Ask Slashdot: What Windows-Only Apps Would You Most Like To See On Linux?
An anonymous reader writes: With all the recent brouhaha about Windows 10 privacy violations and forced updates, I'm one of those that wants to thank Microsoft very gently, while taking it by the hand, and slamming the door behind it for good. Fortunately for me, I don't use any special software that is tied to Windows, except games, of course. One program I would really miss though is Total Commander file manager, which is basically my interface to the whole OS. So, I know there are Linux alternatives, but which one is the best? Also, I currently use PaleMoon fork of Firefox as my main browser, but there doesn't seem to be a Linux variant. What other software would you want to transplant to Linux, if any?
I think Linux memory management would go well with Photoshop. Might struggle with video card support.
VS is definitely a very nice IDE for C++. It would be awesome to have in Linux especially to work on projects with Unreal 4.
Almost all the actual apps that I use are more-or-less open-source already. Or, well, Netflix I would also like as a native app; as far as I know the web-browser client still doesn't support 1080p resolutions or surround-sound.
Steam is getting there from what I've heard, but as a hard core gamer I need games.
:)
Embedded toolchains would be nice too (esp ARM), but that's my boss' Windows box, not mine
What Linux-only apps would you like to see available on Windows?
I honestly can't think of any. Almost all the useful apps available for Linux are available for Windows, too. And what's left is mostly Linux-specific system-management stuff.
And THAT is the problem with Linux on the desktop. There simply aren't any compelling applications that aren't ALSO available for Windows or OS X. Yes, security is good (though ACL support still sucks, which is ridiculous), and not having to worry about viruses is nice, too. But those are secondary concerns, honestly.
If I was going to port just one piece of software to Linux, it would be the Windows 7 Desktop Environment.
-1 Uncomfortable Truth
GIMP is indeed overkill for many tasks or users. A light-duty image editor would be nice.
However, please add local and general blurring, brightness/contrast/alpha tuning, and basic color adjusting with red/green/blue channel shifting (alpha curve). Don't need layers.
You want KolourPaint:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It is part of KDE. Install it on *buntus with:
$ sudo apt-get install kolourpaint4
It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
Word doesn't even completely interoperate with Word for Mac, as far as that goes.
Word on Windows doesn't even completely interoperate with Word for Windows, as far as that goes.
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
GIMP can handle the pictures. Now FrameMaker would be cool.
Way back when... I was a heavy Framemaker user on our Sun Workstations. I was bringing in Linux on 486s. I served as a beta test site for Adobe Framemaker on Linux. It worked flawlessly and I was ready to fork over similar license fees as I paid on my Sun Workstations. Then Adobe axed the release with some statement about how Linux users only wanted free stuff. My take away was, and remains, that Adobe is the most anti-linux shop out there. Way more of a problem than Microsoft.
"People pay for Office because it's better."
No, people pay for Office because they are sheeple and don't know any better; and because Micro$oft has a stranglehold on the market.
On the plus side, if you used an open source office suite instead of wasting hundreds of dollars on M$ Office, you could save enough to get your dick properly sucked by a professional and not have to resort to lame, unsatisfying blow jobs by open source asshole dickwads.
Political correctness is really just herd psychology pushed by insecure people who desperately seek social conformity.