Essential applications (Linux, Android, Windows): Difference between revisions

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A list of all the applications that I use, on various platforms.
A list of all the applications that I use, on various platforms.


= Linux Applications =


== Mac OS X Applications ==
== Packaging Systems (on Gentoo) ==


*; emerge: THE best package manager for Linux.


*; flatpak: Works well on Gentoo (OpenRC) and allows to install some programs that don't have ebuilds available.


=== Packaging Systems===
*; appimage: another good package system, entirely self contained (no need to install a package manager to run appimage packages).


*; snap: requires systemd, so bad choice for Gentoo OpenRC systems. Better to avoid snap packages.


*; SoftwareUpdate: Built-in (from Apple), will only update the OS and Apple applications. Very easy.
== Console Applications ==
 
*; htop: Small utility to monitor your system's resource usage (CPU and RAM).
 
*; nano: Good console text editor.
 
*; screen: Utility to allow to launch long commands on remote hosts, disconnect and later reconnect to your previous session.
 
*; wgetpaste: Excellent small utility to post to an online paste service.
 
== Desktop & File Sharing ==
 
*; Dolphin: Best file manager available on any platform due to its excellent integration with any protocol (SFTP, FTP, etc).
 
*; Nextcloud: Very good free file sharing platform (similar to Google Drive or Dropbox). You must setup your own server.
 
*; Insync: Good Google Drive synchronization client for Linux. Not free, but I was unable to find a correct free client.


*; [[Installing UNIX software on Mac OS X (10.4): Fink and DarwinPorts| Fink]]: Large repository of UNIX open-source software.
== Internet ==


*; [[Installing UNIX software on Mac OS X (10.4): Fink and DarwinPorts| DarwinPorts ]]: Other package manager. The repository has a lot of server software. Easy to use.
*; Brave: Better and more lightweight than Chromium.


*; Firefox: The standard open-source browser that you can trust. Emerge <tt>netscape-flash</tt> or <tt>gnash</tt> to get Flash support.


=== Internet ===
*; Chromium: Was best browser available for Linux, now bloated and second to Firefox.


*; Opera: Another good web browser. Development tools are awful, and not free.


*; Mail: Free as in beer (from Apple), good client except for the Spotlight search feature taking hours (and not returning anything useful, generally).
*; Floccus: Easy bookmarks synchronization service. Required with Firefox & Chromium.


*; Thunderbird: Good open-source email client from Mozilla.
*; Thunderbird: Good open-source email client from Mozilla.


*; Firefox: The standard open-source browser that you can trust.
*; Filezilla: Best fully featured FTP client currently available on Linux.
 
*; Konversation: IRC client for KDE, better integration with KDE than X-Chat.
 
*; Kopete: Excellent, ultra-customizable multi-protocol IM client.
 
*; Krdc: VNC / Rdesktop client for KDE.
 
*; TightVNC: VNC client.
 
*; Ekiga: SIP (Audio / Video) client. For webcams or remote conferences. Very buggy still.
 
*; aMule: Best client for eMule P2P networks.
 
*; kTorrent: Nice client for torrent downloads.
 
*; Eiskalt DC ++: Client for Direct Connect networks.
 
== Development ==
 
*; GCC: The whole GNU tool chain will be of course included in the system.
 
*; VSCode: Excellent, fast IDE.


*; Safari: Probably the best browser available for OS X (very fast). Based on Konqueror so should be open.
*; Eclipse: Excellent, complex IDE for Java and other languages as well with plugins.


*; Cyberduck: FTP client, open-source. I don't like it that much but it seems one of the best for the Mac.
*; Kate: Lightweight text editor.


*; X-Chat Aqua: Open-source IRC client. Not awesome, but ok.
*; Quanta: Good text editor oriented towards web development (PHP, Javascript, HTML).  


*; Fire: Open-source multi-protocol IM client.
*; KDevelop: Very good IDE for C/C++ development.


*; Subversion with KDEsvn: Excellent source management system. KDEsvn is the best GUI front-end available currently under KDE. It has Konqueror integration.


=== Development ===
*; Kompare: Good program to visualize diffs.


*; Kdiff3: GUI for the diff3 utility. Needed to create patches.


*; GCC: Included in the system from Apple.
*; Okteta: This is an hex editor, sometimes useful.


*; X-Code: Good IDE for C++/Objective-C/Java, unfortunately only available on the Mac. It manages its own build system, but this is not portable.
== Office ==


*; Okular: Free PDF viewer. Lighter than Acrobat Reader. Can reload files instantly, so very useful for LaTeX development. In theory can also open .epub and .mobi files.


