number. Make sure root logins are disabled.
tmux so that I can have multiple shells in a single ssh session. screen works for this, too, but I recently switched to tmux.
rsync so that I can copy files around efficiently.
After that, it depends on what I want to do with the system. Usually, there will be at least some software development, so build-essential (libc-dev, gcc, make), irb, git. Usually ssh and some network debugging tools like ping and traceroute6.
I like zsh, so if I'm going to be using the system extensively, I'll install that. If this is my primary system, irssi and mutt. If the system has enough memory to run it, emacs24-nox.
If I want a GUI, xserver-xorg, xterm, whatever window manager I happen to like at the moment (wmii), some web browser (iceweasel).
It's been a while since I've last done this, so I may have missed some things, but this seems to be about it. The package names are for Debian-like systems and will likely be a bit different for other systems, but I don't generally maintain those.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
... when I kept an emergency DOS boot floppy I would have included a smallish text editor like 'edlin' and a hex editor (for editing binaries, screwed up wordperfect files, etc.). Later on I replaced 'edlin' with 'point', a nifty editor that came with Logitech's mice that could edit files of any size that would fit in memory. Probably not exactly what the OP was asking about but those were my go-to tools back in those days.
Nowadays, I try and install Emacs (yes, vi is everywhere but I started out with the Perfect suite on DOS and then microemacs on Coherent so Emacs key bindings are permanently burned into my brain and if I'm going to be working on something all day, I find Emacs to be more useful), PostgreSQL, a slew of Perl modules, rcs, make, and R. Yeah, yeah... a C compiler is required for the Perl modules so I'll want that on at least one system. If I have the space I'll toss TeX (and a couple of closely related -- for me at least -- tools like ps2pdf, etc.) on my primary system so I can pound out documentation, especially for things that change fairly often (MS Office and LibreOffice drive me crazy). I use rcs for tracking changes in those .tex files; don't need anything heavier than that. Even if I'm stuck on a Windows system, I'll be downloading Cygwin and including those tools.
Now let the flames begin!
CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
*Debian (preferrably from Sid)
*Blender
*VIM with some python markup niceness. (If you want to be productive with programming take the time to learn this.)
*Yakuake (quake style console).
*Python and various packages like Django, SQLAlchemy, python-virtualenv.
*Most of the linux command line tools, grep, awk, more, less, cat, dog, top, ls, find, ps, kill, bg, fg.
*Little tools like clipman
*ffmpeg
*k3b
*Firefox, chromium (both with all the addons to block ads etc eg: stop the internet being s**t).
*VLC
*GIMP and Inkscape (by no means good with these but i dont care they work well enough).
I could have listed a whole web stack but i can live without it. (my job). Its all FOSS and every time i have to go back to Windows/Mac i think how can anyone stand the rubbish OS'es those two companies produce now.
Things I can't live without: Air, Food, Water, Shelter
First thing for me always is FreeHand MX because it simply is still the best graphics design software ever. As it is PPC software, I stay on Mac OS X 10.6.8. And with every new version of OS X I am more glad I did, when I see all the crap Apple has produced since.
- openssh
- mosh
- tmux
- mutt
- rsync
- vim
- vim-outliner
- GNU toolchain
- wyrd
- orpie
- sc
- links2
- bitlbee
- irssi
+ gui:
firefox-aurora
gimp
openshot
Xmonad
Xfce
rox
audacity
audacious
vlc
apt-get
nano
For Programming:
Sublime 3
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
This looks cool:
http://mobaxterm.mobatek.net/
Visual demonstration on page.
Futurist Traditionalism
I use Windows 7 at work, lots of word processing and PDF documents. These are now essential to me:
...and my weirdest one: Window 7 hack to enable focus-follow-mouse.
Winroll (right-click on X pushes window behind other windows)
do-PDF
Handyfind (must-have find-text-as-you-type tool, works in most apps incl. Office)
Cygwin (rsync, fortune messages in a periodic loop)
ClassicShell
PDF-Xchange Viewer (free OCR)
7-zip
Actual Window Manager (Commercial, but worth it. Sizer is a less capable but free substitute).
