Miscellaneous > Applications

Short list good app dump

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H_TeXMeX_H:
I've found it rather hard to find really good, useful, and stable applications ... well, not as much hard as time consuming. This might be a bad idea, but why not list some really good apps you've encountered, no particular category, just applications that you find to be exceptional or getting there. (They should at least be free if not open-source and capable of running on Linux and/or BSD)

Before I list mine, I'd like to say that I started out using the tools given to me ... GNOME as a wm, gedit to edit text, gnome-terminal as a terminal, nautilus as a file manager ... etc. But at one point it hit me that these are definitely not the most stable, useful, and usable applications. So I decided to change them ... and it took a lot of time (like a week or two), but I've found very good replacements for all that shit :) Of course there is variation as to what apps some people think are good or bad, but as long as the apps are stable, usable, and useful it's all good. Let's say list 5 or 6 apps, it might get out of hand if you list all the apps you use.

I try to focus on getting small, lightweight, and fast apps, but they should still look nice.

Paco 1.10.8 (the newer version 1.10.10 is somewhat unstable :()(I know Pirate Penguin mentioned this one some time ago) - invaluable for installing things from source, it keeps track of stuff you install from source and let's you uninstall it quickly and easily.

Terminal Emulator / XFCE Terminal - yup it comes standard with XFCE but I prefer fluxbox, it's lightweight, tabbed, much better than xterm, and it's cool :)

ROX Edit - ROX bundled text editor capable of syntax highlighting, spellcheck, unlimited undo/redo, show changes, and supports UTF-8

ROX / ROX Filer - A really nice file manager, and I listed ROX as well, cuz they have other useful apps bundled in. Really you could get more lightweight than this with mc (midnight commander) or others like it, but by far it is the lightest file manager that still has folder themes and thumbnails (useful if you have a lot of vids and trouble identifying them) :)

Fluxbox - It's not really an app, but it's small enough to count as one. A great window manager, I think.

P.S. I got really bored today, that's why I posted this :D
Oh, and I found all of these on freshmeat a relatively long time ago... a great place to find apps if ya didn't know.

EDIT: Replaced minimum profit with ROX Edit

Calum:
every now and again somebody starts a thread like this, and i always think the thread should be made into an obvious static page on the site somewhere for people to find all the best non microsoftie applications, especially newbies. it never happens though.

anyway, mine are all the usuals i suppose. i do like rxvt for a terminal, what else could i not live without? hmm, grip, is the best cd ripper i have found, and it can use blade or gogo easily, as well as lame (by the way gogo is worth a mention for being far superior to lame, it is essentially a "port" of lame, written in asm, it encodes for me at about 5 or 6 times playing speed) - while we're on that subject, there's a small collection of useful scripts for audio conversion at wma2mp3.501megs.com which void main helped me write, i only mention it because they are the best software for doing audio conversions easily that i have found, reason being that i couldn't find any so i made my own! does that qualify?

other best programs i use are totally unstunning, openoffice.org, xmms, firefox, gftp, audacity (now that it's fairly stable, and you can get a whack of plugins for it from ccrma), gtk-gnutella, vim, gedit (which is great, syntax highlighting and tabs, but as easy to use as "notepad" type programs)... nothing surprising. i have tried a lot of the alternatives to these, but things like beonex, zinf, epiphany and so on always have something wrong with them, limited filetype support, instability, bloated, inability to configure them properly, a lot of programs simply aren't designed properly.

anyway, i'll stop moaning now.

worker201:
Some software I recommend:

transcode: CL tool used to re-encode video/audio from one format to another.  Best used in conjunction with...

dvdauthor: a CL set of tools to produce your own dvd menus

bluefish: a graphical syntax highlighting editor specifically designed for web development, it also does tag completion and site management

firestarter: gui interface to iptables, makes firewall configuration a breeze

mplayer, gimp, xmms, gaim: they may be common, but they're good

Of course there are some programs I don't like very much.  Lately, ggv has been giving me a lot of problems.  And the number of free hi-power vector programs is still lacking (no thanks to me!).  So there's still a lot of work to be done.

H_TeXMeX_H:

--- Quote from: Calum ---gedit (which is great, syntax highlighting and tabs, but as easy to use as "notepad" type programs)
--- End quote ---

gedit is great, except for one thing: it leaves those nasty ~temp files around :( then I have to clean em up, it's a hassle.

For svg I was gonna list Inkscape, it's helped me edit pdfs and postscript really nicely ... the output can be made very professional. But, I've only used it for a couple days, and if you add too many objects it starts to get laggy and use lots of CPU time.

Pathos:
which apps I use depends on the distro...some just work better with the setup of the distro

with xubuntu I'm using scite or vi as an editor. xfmedia for music/video.

on vector linux i use kate, xine, amarok

on dsl I use nedit, xmms

on windows notepad2, MediaPlayerClassic and foobar2000. Windows seems to have the best apps :/

don't like using gedit because gnome is so damn slow so I don't have it installed.

gnumetric is very nice as is abiword.

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