What are your must-have programs?

Trying to discover new/unheard Linux desktop programs (Sorry for the confusion).

Edit: I apologise for confusing a lot of people. I meant Linux desktop “programs” coming from Windows/Mac. I’m used to calling them “apps”.

Edit: 🙌 I’m overwhelmed with the great “programs” people have recommended in the comment section. Thank you guys.

MonkderDritte, (edited )

edir to mass-rename

fd is more convenient than find

aria2 makes downloads go brr with parameters -x 10 -k 5M and is integrated with multiple tools like yt-tlp, yay

Oh, and pass for password-management

ssu makes root console tools password-less. That and rdo for gui-tools (both a bit over 100 loc) made me uninstall sudo.

01011,

Making a note of fd and edir for later. Thanks.

beeng, (edited )

My nixpkgs list is something like

  • Firefox
  • Vim
  • WezTerm
  • Fzf
  • Zoxide
  • Starship
  • Copyq
  • mpv
  • Obsidian
  • Chromium
  • Xbindkeys
  • Xte
axzxc1236,

Syncthing and KeepassXC for syncing 2FA between devices. (I use Bitwarden for passwords)

Lem453,

Do you want to have 2fa keys on all your devices? Doesn’t that defeat the purpose?

axzxc1236, (edited )

Do you want to have 2fa keys on all your devices?

Yes

Doesn’t that defeat the purpose?

I use different password between KeepassXC and Bitwarden. (On my phone one of them is unlocked by fingerprint because I am lazy but not both)

And I don’t store KeepassXC password in Bitwarden.

axzxc1236,

While my solution isn’t perfect (if someone key logged my computer I am very screwed), I think it’s better than (1) have a much higher chance of losing my 2FA tokens altogether (2) put all hope on Bitwarden being not compromised

fine_sandy_bottom,

Everyone needs to make their own choices about this but IMO it’s fine.

Pretty much everyone saves recovery codes in their password manager anyway, which is the same thing.

MangoPenguin,
@MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

No, 2FA stops someone from getting into your account if they have the password.

nobleshift,
@nobleshift@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • rem26_art,
    @rem26_art@fedia.io avatar

    If anyone's interested and using KDE, there's Yakuake, which is also a Quake-style terminal that fits in nicely with that environment

    xcjs,
    @xcjs@programming.dev avatar

    I’m also going to push forward Tilda, which has been my preferred one for a while due to how minimal the UI is.

    kurcatovium,

    Although I’m not really terminal-heavy user, I use Yakuake multiple times a day. It’s awesome to have it ready all the time with one on keypress…

    rem26_art,
    @rem26_art@fedia.io avatar

    Ya Quake-style terminals are super convenient!

    steeznson,

    Emacs is the only app you’ll ever need once you’ve mastered it.

    kurcatovium,

    Is it even possible to master emacs?

    TheCheddarCheese, (edited )
    @TheCheddarCheese@lemmy.world avatar

    I really like Lunatask. It’s a task/habit management app kind of like Todoist, but it works better for me personally. The premium version is quite expensive, but the free one is quite okay to work with. And it’s still in development so a lot of features are missing (you can’t set a time for a task for example which I find ridiculous).

    Also Ghostwriter, it’s a really nice minimalistic markdown editor. I wish it was a bit more customizable but I guess I could try emacs for that.

    darklamer,
    @darklamer@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    When I finally learned about Pocket just a few years ago it surprised me greatly that I didn’t know about it before and now I use it daily:

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocket_(service)

    Interstellar_1,
    @Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    It does collect your data though, and it’s not open source. Omnivore is a good FOSS alternative

    Templa,

    We liked Readeck way better than Omnivore. Their browser extension is also very good.

    Interstellar_1,
    @Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    I’ve never heard of it! I’ll check it out.

    rodbiren,

    Syncthing, micro, fish, btop, podman

    I distro hop so these are usually the first that get installed.

    possiblylinux127,

    Localsend, distrobox+podman and ublock origin just to name a few

    node815,
    @node815@lemmy.world avatar

    For terminal, the first thing I install is Midnight Commander - dual pane file manager. midnight-commander.org

    For all of my physical Linux machines - Cockpit and Cockpit-File Sharing plugin.