T-Clock 2010
Office 2003 (white-hot hate for the Ribbon; will re-consider LibreOffice/OpenOffice if they ever provide a Normal/Draft Mode for Writer)
Marxio Checksum Verifier
LibreOffice Draw
Gimp (imports and edits scanned PDF files)
The latter was available for XP under TweakUI, but went missing with Windows 7 and I needed it so bad I wound up hacking something myself.
Like Winroll and Actual Window Manager, this feature is inspired by a lot of time with X11. I cut my teeth back in the day with twm and lots of X-terms and Emacs windows, and I grew used to simply hitting the mouse with the side of my hand to shift from one window to another, without actually gripping the mouse and lining up my finger to click the button. Now, I find wherever I put the mouse pointer, I expect the underlying window to scroll with the wheel - I don't expect to have to click the left-button first and often don't want the window to raise either (oddly this is how it works on stock OS X, but only for the scroll wheel).
Windows plays surprisingly nice with focus-follow-mouse, and the odd UI glitches here and there with one app or another I've learned to work around; it's worth it.
Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
By voidwaretools.
An internal system operation returned the error "The operation completed successfully.".
Locate32 is much faster than Agent Ransack
Moderated Usenet
Some of the lesser known high quality & useful software (so won't be listing emacs here):
It's one of the first things I install. http://beyondgrep.com/
Not affiliated, just a fan.
zsh, vim+plugins, ssh, ssh keys, unison, git, rvm for ruby and some gems, guake/yakuake, htop, solarized and all the corresponding config files
Linux, OSX or windows. A computer is useless to me without an OS.
Of course. Steam.
Born to Play
Emacs
Firefox
Dexpot (best multi-desktop tool for my needs, out of several I've tried)
IZArc (7zip's GUI just annoys me for some reason)
vlc
ClamWin
Agent Ransack (I'll admit I've not tried the alternatives)
Cygwin
(I haven't got a clear favorite for music yet -- Foobar2000 or MediaMonkey, usually, but might give MusicBee a try)
I need TeX/LaTeX. And GNU emacs.
Been using it so long that its hardwired into my brain. Productivity drops at least 2X with any other tool (even after months of using Python).
Putty, the SSH, Serial, and Telnet utility knife.
who moded this down? good information
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
Not just basic monitoring, you can send signals, pin processes to cpus, use strace.
I do wish it were extensible (for example, to add a temperature monitor).
What part of `yes no` don't you understand?
All on Windows as I currently dont have a Linux box.
Miranda IM (open-source multi protocol IM client that does IRC, ICQ, AIM,. Yahoo and MSN)
WinAmp (music player with a nice clean simple interface that plays my entire music collection)
SeaMonkey (open-source all-in-one browser/email solution sharing a lot of code with Firefox and Thunderbird)
CDEx (open source program for ripping music CDs on the rare occasion I want to do that for some reason)
Filezilla (open source FTP client with every feature you could possibly need in an FTP client)
Universal Extractor (great tool for unpacking installers and other things that Winrar and 7-zip cant handle)
Process Monitor (great for finding out e.g. just where some program I am running is looking for a particular file or registry key or just which files its reading or all sorts of other useful stuff)
Wireshark (open source, great for monitoring network traffic to e.g. figure out unknown protocols or to identify what URLs a particular program is downloading)
XVI (great hex editor and fairly light weight)
TortoiseGit (open source shell extention for GIT repositories)
TortoiseSVN (open source shell extention for SVN repositories)
ZtreeWin (modern windows-console-based clone of the old XTree file manager, perfect for searching a bunch of files for a particular keyword then searching inside the file with the built-in text viewer. Or any number of other things that would require more steps/effort if done with other tools)
I've been notoriously addicted to Blender (3D modelling software) over the last 10 years, it would be hard for me to let that go, real hard. In fact...I think it would be easier to live without internet access than Blender. Blender has brought me food on my table and wasted countless hours of my life. Linux is just freedom, I'm a bit of a control freak, I need to feel that I'm in control of my computers, not some remote corporate that steals my life without my consent, and besides...if compiled from scratch, the computer I use - becomes mad blazing fast in comparison to nearly any newer windows computers.