=== Multimedia ===
*; Xournal++: Tool to easily add text to a PDF document (very useful for some documents that don't have PDF forms).


*; Foliate: Great e-book reader.


*; iTunes: Excellent audio player.
*; CoolReader: Another e-book reader.


*; MPlayer: Best video player available on the Mac, but should be compiled from source. The binaries versions are not maintained it seems. Also, the GUI sucks. '''Update''': new binaries seem available directly from the official site.
*; FBReader: Epub / mobi / azw reader. Has some issues with some .epub files. Exists on Android too.


*; VLC: It will play less files than MPlayer, but the Mac port is official and better.
*; Calibre: Excellent software to manage collections. The viewer features are not interesting.


*; Adobe Photoshop: Best image editing program.
*; Tellico: Organizes a collection. Can be used with file collections, although it is not ideal.


*; Roxio Toast: Good CD/DVD-burning software, but not free.
*; LibreOffice: Necessary to open Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files.


*; Odoo: Web based accounting application (very powerful, can be used as a fully featured ERP). Open-source, can be self-hosted, but a paying SaaS version also exists.


=== Office ===
*; KAddressBook: Good address book / contact manager.


*; PortableSigner: Tool in Java to electronically sign a PDF document. Comes with a Swing interface.


*; Adobe Acrobat Reader: Essential to read PDF files.
== Graphics ==


*; Address Book: Nice contact book manager.
*; Gwenview: Excellent KDE image viewer.


*; Inkscape: Excellent SVG editor. Same as Adobe Illustrator.


=== Utilities ===
*; The GIMP: Excellent graphics manipulation program. Can be automated via scripts.


*; Digikam: Very good image library management program. Very useful as well to find image duplicates (by content / similarity).


*; Built-in Unarchiver: It will decompress .tar, .zip, and other formats. Nice integration into the Finder.
*; Geeqie: Also able to search for image duplicates (but worse than Digikam).


*; CDFinder: Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Good but not multiplatform nor Open-Source.
*; Skanlite: Application to scan documents from a scanner. Minimalistic but decent.


*; CDCat : Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Free as in speech, multiplatform, uses Qt3. But you must compile it yourself.
== Multimedia ==


*; smartmontools : Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive. If you install using the Apple installer, the daemon will be automatically launched at startup (remove the StartupItem to prevent that).
*; SMPlayer: Best video player interface. Can use mplayer or mpv (recommended) as backend.


*; Kodi: Excellent Home Theater software.


*; Strawberry: iTunes like audio player and collection manager.


== Linux Applications ==
*; Clementine: Another iTunes clone.


*; MComix: Really excellent viewer for reading comics.


*; Gwenview: Best image viewer (for collections).


=== Packaging Systems (on Gentoo)===
*; VLC: It will play less files than MPlayer, but is still good. Allows streaming over a network.


*; Showimg: Excellent image viewer.


*; emerge: THE only one tool that you will ever need.
*; MPlayer: This is the player that will play almost all your media files. On Linux you should use a different GUI.


*; OBS Studio: Great software to record (and stream) movies to disk.


=== Console Applications ===
*; Kdenlive: A video editor with advanced features.


*; Avidemux: A tool that allows you to split videos with a GUI (among other things).


*; htop: Small utility to monitor your system's resource usage (CPU and RAM).
*; K3b: Nice GUI to burn CDs/DVDs. Also able to rip audio CDs to Ogg / Flac / MP3.


*; nano: Good console text editor.
*; Amarok: iTunes like audio player and collection manager. Not actively developed anymore.


*; nopaste: Excellent small utility to post to an online paste service.
== Utilities ==


=== Internet ===
*; Ark: With the Konqueror plugin, it has a [[Uncompress_files_directly_from_Konqueror | nice integration into your system.]] Allows you to uncompress archives directly from Konqueror / your desktop.


*; Authy: 2 Factor Authentication (2FA) application. Better than Google Authenticator, as it works on Android and Linux, but unfortunately is very buggy (automated backups don't sync well across devices, Linux app does not start with some versions...). Note also that the name of the accounts are not synced across devices, only the keys themselves. If it worked well, it would be the best 2FA available.


*; Thunderbird: Good open-source email client from Mozilla.
*; 2FAS: Another 2FA application that has to be tested. Available in Android and as a Chrome browser extension.


