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

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;* Amarok : Best audio player available.
*; Amarok : Best audio player available.


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


*; VLC : It will play less files than MPlayer, but is still good.


=== Utilities ===
=== Utilities ===

Revision as of 10:24, 14 October 2006

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

  • 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.
VLC
  • It will play less files than MPlayer, but the Mac port is official and better.


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.


Internet

  • Thunderbird
    Good open-source email client from Mozilla.
  • Firefox
    The standard open-source browser that you can trust.
  • gFTP
    FTP client, open-source. Although it seems old and not maintained it is fast and efficient.
  • X-Chat
    Open-source IRC client. Not awesome, but ok.
  • Gaim
    Open-source multi-protocol IM client. I don't like it that much, but it works - I hope version 2 will be better


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.
  • KDevelop
    Very good IDE for C/C++ development.

Multimedia

  • Amarok
    Best audio player available.
  • 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.

Utilities

Ark
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.