What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
Agreed. Have you tried Glances? In some ways it is like htop on steroids.
We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
-- Anais Nin
CPU microcode :-P
Directory Opus. Five major releases on the Amiga; now at release 10.x on Windows.
If you have to use a PC running Microsoft Windows; it is at least nice to have the Linus blanket of a *working*, highly multi-threaded, File Manager written by a competent programmer!
Cryptolocker. Really solid encryption, runs silently, fast customer support. :)
in the modern GUI realm, Omni Outliner. I have it under OSX and on the iPad. I use it *constantly* for all manner of information.
In the shell, midnight commander. first thing I do when I open a shell is "mc" or "sudo mc" and off I go.
Aside from those, the components of c and c++ application creation (can be compiler and linker only, mc has a nice editor and I don't require a debugging environment though I'm happy to use 'em when they are available), and Python. Without these, there would be little point in me even owning a desktop or laptop computer.
Coming in dead last, a web browser.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
My list:
-Vim (usually I'll go for a motif build of gvim).
-Links2 for a lightweight browser that works with many websites in text, framebuffer, and X11.
-Iceweasel (preferred) or Firefox for a full browser.
Chrom{e,ium} and Midori don't cut it; I liked a number of the features of Opera, but not everything. QtWeb is nice when it works but doesn't have enough security updates (WebKit has fixed several vulnerabilities since the last release).
-xli and fbi/ida for image viewers. (Yes, I use three: one for framebuffer, one for a quick view in X, and one for going through photos and making small adjustments).
-xpdf for a PDF viewer, preferably with a certain small patch.
It's fairly light, doesn't waste much screen, and has rectangular selection. Ever tried copy-pasting from a 2-column pdf that was output wrong?
-ksh (OpenBSD pdksh, ksh93, or mksh. NOT oksh.)
Floating point shell math as in ksh93 is nice.
-Ted for a word processor. Yes, it's almost forgotten, and it only edits RTF. But it displays RTF right, and writes RTFs that show up the same anywhere else. When you could end up using any version of Microshaft Office, Wordpad, OpenOffice/LibreOffice, Textmate, or even vde, that's nice.
-mpg123 is great for audio...
-ffplay or vlc for video
-Xiphos and libsword
-gcc, python, dc, groff/nroff and man.
Agreed. Have you tried Glances? In some ways it is like htop on steroids.
Nice, but too many dependencies for my taste...
What part of `yes no` don't you understand?
That is the expected behavior in Calibre! When you open a file with it, it adds that book to your Calibre Library. If you only want one copy of the book delete the file in the original location. It is after all, primarily an ebook library management system. The conversion feature is really secondary, though very welcome since i don't need an extra application just for that! The editing and creation features have been greatly enhanced lately also! If you care to dig into it, it can do some pretty amazing and complicated things with ebooks, most of which Thankfully I don't need to do!!
These are pretty much all I need to execute and publish computer-based science.
It adjusts the colour temperature of your monitor according to sunrise / sunset times, helping to trigger your circadian rhythm. Almost completely fixed my sleep pattern problems. http://justgetflux.com/
Linux
-------------
gFortran / g95 / ifort
vim and tde (http://adoxa.hostmyway.net/tde/index.html)
LaTeX
xFig
mrxvt
ImageJ
apt (only system maintenance I know)
Some browser. Ice weasel? Whatever.
Windows
------------------
Rietica
FullProf
Excel
Powerpoint and Word so I can collaborate with the great unwashed
Mac
--------------
Mac? Do I look like I'm made of money?
Office 2010, Photoshop CC. Sublime Text 3. Google Chrome. Ruby 2.x. Steam. ConEmu. Can't live without them.
For Windows, everything is listed by others, except:
FreeCommander
The best way to see your files and keep them organized.
Dual pane, drive letter across the top. You don't get lost deep in the tree where drive letters are several levels down already.
Most functions available from the keyboard
Tabs
Directory size option.
Preview files with F3, many file types supported.
Image thumbnail option.
Compare directories.
Handles LAN connections and FTP
Everything is configurable.
This is one of them main reasons that I don't use Linux all the time.