*; Firefox: The standard open-source browser that you can trust. Emerge <tt>netscape-flash</tt> to get Flash support.
*; Virtual Volumes View: File indexer / volume cataloger. Very basic, but no better alternatives right now.


*; Opera: Another good web browser. Less development tools available than Firefox.
*; Basenji: Another file indexer.


*; Konqueror: The integrated FTP/SFTP client is very good. And as a file browser, Konqueror is also very useful.
*; smartmontools: Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive.


*; Filezilla: Best fully featured FTP client currently available on Linux.
*; phoronix-test-suite: benchmarking tool. It is actually a test suite manager, you can install and run many different test suites.


*; X-Chat: Open-source IRC client.
*; bonnie / bonnie++: I/O (hard drive) benchmarking tool.


*; Kopete: Excellent, ultra-customizable multi-protocol IM client.
== Emulation & Virtualization ==


*; Pidgin: Open-source multi-protocol IM client. Not bad.
*; Wine: This is absolutely necessary to play Blizzard games (Warcraft III), and many other Windows games as well. Latest versions are really impressive.


*; TightVNC: VNC client.
*; VirtualBox: A free and excellent virtualization software. Allows you to run Windows natively on your Linux guest OS.


*; Skype: Non free VoIP communication tool. The Linux client is of very poor quality.
*; RetroArch: Great front-end to many virtualization systems (especially arcade and console emulators).


=== Development ===
*; DosBox: Emulator for the DOS operating system, allows you to play old PC games.


*; Qcmame: Front-end for the SDLMame Linux version.


*; GCC: The whole GNU tool chain will be of course included in the system.
*; GXMame: Front-end for the XMame Linux version (obsolete, does not work anymore with SDLMame).


*; Eclipse: Excellent, complex IDE for Java and other languages as well with plugins.
*; Gens: Sega Genesis emulator.


*; Kate: Lightweight text editor.
*; Yabause: Sega Saturn emulator.


*; Quanta: Good text editor oriented towards web development (PHP, Javascript, HTML).
== Games ==


*; KDevelop: Very good IDE for C/C++ development.
*; Battle for Wesnoth: A great wargame with nice art.


*; Subversion with KDEsvn: Excellent source management system. KDEsvn is the best GUI front-end available currently under KDE. It has Konqueror integration.
*; Majesty: Native port of the great fantasy kingdom simulation game.


*; KHexEdit: This is an hex editor, sometimes useful.
*; Pingus: Free clone of Lemmings, excellent.


=== Office ===
*; Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Native port of the FPS game.


= Android Applications =


*; Adobe Acrobat Reader: To read PDF files.
== Multimedia ==


*; Kpdf: Free PDF viewer. Lighter than Acrobat Reader.
*; Kodi: Best video player on Android. Can be configured to auto-hide OSD (Settings -> Interface -> Configure Screen -> On screen display).


*; OpenOffice: Necessary to open Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files.
*; Kore: Remote control application for Kodi.


*; Perfect Viewer: Great application for reading comics.


=== Graphics ===
*; VLC: Good video player on Android.


== Utilities ==


*; Inkscape: Excellent SVG editor. Same as Adobe Illustrator.
* File Manager +: Good file manager.


*; The GIMP: Excellent graphics manipulation program. Can be automated via scripts.
= Windows Applications =


=== Multimedia ===
== Development ==


*; MinGW: This allows you to use the GCC compiler on Windows, allowing your applications to be portable.


*; K3b: Nice GUI to burn CDs/DVDs.
*; Eclipse: Excellent, complex IDE for Java and other languages as well with plugins.


*; Amarok: iTunes like audio player and collection manager.
*; Notepad++: Very good lightweight text editor.


*; MPlayer: This is the player that will play almost all your media files. On Linux the built-in GUI is OK.
*; TortoiseSVN: Excellent GUI front-end for Subversion.


*; VLC: It will play less files than MPlayer, but is still good. Allows streaming over a network.
== Utilities ==


*; Picasa: Photo organizer from Google. Not good for viewing single files.
*; Avira: Free antivirus tool.


*; Showimg: Excellent image viewer.
= Mac OS X Applications =


*; Comix : Really excellent viewer for reading comics.
== Packaging Systems==


*; SoftwareUpdate: Built-in (from Apple), will only update the OS and Apple applications. Very easy.


=== Utilities ===
*; [[Installing UNIX software on Mac OS X (10.4): Fink and DarwinPorts| Fink]]: Large repository of UNIX open-source software.


