Essential applications (Linux, Android, Windows)
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A list of all the applications that I use, on various platforms.
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
- 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).
Linux Applications
Packaging Systems (on Gentoo)
- emerge
- THE only one tool that you will ever need.
Console Applications
- htop
- Small utility to monitor your system's resource usage (CPU and RAM).
- nano
- Good console text editor.
- nopaste
- Excellent small utility to post to an online paste service.
Internet
- Thunderbird
- Good open-source email client from Mozilla.
- Firefox
- The standard open-source browser that you can trust. Emerge netscape-flash to get Flash support.
- Konqueror
- The integrated FTP/SFTP client is very good. And as a file browser, Konqueror is also very useful.
- gFTP
- FTP client, open-source. It is fast and efficient, but old and not very robust.
- FTPcube
- Promising FTP client. Ugly interface yet.
- X-Chat
- Open-source IRC client. Not awesome, but ok.
- Kopete
- Excellent, ultra-customizable multi-protocol IM client.
- Pidgin
- Open-source multi-protocol IM client. Not bad.
- TightVNC
- VNC client.
Development
- GCC
- The whole GNU tool chain will be of course included in the system.
- 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.
- KHexEdit
- This is an hex editor, sometimes useful.
Office
- Adobe Acrobat Reader
- To read PDF files.
- Kpdf
- Free PDF viewer. Lighter than Acrobat Reader.
- OpenOffice
- Necessary to open Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files.
Graphics
- Inkscape
- Excellent SVG editor. Same as Adobe Illustrator.
- The GIMP
- good graphics manipulation program. Strange interface.
Multimedia
- K3b
- Nice GUI to burn CDs/DVDs.
- Amarok
- iTunes like audio player and collection manager.
- MPlayer
- This is the player that will play almost all your media files. On Linux the built-in GUI is OK.
- VLC
- It will play less files than MPlayer, but is still good. Allows streaming over a network.
- Picasa
- Photo organizer from Google. Not good for viewing single files.
- Showimg
- Excellent image viewer.
- Comix
- Really excellent viewer for reading comics.
Utilities
- Ark
- With the Konqueror plugin, it has a nice integration into your system. Allows you to uncompress archives directly from Konqueror / your desktop.
- CDCat
- Organizes a CD/DVD collection. Free as in speech, multiplatform, uses Qt3. But you must compile it yourself (not in Portage).
- smartmontools
- Tool to monitor the SMART status of your hard drive.
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.
- DosBox
- Emulator for the DOS operating system, allows you to play old PC games.
- GXMame
- Front-end for the XMame Linux version.
- Gens
- Sega Genesis emulator.
Games
- Battle for Wesnoth
- wargame similar to Warlords.
- 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.
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.
- TortoiseSVN
- Excellent GUI front-end for Subversion.