Homebrew and Homebrew Cask - Almost every application I need, effortlessly installed / updated / uninstalled
Chromium - Mainly synchronising web sessions across machines
TextWrangler - Free, simple editor that can handle most common programming languages very well.
VLC - opens just about any type of video files
Fluid - generate native OSX apps for websites. I use it for Google Tasks
IntelliJ - most productive IDE for myself
Nosleep - prevents Macbook from going to sleep when closing the lid, great for moving around within the office, presentations
Tarsnap - backup with encryption and deduplication
ImgurBar - drag and drop to share images
Many of those go on my system first:
Firefox with Adblock Plus
Thunderbird
7zip
Paint.NET
WinMerge
Paint Shop Pro
~~
Total Commander: originally a Norton Commander clone for Windows, I registered it back in the early 90s, and it's still being actively developed.
Opera or Chrome, latest version.
Picasa.
PuTTY and Cygwin. They are the only truly essential thing on my Windows box.
RedNotebook.
It's called an elephant's trunk whereas it is in fact, an elephant's nose, a nose by any other name would smell as sweet
Android
3D Image Live Wallpaper - Live wallpaper moves according to device gyroscope. | 920 Text Editor - Text editor | Adobe Reader - PDF reader | AirDroid - Manage phablet in PC wirelessly. | Alarm Clock Xtreme Free - Alarm clock with infinite snooze. | Google Analytics - Google Analytics | AndroPHP - localhost PHP server. | BubbleUPnP UPnP/DLNA - DLNA server. | Animated Analog Clock Widget - Analog clock with moving second hand. | Camera ZOOM FX - Enhance camera with effects. | Chrome Beta - Google Chrome Beta. | Contact Remover - Contacts remover. | Dropbox - Dropbox client. | Dropsync - Sync folder through Dropbox | Dropsync PRO Key - Dropsync PRO Key | Google Earth - Google Earth. | Feedly - RSS reader. | File Expert - File and folder manager, unzip folder | Flashlight - Flashlight | Flipboard - News aggregator | Google Keyboard - Keyboard. | Golden Screen Cinemas - Golden Screen Cinemas online ticket. | Hybrid Stopwatch and Timer - Beautiful stopwatch and timer. | IMDb - Check movie info and new trailer. | KeePassDroid - Password manager | Maple - Audio player with A-B repeating, pitch adjust, speed adjust and equalizer. | Marine Compass - Compass | Maybank2u - Maybank online banking. | Media Remote for Tablet - Sony Blu-ray player remote control. | mtbink.com mobile - Take http://mtbink.com/ anywhere you go even when offline. A registry of software that I used everyday and some useful utilities. | MX Player - Video player | Google Play Books - Google Play Books | QR Code Reader - QR code reader | QuickPic - Faster picture gallery. | Skype - Instant Messaging. | Solat Malaysia - Malaysia prayer time. | TeamViewer - Remote desktop control. | Todoist - Recurring to-do list manager. | Trello - To-do list manager. | Twitter - Official Twitter client. | WhatsApp - Instant Messaging based on sim card phone number. Works through internet.
Google Chrome extensions
Alexa Traffic Rank - Alexa Traffic Rank | Auto Refresh Plus - Auto refresh web page. | SearchPreview - Provides thumbnail in search result page.
Greasemonkey script
YouTube Center - Disable YouTube DASH playback.
Mozilla Firefox Add-ons
Alexa Toolbar - Alexa Toolbar | Auto Refresh - Auto refresh web page. | ColorZilla - Check the colour of an element in a web page. | Context Search - Right-click search menu. | DownloadHelper - Download YouTube video. | DownThemAll! - Download accelerator and manager. | Firebug - Web page development tools. | Flagfox - Shows flag icon in the address bar. | Google/Yandex search link fix - Transform all the links in Google search page into direct links (no longer gibberish links). | Greasemonkey - Customize any web page using JavaScript. | Imgur Uploader - Upload image to imgur.com via right-click. | Linkification - Converts text links into genuine, clickable links. | MeasureIt - Check the width of an element in a web page. | Pearl Crescent Page Saver Basic - Web page screenshot. | QuickJava - Enable or disable JavaScript / Java / Flash / Silverlight / cookies / images / animated images / CSS | ReloadAll! - Reload all/some tabs. | Restartless Restart - Bring restart button. | Save Session - Save session and exit | SearchPreview - Provides thumbnail in search result page. | Session Manager - Session manager. | Status-4-Evar - Bring back the status bar. | Tab Counter - Show tab counter. | Tab Scope - Tab preview. | User Agent Switcher - User agent switcher. | YouTube Auto Replay - Auto replay YouTube videos
Notepad++ plugins
Code alignment - Code alignment | JSTool - JavaScript code formatter | NppJavaScript - JavaScript macro programming for Notepad++ | Function list - List all the functions in the current JavaScript or PHP file.