*; [[Installing UNIX software on Mac OS X (10.4): Fink and DarwinPorts| DarwinPorts ]]: Other package manager. The repository has a lot of server software. Easy to use.


*; Ark: With the Konqueror plugin, it has a [[Uncompress_files_directly_from_Konqueror | nice integration into your system.]] Allows you to uncompress archives directly from Konqueror / your desktop.
== Internet ==


*; CDCat: Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Free as in speech, multiplatform, uses Qt3. '''Nnot in Portage.'''
*; Mail: Free as in beer (from Apple), good client except for the Spotlight search feature taking hours (and not returning anything useful, generally).


*; smartmontools: Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive.
*; Thunderbird: Good open-source email client from Mozilla.


*; bonnie / bonnie++: I/O (hard drive) benchmarking tool.
*; Firefox: The standard open-source browser that you can trust.


=== Emulation & Virtualization ===
*; Safari: Probably the best browser available for OS X (very fast). Based on Konqueror so should be open.


*; Cyberduck: FTP client, open-source. I don't like it that much but it seems one of the best for the Mac.


*; Wine: This is absolutely necessary to play Blizzard games (Warcraft III), and many other Windows games as well. Latest versions are really impressive.
*; X-Chat Aqua: Open-source IRC client. Not awesome, but ok.


*; VirtualBox: A free and excellent virtualization software. Allows you to run Windows natively on your Linux guest OS.
*; Fire: Open-source multi-protocol IM client.


*; DosBox: Emulator for the DOS operating system, allows you to play old PC games.
== Development ==


*; GXMame: Front-end for the XMame Linux version.
*; GCC: Included in the system from Apple.


*; Gens: Sega Genesis emulator.
*; X-Code: Good IDE for C++/Objective-C/Java, unfortunately only available on the Mac. It manages its own build system, but this is not portable.


=== Games ===
== Multimedia ==


*; Battle for Wesnoth: wargame similar to Warlords.
*; iTunes: Excellent audio player.


*; Majesty: Native port of the great fantasy kingdom simulation game.
*; MPlayer: Best video player available on the Mac, but should be compiled from source. The binaries versions are not maintained it seems. Also, the GUI sucks. '''Update''': new binaries seem available directly from the official site.


*; Pingus: Free clone of Lemmings, excellent.
*; VLC: It will play less files than MPlayer, but the Mac port is official and better.


*; Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Native port of the FPS game.
*; Adobe Photoshop: Best image editing program.


== Windows Applications ==
*; Roxio Toast: Good CD/DVD-burning software, but not free.


== Office ==


*; Adobe Acrobat Reader: Essential to read PDF files.


=== Development===
*; Address Book: Nice contact book manager.


== Utilities ==


*; Built-in Unarchiver: It will decompress .tar, .zip, and other formats. Nice integration into the Finder.


*; MinGW: This allows you to use the GCC compiler on Windows, allowing your applications to be portable.
*; CDFinder: Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Good but not multiplatform nor Open-Source.


*; Eclipse: Excellent, complex IDE for Java and other languages as well with plugins.
*; CDCat : Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Free as in speech, multiplatform, uses Qt3. But you must compile it yourself.


*; TortoiseSVN: Excellent GUI front-end for Subversion.
*; smartmontools : Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive. If you install using the Apple installer, the daemon will be automatically launched at startup (remove the StartupItem to prevent that).

Latest revision as of 11:10, 26 March 2024

A list of all the applications that I use, on various platforms.

Linux Applications

Packaging Systems (on Gentoo)

  • emerge
    THE best package manager for Linux.
  • flatpak
    Works well on Gentoo (OpenRC) and allows to install some programs that don't have ebuilds available.
  • appimage
    another good package system, entirely self contained (no need to install a package manager to run appimage packages).
  • snap
    requires systemd, so bad choice for Gentoo OpenRC systems. Better to avoid snap packages.

Console Applications

  • htop
    Small utility to monitor your system's resource usage (CPU and RAM).
  • nano
    Good console text editor.
  • screen
    Utility to allow to launch long commands on remote hosts, disconnect and later reconnect to your previous session.
  • wgetpaste
    Excellent small utility to post to an online paste service.

Desktop & File Sharing

  • Dolphin
    Best file manager available on any platform due to its excellent integration with any protocol (SFTP, FTP, etc).
  • Nextcloud
    Very good free file sharing platform (similar to Google Drive or Dropbox). You must setup your own server.
  • Insync
    Good Google Drive synchronization client for Linux. Not free, but I was unable to find a correct free client.

