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.

rodbiren,

Syncthing, micro, fish, btop, podman

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

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!

    Churbleyimyam,

    A good kit IMO, in order of priority:

    • Cherrytree; nominally for making hierarchical lists but you can basically use it as a wiki for your entire life. You can theme it yourself too, if you think it looks too retro out of the box.
    • Syncthing, for keeping files synced between devices without having to use a server.
    • Qbittorrent, for getting files you need. Remember to install search plugins.
    • KeepassXC. Password manager (local, not on a server, use in combination with Syncthing).
    • Convertall, for unit conversions.
    • Calibre, for managing an ebook library, converting formats, removing DRM, transferring to ereader etc.
    • Rhythmbox, for music library, podcasts, internet radio.
    • Shotwell, for photo and video library. Easy to use, supports tags (metadata written to image files).
    • GIMP, for image manipulation. It’s extremely versatile, comprehensive and versatile. 3.0 is due out soon and will include non-destructive layer effects. Heavyweight piece of software, so expect a learning curve.
    • Ardour, for music production. Heavyweight, steep learning curve.
    • Flowblade for video production. Lightweight, easy to learn.
    • Libreoffice, desktop publishing.
    • Librewolf; privacy-focussed web browser.
    • Thunderbird; highly organisable email client.
    • Freetube, for watching youtube videos without all the ads and tracking. Local subscriptions and playlists, which you can export to use with Newpipe on Android. Also lets you download video and audio.

    If you like the terminal also add:

    • ranger; file manager
    • newsboat; RSS feed reader
    • yt-dl; download videos from youtube and many other sites ;)
    • w3m; command line web browser. I like to use this in combination with newsboat.

    Enjoy!

    Eyck_of_denesle,

    I would suggest yazi in place of ranger. Both are good, yazi just feels faster and has more features.

    Churbleyimyam,

    OK thanks, will check it out :)

    Steamymoomilk, (edited )

    I mostly use terminal unironically. Duf (to check system storage) Youtube-tui (written in rust tui for youtube) Btop (for system management) Iftop (see where my pc is calling to) Tuptime (has full system uptime from install to now. It just for fun to see how long my system has been alive)

    Ive also gotten into atuin to find command i used and cant remember the command.

    Also obligatory Megalist of terminal apps

    sh.itjust.works/post/11871260

    governorkeagan,

    tuptime: I’ve been looking for something like this

    Eyck_of_denesle,

    YouTube-tui is so good but it crashes in kitty and it’s image protocols are not that good. There’s a rewrite going on. Wish it would fix it.

    Steamymoomilk,

    If you build from github it works in kitty and crashes if you scroll to fast. It kinda works, hope they rewrite it

    Eyck_of_denesle,

    yeah I know. It’s super irritating, cause kitty image protocol is one of the best but the author hasnt properly acknowledged the issue yet.

    learnbyexample,
    @learnbyexample@programming.dev avatar

    oxipng, pngquant and svgcleaner for optimizing images

    auto-editor for removing silent portions from video recordings

    toastal,

    I prefer Scour for SVGs, but as long as we can agree that svgo is trash, we can be friends.

    pH3ra,
    @pH3ra@lemmy.ml avatar

    The first things I install on a fresh linux install are always htop (task manager) and micro (nano but better).

    Hellmo_Luciferrari,

    I have used both, but have stuck with nano. Why do you personally choose micro over nano?

    pH3ra,
    @pH3ra@lemmy.ml avatar

    It has shortcuts that feel a little more natural to me and the ootb theming makes files more easy to navigate.
    I know you can also theme nano but I’m lazy

    Hellmo_Luciferrari,

    Oh no judgment, purely curiosity here.

    pH3ra,
    @pH3ra@lemmy.ml avatar

    Never felt it as judgement :)

    Astongt615,

    Have you looked at btop by chance? More visually appealing to me, but still in terminal.

    MangoPenguin,
    @MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    I find it really hard to read for getting the information I need quickly, too much going on with too much useless info.

    Astongt615,

    That’s fair, there is more info and suffering font sizes. I usually minimize the disk use window myself.

    sic_semper_tyrannis,

    BleachBit is a must have and PhotoGIMP is pretty neat.

    devpaul,

    Someone already mentioned Logseq, but I’m really enjoying Obsidian for my note taking needs. It’s similar, but I have found Obsidian to be very nice. Not FOSS, but I really like what the devs are doing.

    Eyck_of_denesle,

    Same I tried logsec but it needs a bit more polishing and most importantly the excalidraw plugin is not that good.

    devpaul,

    Yeah I’ve tried One Note, Evernote and notion before coming across Logseq and Obsidian. I’m really enjoying it. I haven’t given Excalidraw much use in obsidian but I may do so in the future.

    Eyck_of_denesle,

    It’s a game changer for me. Obsidian plugin allows previewing these drawings in notes, and we can also link notes in the drawings. The built in canvas feature is simply bad. All it needs to do is center the text inside boxes. Wish the devs made it open source and this problem could get fixed but apparently they don’t believe in it.

    land, (edited )
    @land@lemmy.ml avatar

    Same here. I have tried:

    • Joplin
    • Standard Notes
    • loqseq
    • simple notes
    • craft and a few others, but I keep coming back to obsidian. Currently self-hosting it using one of the plugins, that helps me easily sync between pc, MacBook, android and iOS.
    devpaul,

    Nice! Yeah you’ve definitely tried a bunch of apps.

    What service are you using to self host obsidian? And is it cheaper than paying for obsidian sync?

    land, (edited )
    @land@lemmy.ml avatar

    Nextcloud and Janitor plugin. In my opinion, obsidian sync is not worth it. You have many ways to sync your data across different devices. Even using GitHub or Sorj.

    Edit: For my usecase, Janitor plugin works the best. You could try it.

    Edit:

    devpaul,

    Cool thanks for the info! Ill check it out

    SolarPunker,

    QuodLibet: I’m waiting for Amarok 3 to be ported but right now this is the best music collector/player in my experience.

    Andromxda,
    @Andromxda@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Have you tried Strawberry?

    SolarPunker, (edited )

    Yes, I’ve tried pretty much everything. Strawberry is pretty good but it doesn’t have a grid view for albums, it also shows the contents in a way that is not very intuitive imo (I want albums in publication order with original release date). I sincerely expect something new from the next Amarok in terms of intuitiveness of use, I hope the good man who is bringing it back wants to innovate something in this sense.

    zod000,

    Agreed

    beeng, (edited )

    My nixpkgs list is something like

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

    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.

    echutaa,

    I like to pack services in containers so ctop has been a great basic ui to manage and monitor them in the shell

    DmMacniel,

    KDE Itinerary. To keep all your travel (rail tickets, hotel reservations…) documents and Infos in one place.

    Tokodon/Tuba a great mastodon client for KDE and GNOME respectively

    Lollypop a beautiful and useful Mediaplayer and Jukebox for GNOME.

    Geary a great mail client by the same developer as Lollypop, also for GNOME.

    thebardingreen,
    @thebardingreen@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz avatar
    • sshfs. I use it for everything.
    • autossh
    • git. It always annoys me how Debian doesn’t come with it out of the box. Gets me every time I set up a new server.
    • Signal desktop app.
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