Portable software
Audacity Portable - * audio file editor * apply sound effect * truncate * join * reverse * convert FLV to MP3 (by using LAME MP3/FFmpeg) * extract audio from video (using FFmpeg) | AutoHotkey - Keyboard and mouse automation | Diffpdf Portable
Tcsh, nvi, slrn, irssi, mutt, fetchmail, bogofilter, esmtp, moc, ctwm, VLC.
Software I can't live with, so I remove if present: sendmail, Vim, any desktop environment and its associated garbage.
Knowledge is power; knowledge shared is power lost.
1.Total Commander. Have been using since 20 years. Plus plug-ins such as DirList, Complex CD/DVD Burner
2. PasswordSafe
3. Notepad++
4. MS Office
5.IrfanView
6. jdk
7. WinDirStat
i typically install right away:
gmake bash bitlbee git vim i3 fetchmail procmail mutt mpg123 minicom mupdf
toolchain and stuff is already there, as part of the base system, of course
headless would differ a bit ncdu wget netcat nmap irssi gnuplot
CLI paste? paste.pr0.tips!
1) Debian (for i386 and ARM) . ;P
2) Windows 7 (I hang my head in terrible shame. I need it for Guild Wars 2, and if ArenaNet ever puts out a Linux client - buh bye, Windows)
3) SSH
4) Adobe Flash plugin for . . .
5) Firefox
6) PHP
7) MySQL
8) Apache
9) Locate
10) Guild Wars 2
11) Java (unfortunately)
12) VMware player
On Windows, at least, CCCP tends to be better in terms of getting things to display correctly (e.g., fancy subtitles, obscure formats, etc.).
This is my mantra:
Here's a personal favorite of mine. Metapad LE as a drop-in notepad.exe replacement. It's basically a more fully featured notepad that loads equally as fast. Differences on LE/full version here if you care.
This is /. and we don't do any editing. If you want editing, read the newspaper as they have actual editors - letters to the Editor are my favorite along with Garfield.
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
That would be Thunderbird, followed by Calibre and Skype. I don't care for Evolution, so Thunderbird which is nice and simple to use! Calibre since I have a Sony Reader which uses epub format, since Calibre can convert just about any eBook format to just about any other one, as long as they are not DRMed, it also keeps my eBook library nicely organized. Skype is because one son lives 800 miles away and another 6,157 miles away right now, and Skype works with MS, Apple and Linux OSes so we can keep in touch and see each others faces once in a while!
I used to install Calibre on everything, too, then I started using their server option and just leave a master copy running on my home server. Much better, and I don't have to worry about my various libraries getting out of sync.
Skype and Thunderbird...not so much.
"I love animals! Some are cute, others are tasty, what's not to like?" - Betsy Schroeder, Jeopardy contestant
I cannot survive without mc as well. First thing I install on a new Linux machine. And I judge distros based on if they ship mc with base distro or if I need to get it off the net :) Configuring network without mc is a pain.
And I do install Far Manager first thing on any windows machine I run across as well.
My habit probably comes back from old DOS and Volkov Commander days... Two panels, Text User Interface, F-key shortcuts for everything and efficient operation without mouse was quite a good way to develop user interface. Current GUIs are horrible if you need to use them without a mouse.