Internet

  • Brave
    Better and more lightweight than Chromium.
  • Firefox
    The standard open-source browser that you can trust. Emerge netscape-flash or gnash to get Flash support.
  • Chromium
    Was best browser available for Linux, now bloated and second to Firefox.
  • Opera
    Another good web browser. Development tools are awful, and not free.
  • Floccus
    Easy bookmarks synchronization service. Required with Firefox & Chromium.
  • Thunderbird
    Good open-source email client from Mozilla.
  • Filezilla
    Best fully featured FTP client currently available on Linux.
  • Konversation
    IRC client for KDE, better integration with KDE than X-Chat.
  • Kopete
    Excellent, ultra-customizable multi-protocol IM client.
  • Krdc
    VNC / Rdesktop client for KDE.
  • TightVNC
    VNC client.
  • Ekiga
    SIP (Audio / Video) client. For webcams or remote conferences. Very buggy still.
  • aMule
    Best client for eMule P2P networks.
  • kTorrent
    Nice client for torrent downloads.
  • Eiskalt DC ++
    Client for Direct Connect networks.

Development

  • GCC
    The whole GNU tool chain will be of course included in the system.
  • VSCode
    Excellent, fast IDE.
  • Eclipse
    Excellent, complex IDE for Java and other languages as well with plugins.
  • Kate
    Lightweight text editor.
  • Quanta
    Good text editor oriented towards web development (PHP, Javascript, HTML).
  • KDevelop
    Very good IDE for C/C++ development.
  • Subversion with KDEsvn
    Excellent source management system. KDEsvn is the best GUI front-end available currently under KDE. It has Konqueror integration.
  • Kompare
    Good program to visualize diffs.
  • Kdiff3
    GUI for the diff3 utility. Needed to create patches.
  • Okteta
    This is an hex editor, sometimes useful.

Office

  • Okular
    Free PDF viewer. Lighter than Acrobat Reader. Can reload files instantly, so very useful for LaTeX development. In theory can also open .epub and .mobi files.
  • Xournal++
    Tool to easily add text to a PDF document (very useful for some documents that don't have PDF forms).
  • Foliate
    Great e-book reader.
  • CoolReader
    Another e-book reader.
  • FBReader
    Epub / mobi / azw reader. Has some issues with some .epub files. Exists on Android too.
  • Calibre
    Excellent software to manage collections. The viewer features are not interesting.
  • Tellico
    Organizes a collection. Can be used with file collections, although it is not ideal.
  • LibreOffice
    Necessary to open Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files.
  • Odoo
    Web based accounting application (very powerful, can be used as a fully featured ERP). Open-source, can be self-hosted, but a paying SaaS version also exists.
  • KAddressBook
    Good address book / contact manager.
  • PortableSigner
    Tool in Java to electronically sign a PDF document. Comes with a Swing interface.

Graphics

  • Gwenview
    Excellent KDE image viewer.
  • Inkscape
    Excellent SVG editor. Same as Adobe Illustrator.
  • The GIMP
    Excellent graphics manipulation program. Can be automated via scripts.
  • Digikam
    Very good image library management program. Very useful as well to find image duplicates (by content / similarity).
  • Geeqie
    Also able to search for image duplicates (but worse than Digikam).
  • Skanlite
    Application to scan documents from a scanner. Minimalistic but decent.

Multimedia

  • SMPlayer
    Best video player interface. Can use mplayer or mpv (recommended) as backend.
  • Kodi
    Excellent Home Theater software.
  • Strawberry
    iTunes like audio player and collection manager.
  • Clementine
    Another iTunes clone.
  • MComix
    Really excellent viewer for reading comics.
  • Gwenview
    Best image viewer (for collections).
  • VLC
    It will play less files than MPlayer, but is still good. Allows streaming over a network.
  • Showimg
    Excellent image viewer.
  • MPlayer
    This is the player that will play almost all your media files. On Linux you should use a different GUI.
  • OBS Studio
    Great software to record (and stream) movies to disk.
  • Kdenlive
    A video editor with advanced features.
  • Avidemux
    A tool that allows you to split videos with a GUI (among other things).
  • K3b
    Nice GUI to burn CDs/DVDs. Also able to rip audio CDs to Ogg / Flac / MP3.
  • Amarok
    iTunes like audio player and collection manager. Not actively developed anymore.