    Desktop

    • Thunderbird
    • Firefox
    • Vivaldi
    • Gnome
    • Chromium I use Firefox, wife uses Chromium and My WFH job I use Chrome. Vivaldi is a backup browser, I’ve been messing around with.
    • QEMU/LibVirtd - So I can run a Windows VM for my old Canon Lide 60 scanner which scans clearly there, otherwise in Linux, it’s contrasted super grey for some reason.
    • Kopia-UI - Backup system which supports NFS Shares - set and forget type of setup.
    • VLC - Need I say more? Lol
    • OnlyOffice - Better aesthetically IMHO than LibreOffice
    • PDF Arranger - Works well to re-arrange pages or rotate them after scanning them in. (I self host Sterling PDF and will probably switch to that later)

    And for some inspiration - the “Awesome Linux Software” list (Not mine) similar to the other Awesome lists you see around. github.com/luong-komorebi/Awesome-Linux-Software

    Lem453,

    Thrown away your current ssh client and get

    xpipe.io

    governorkeagan,

    That looks really good!

    eugenia,
    @eugenia@lemmy.ml avatar

    I use XSane and TheGimp to scan and edit my paintings, Firefox with privacy extensions to browse, VLC to play videos, Gnome Mahjongg to waste time playing. I used to use Resolve to edit videos, I’ll soon start using Kdenlive. As a visual artist I have a thing for film emulation that Kdenlive can’t do, but it’s something I’ll have to leave behind.

    Nibodhika,

    What do you mean with film emulation that Kdenlive can’t do?

    eugenia,
    @eugenia@lemmy.ml avatar

    On Resolve there various helper for-film-emulation plugins, and also third parties like Dehancer and Cineprint (which are exceptional), that do near-perfect film emulation. These things don’t exist on Linux video editors. They barely exist for Premiere/FinalCut. It’s a Resolve-first ability.

    Nibodhika,

    I think I didn’t expressed myself correctly, what do you mean with film emulation?

    eugenia,
    @eugenia@lemmy.ml avatar

    Film emulation is a whole “sub-genre” of photography and video, where creators are trying to emulate the look and feel of various types of films, like kodachrome, fujifilm, etc. In fact, most movies and music videos have a layer of such emulation during their color grading process. I also treat my videos that way for a more cinematic look.

    Palacegalleryratio,

    Not exactly unheard of:

    Terminal:

    Vim or Neovim, Tmux or Zillij.

    Web browser:

    Firefox or a fork, but personally I’m fine with the standard Mozilla offering with a couple of extensions.

    Photos:

    Big fan of darktable as a lightroom replacement.

    kylian0087,

    Htop vim and ncdu to name a few terminal apps.

    aktenkundig,

    +1 for vim. Although I usually use a stripped down gvim.

    Didn’t know ncdu, will try.

    I prefer btop to htop, the interface is much nicer.

    For the terminal (and within vim) another must-have is fzf.

    42yeah,

    ncdu is like Filelight but for terminal. It’s awesome!

    aktenkundig,

    Analogous to the Krita post, I am surprised nobody seems to know KolourPaint. It’s similar to MS paint. I use it, when I need to make a quick sketch, whiteboard style, e.g. when sharing my screen with a coworker.

    Otherwise, I really must have Dolphin and Okular.

    I love dolphin’s split mode (quickly toggled with F3) and its ability to seamlessly navigate all kinds of protocols for my NAS, webdav for nextcloud storage, MTP for the phone…

    Okular has annotations which have been super useful to me. And it’s so easy to switch between viewing single page, two-page and multi-page. Which is great for skimming text documents and presentations. The auto reload ability is great when iterating on a document (e.g. latex doc or matplotlib chart).

    Otherwise, of course firefox and thunderbird, not much to say here Please don’t use chrome. It’s market share makes Google the de-facto owner of www technology. But I guess I’d be preaching to the choir here.

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