--Coder
Frankly, the first thing I 'install' on a Windows box is a USB drive containing my Portable Apps, including Firefox, Libre Office, pdftk, FreeCommander, Lupas Rename (portable version), 7-Zip, FileZilla, Gimp, Dia, Irfanview, Notepad++, VLC, Audacity, WinDirStat, AutoHotKey and of course PStart to help manage them all :)
"I love animals! Some are cute, others are tasty, what's not to like?" - Betsy Schroeder, Jeopardy contestant
Hellzyeah. I *am* a developer, and you get more done with a half-dozen regular expressions than you usually do in any IDE.
I have a small, but close group of frien..er, applications I stick with. These are: Audacious for media. Plays many files, while being light on dependencies. Indespensible. TexMaker for latex. Needed for math and science. Indespensible. Firefox/Iceweasel. I don't trust Chrome. Indespensible. vim. Best text editor availible. Indespensible. cups. My printer does not work without it. Indespensible. Bitorrent Sync. Comes on Windows, Linux, even FreeBSD! Needed to sync my folder of stuff. Indespensible. i3. How can anything beat a window manger named, "Window manager improved improved improved!". Indespensible. And yah, that's pretty much it. (Sorry, Slashdot messed up the list format. Won't let me insert a damn line break.)
"Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
Power pro is a utility that "changes the way you work with Windows". Got you ;). Although to be fair, it took a few google searchs to find this thing. Looks like it hasn't had an update in 20 years.
"Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
I would install: gcc, gdb, python, perl, ghc, etc. Hold up, on Ubuntu I believe most of this is installed by default. Might as well install Chrome though, and tcc.
I must admit, I didn't buy a new version of Office for personal use for a long time (last PC version was Office 2000), and only got Office 2011 for Mac because I was found a cheap deal off eBay, plus Pages couldn't digest some of the Word documents I needed to use.
Given that there's no indication that Microsoft are going to do a new version of Office for Mac any time soon, I'm now looking into trying LibreOffice.
Worst part is that because I only occasionally need to crack open Word, Excel or Powerpoint, when I do want to do so I invariably have to wait whilst Microsoft AutoUpdate installs the latest update.
Best part, though, is that Office for Mac has an actual proper menu - I would probably go insane trying to use the fecking Ribbon!
-MT.
I used to use Beyond Compare for work purposes back when I was involved in USB flash device duplication - great for checking master copies prior to duplication, and double-checking selected duplicate sticks during duplication.
Along those lines, I'd also recommend TeraCopy - fast file copying with the option of CRC checking to spot any corrupted or missing files.
-MT.
Kudos to ninite. It makes starting to use a new OS install much quicker.
1. BSPlayer, vastly preferred over VLC. I occasionally use VLC if I want to do something weird like rotate video, but everything else is BSP.. tiny/fast, lots of options and single-hotkeys aplenty (^_^;;;)
2. Chrome+FFox, for browsing different kinds of sites I prefer one over the other for..
3. IrfanView for random image viewing needs. can do quite a bit more than the standard Windows version and it's tiny/fast..
4. Audacity for recording audio from the machine.. I am a hoarder of audio streams that have very limited online playability and prefer ripping them this way..
5. FileZilla for FTP. A few sites I need to update periodically..
6. mIRC 4.72 for IRC, which is an old and special-to-me 16-bit ver for Win 3.1 that I still use from the era..
7. WinRAR. I know Windows can now unzip things on its own, but I'm just a fogey in this way =P
8. DVDFlick, simplest video file to disc image program I've ever used..
That loo paper is also classed as software.
jdk 1.8, apache maven, ant. Also: git, emacs, netbeans. Can't survive a day without those 6.
Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
First, the essentials for me, on my iMac (many of which moved with my from PC background) :
Google Chrome - go-to web browser. (Safari just doesn't cut it, Firefox is good but doesn't work quite the way I'd like it to.) :)
VLC - the media player that will play anything!
F.lux - mentioned elsewhere in comments, this adjusts monitor brightness from daytime to nighttime.
Pathfinder - excellent power-user file manager for OSX.
DaisyDisk - find where all that hard disk space has gone.
CleanMyMac 2 - scrub the detritus from OSX and apps.
Torrent - for my torrenting needs.
Parallels Desktop - for when I need to run Windows software.
Mozilla Thunderbird - my mail manager of choice.