Utilities

  • Authy
    2 Factor Authentication (2FA) application. Better than Google Authenticator, as it works on Android and Linux, but unfortunately is very buggy (automated backups don't sync well across devices, Linux app does not start with some versions...). Note also that the name of the accounts are not synced across devices, only the keys themselves. If it worked well, it would be the best 2FA available.
  • 2FAS
    Another 2FA application that has to be tested. Available in Android and as a Chrome browser extension.
  • Virtual Volumes View
    File indexer / volume cataloger. Very basic, but no better alternatives right now.
  • Basenji
    Another file indexer.
  • smartmontools
    Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive.
  • phoronix-test-suite
    benchmarking tool. It is actually a test suite manager, you can install and run many different test suites.
  • bonnie / bonnie++
    I/O (hard drive) benchmarking tool.

Emulation & Virtualization

  • Wine
    This is absolutely necessary to play Blizzard games (Warcraft III), and many other Windows games as well. Latest versions are really impressive.
  • VirtualBox
    A free and excellent virtualization software. Allows you to run Windows natively on your Linux guest OS.
  • RetroArch
    Great front-end to many virtualization systems (especially arcade and console emulators).
  • DosBox
    Emulator for the DOS operating system, allows you to play old PC games.
  • Qcmame
    Front-end for the SDLMame Linux version.
  • GXMame
    Front-end for the XMame Linux version (obsolete, does not work anymore with SDLMame).
  • Gens
    Sega Genesis emulator.
  • Yabause
    Sega Saturn emulator.

Games

  • Battle for Wesnoth
    A great wargame with nice art.
  • Majesty
    Native port of the great fantasy kingdom simulation game.
  • Pingus
    Free clone of Lemmings, excellent.
  • Return to Castle Wolfenstein
    Native port of the FPS game.

Android Applications

Multimedia

  • Kodi
    Best video player on Android. Can be configured to auto-hide OSD (Settings -> Interface -> Configure Screen -> On screen display).
  • Kore
    Remote control application for Kodi.
  • Perfect Viewer
    Great application for reading comics.
  • VLC
    Good video player on Android.

Utilities

  • File Manager +: Good file manager.

Windows Applications

Development

  • MinGW
    This allows you to use the GCC compiler on Windows, allowing your applications to be portable.
  • Eclipse
    Excellent, complex IDE for Java and other languages as well with plugins.
  • Notepad++
    Very good lightweight text editor.
  • TortoiseSVN
    Excellent GUI front-end for Subversion.

Utilities

  • Avira
    Free antivirus tool.

Mac OS X Applications

Packaging Systems

  • SoftwareUpdate
    Built-in (from Apple), will only update the OS and Apple applications. Very easy.
  • Fink
    Large repository of UNIX open-source software.
  • DarwinPorts
    Other package manager. The repository has a lot of server software. Easy to use.

Internet

  • Mail
    Free as in beer (from Apple), good client except for the Spotlight search feature taking hours (and not returning anything useful, generally).
  • Thunderbird
    Good open-source email client from Mozilla.
  • Firefox
    The standard open-source browser that you can trust.
  • Safari
    Probably the best browser available for OS X (very fast). Based on Konqueror so should be open.
  • Cyberduck
    FTP client, open-source. I don't like it that much but it seems one of the best for the Mac.
  • X-Chat Aqua
    Open-source IRC client. Not awesome, but ok.
  • Fire
    Open-source multi-protocol IM client.

Development

  • GCC
    Included in the system from Apple.
  • X-Code
    Good IDE for C++/Objective-C/Java, unfortunately only available on the Mac. It manages its own build system, but this is not portable.

Multimedia

  • iTunes
    Excellent audio player.
  • MPlayer
    Best video player available on the Mac, but should be compiled from source. The binaries versions are not maintained it seems. Also, the GUI sucks. Update: new binaries seem available directly from the official site.
  • VLC
    It will play less files than MPlayer, but the Mac port is official and better.
  • Adobe Photoshop
    Best image editing program.
  • Roxio Toast
    Good CD/DVD-burning software, but not free.

Office

  • Adobe Acrobat Reader
    Essential to read PDF files.
  • Address Book
    Nice contact book manager.

Utilities

  • Built-in Unarchiver
    It will decompress .tar, .zip, and other formats. Nice integration into the Finder.
  • CDFinder
    Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Good but not multiplatform nor Open-Source.
  • CDCat
    Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Free as in speech, multiplatform, uses Qt3. But you must compile it yourself.
  • smartmontools
    Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive. If you install using the Apple installer, the daemon will be automatically launched at startup (remove the StartupItem to prevent that).