FontExplorer X Pro - organise and manage font library, root out dupes and duds.
Last.fm - because here in the UK at least, I can still listen to full tracks. Still the best way to find where to buy particular tracks.
Spotify - I still love my MP3s, but this way I can legally share the love.
Sophos Anti-Virus - because I know better than to believe the hype about Macs being less at risk.
LastPass / XMarks - recent addition, no more hassle losing passwords or bookmarks between browsers.
DesktopServer - for Wordpress site development and deployment.
Toast Titanium - still need to burn the occasional disc.
Steam - need I say more?
Pocket - where my read-later stuff goes.
Alfred - Like Spotlight, but with brains.
There are a few Windows apps that I miss, because there isn't a good Mac equivalent :
TeraCopy - Pathfinder does bulk copy operations, but doesn't support CRC checking / diff.
Everything - Spotlight is good, most of the time, but not fast. Alfred is better, but still no speed demon.
-MT.
It may have been an old version I tried, but I was singularly unimpressed by Calibre.
It silently failed to convert some files, plus it insisted on copying every file I opened with it to its own directory.
For its intended purpose (ebook library management for use with your reading devices), calibre is simply the best software out there IMNSHO, paid or not. There are things for which it is not as good, but for my library of epub/kindle ebooks I haven't found anything that comes close. It might not be for you after all, but I'd advice you to give it another try, keeping the following in mind:
The "copying files" thing can be counterintuitive if you're used to micromanage files and folders yourself, but it can be viewed from another perspective: calibre doesn't manage files, it manages *books*. It keeps them in its internal database, of which the folder structure and data files is essentially just the bulk storage part. The files are a subset of all the information that makes up a book record, and the paths are not even used for metadata storage, although it reflects them. I keep a copy of my original files for backup purposes, but they are effectively obsoleted as soon as I clean up metadata and formatting in calibre. After that calibre is the absolutely best way to manage and access my books, and I'm happy to keep them in the calibre "db". After all, a file path is not a good place to store metadata. A db with proper fields, tags and so on is far better suited. Work with it, not against it :)
If you find that it doesn't suit you after some time, the export functionality is excellent. You also have all metadata stored in a well-structured SQLite db to extract and do with as you please.
The conversion error, BTW, is unfamiliar to me. If it simply omitted converting without throwing an error, that's a strange bug I haven't encountered or even heard of. If the results are not satisfactory: be aware that automatic document conversion between some formats, for instance from PDF to a flowing format, is *hard* to perfect, if not impossible. Most of my conversions are between flowing formats, and calibre does an admirable job with those. It even works around limitations in the different formats (by generating a html TOC for formats that don't support proper metadata TOCs, for instance).
It is extremely flexible and extensible. Incidentally the custom column system has a surprisingly powerful template language written by Charles Haley, one of the original authors of ex (which became vi) :)
calibre has a lot of "power user" features built in, a great plugin system with lots of available plugins, and it is very mature at this point. The relevant sub-forum at MobileRead is an excellent resource, any questions you might have are most likely already answered there.
Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors!
Except for Blu-Ray discs. grumble grumble..
-
HeidiSQL for maintaining the MySQL database. Although a Windows app, it runs find under wine. Also Komodo Edit 8, FileZilla, OpenOffice (or LibreOffice) are must-haves. Finally, Oracle Virtual Box for those old MS apps that I still use: esp. Word97 (!!!) because 1) I have a legal copy, and 2) because I have several megabytes of macros that I don't wish to re-write in OOo.
Here's some things I can't live without on any platform
1) PERL
2) Sublime 3 Text Editor
3) Valgrind
4) Google Chrome
5) LibreOffice
6) Say Text extension for LibreOffice (reads your text back to you)
7) Python
8) Mojolicious Framework
9) TOra SQL Editor
When I buy a new PC, it usually has some Windows or other. I try to install some *NIX subsystem to get the familiar shell and commands. I had tried MKS demos, and I have always tried to install Cygwin, because it is free. I am comfortable with the degree of integration in the latter. It doesn't bother me to have to run a terninal application to get a shell or to run an X11 application from the Windows desktop to get access to X11 clinets, xterns, gnuemacs, etc. The price is right.
Generally, though, I have always tried to install Linux on the system because I regard it as much more secure than Windows anything, So I may run Windows with Cygwin just to get me a shell and some *NIX commands. I run Wine on Linux to get access to the odd Windows application I like.
Actually web-based applications come at a great price. Their history discourages communication and thinking. Back in the day of text, there were much better tools for communicating than we have in web-apps, web-sites, and in particular blogs. The textarea widget is a muzzle on good discourse, on the ability to argue and persuade. It encourages people to not address one another and to talk past each other. It should be abolished.
The tools developed for Mail User Agents and their derivative USENET newsgroup readers are much superior than the chat and blog tools that dominate web applications today.
The blog is being used by social media companies to restrict discussion. It is anti-democratic. We need to bring back the standards of the days of text, the discussion forum with its reply in context and its ability of users to change topic lines. Discussion does not take place in blogs and on most web sites because the complexity needed for discussion is not supported. This needs to defeat the Google business model.
Actually web-based applications come at a great price. Their history discourages communication and thinking. Back in the day of text, there were much better tools for communicating than we have in web-apps, web-sites, and in particular blogs. The textarea widget is a muzzle on good discourse, on the ability to argue and persuade. It encourages people to not address one another and to talk past each other. It should be abolished.
And yet you are using a web-based app to say this.
And yet you are using a web-based app to say this.
Indeed... Slashdot has been most instrumental in encouraging discourse.
Have no fear.... Beta is here to fix all that.
For work:
TextPad - all coding
WildEdit - mass search and replace on files in folders with regex
WinMergeU - diff everything
EclipsePalette - colour picker (a very old version that doesn't need installing, just a simple 144kB exe)
PhotoShop 7 (yes, that old - still functional and really fast on modern computers)
Other:
Desktop Sidebar - for the Quick Launch panel. (not yet tried if it works in Windows 8, worked on XP, works on 7)
VLC
Pidgin
MalwareBytes
LibreOffice / OpenOffice
Slashdot is one of the few exceptions of a web interface that allows the sorts of things that should be resurrected on the web. It allows for contextual reply and changing of topic lines. It could stand some improvements in how it displays threads and subthreads in an conversation, and I disagree with an editorial board filter of subjects, driven by articles the editorial board thinks are important. Reddit is better in both regards. I think that you cold teach Markdown to most people especially if it gave them something they really need to target replies.
I hope that your rejoinder about Slashdot Beta UI is ironic for I think that Beta heads in the wrong direction changing the interface to be more like Social Media sites. If it is adopted I will unsubscribe from Slashdot because it will have the same flaw as most social media and web browser driven interfaces, not easily allowing for context in reply.
Someone noticed how bad Thunderbird's editor is. In the days of text your Mail User Editor (MTA) could fork your perferred editor. That was also true of USENET newsreaders. They had the feature built-in to quote the article or message you were replying to. You edited down to the material you wanted to reply to, wrote your response, and sent that. This should be the minimal capability of a web interface.
The standard should be that textareas are OK for small numbers of comments, I think that the dissatisfaction many people voice over Facebook, Google+ and Google Groups and most web sites with blogs is due to this poor design. They fell hampered by the available functionality. It is just too hard with a textarea to do context and what people don't understand, because they don't know any better in many cases, is that their anger at what other people do, distractions people cause, is not due to a problem with people, people haven't changed, but that web site designs and interfaces are badly engineered for the kinds of ways that people communicate. Some idiot engineer on another thread posted how he thought that social science was way down the list on curriculum that should be taught to students in a web-design BA program. It is precisely because of poor human factors research and laziness and greed on the part of web designers and social media companies that we have a sorry state of communication on the Internet mostly centered on the miapplication of blogging to communication. Facebook is a disaster because of this and most of its users are too ignorant to realize that their frustrations with communication on it is due to Zuckerberg's insistence on "Simplocity" which means textarea widgets and blocks of text that are easy to mine for data for his businesss partners. So this is driven by greed. And Google is the same sort of thing. Google+ is just a self-promotion echo chamber for the same reason, greed.
Sorry, I meant "Simplicity". That typo got away!