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Posted: 13 Jun 2014, 20:37
by amospalla
The list could be infinite, but let's put some!

Absolutely necesary: vim (with vimoutliner or vimwiki), tmux, bash, i3(or awesome), rxvt-unicode, firefox+vimperator, zathura, weechat, keepassx, parcellite, terminus font, gmrun.

Nice: vimpc, cdw, ncdu, pastebinit/wgetpaste.

Comments: mosh is great, but having to open udp ports without option to set them makes it imposible to use with nat with several hosts.

Posted: 14 Jun 2014, 01:14
by wheybags
Yeah, I know part of the "whole point" was to avoid this, but it would be nice to have a moshd that runs on one port for all connections.

Posted: 14 Jun 2014, 02:58
by Vierax
What I use (GUI should change if I finally try i3 Windows Manager)

Graphism :
Gimp
Inkscape
Krita, created for digital painting but has more features than Gimp (like native CMJK support)
Scribus, more advanced for printing document than LibreOffice Writer despite the difficulty to import opendocument files :(

Internet :
Firefox (Iceweasel for my Debian) with Addblock and Ghostery extensions
Fillezilla
qTransmission (because I like dark themes and Transmission in GTK3 stays light in my Xfce session)
Thunderbird (Icedove for Debian), great to follow mailing lists
Xchat, not the best IRC client but runs fine
wget, because sometimes you don't want to open your browser just to download from a known location
traceroute, to know where the problem comes from when you can't access a specific URL

Multimedia :
Audacious, because I like the Winamp Classic look
VLC, insanely complete !
Gnome Subtitle, nearly professional subtitle editor I used to fansub

Games :
The Battle Of Westnoth, if I have to name only one free open sourced game
Vegastrike, too vast universe and systems but the physic is wonderful
Thomas was Alone, not a free game but very refreshing
… I stop here because there is plenty of cool games running on Linux

system/security :
Htop, it adds colours to the good ol' top
Gkrellm, shows you graphs and other informations to monitor your computer. A bit long to set up but when it's done it's done. I never figure how to configure properly the famous Conky.
rkhunter, looks for rootkits (add a rule into cron or anacron)
lynis, to check potential vulnerabilities into your OS
diskscan, it read all blocks of your HDD and shows you a graph with the speed it takes. Usefull to check if there is no prefailure
chkfs (or e2fsck for Ext2,3,4)
smxi, it's a script from CrunchBang helping maintenance, works on every Debian based distros

Unisson, easy to use data synchroniser for example to save files in an external drive.

I don't use vim or emacs because I'm not a programmer and I don't need advanced features that much : leafpad and nano are enough to me.

Posted: 14 Jun 2014, 09:02
by matt3o
In games Eschalon trilogy! Not free/open source but very well done.

Posted: 14 Jun 2014, 12:24
by ne0phyte
Chrishas wrote:dwb browser
vim
Nice, another lightweight browser to try. So far I tested xombrero, uzbl, luakit and surf.
I used luakit for a few weeks but somehow went back to chromium.

Posted: 14 Jun 2014, 16:24
by sth
suckless-tools - mostly dmenu and slock. best application launcher and session locker i have ever used :)
zsh is pretty cool. mostly it's just neat, i can live with bash no problem, but i'm testing it out on my work machine.
i'll probably switch from chromium to dwb or uzbl for my 'personal' browser. i "need" firefox for a webapp at work.
my work machine is pretty basic - right now i don't even have a bar. i'm gonna figure out a tray because a specific program i need for work REALLY likes having a spot in the tray, but i dont need a window list and my clock is in the terminal at the bottom of my tmux sessions.

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 13:01
by xauser
vim, mutt, perl, gcc, g++, python, php, make, lftp, screen, tmux, schroot, truecrypt (?), urxvt, less, htop, bmon, git, aptitude, exim, proftpd, owncloud, tcpdump, awesome, nzbget, openvpn, axel, mplayer, vlc, vdr, xbmc, nodm, slim, man, bash, df, du, mount, grep, find, ls, ssh, apache, tail, head, dovecot

In one word: Debian

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 16:01
by Hypersphere
xauser wrote:vim, mutt, perl, gcc, g++, python, php, make, lftp, screen, tmux, schroot, truecrypt (?), urxvt, less, htop, bmon, git, aptitude, exim, proftpd, owncloud, tcpdump, awesome, nzbget, openvpn, axel, mplayer, vlc, vdr, xbmc, nodm, slim, man, bash, df, du, mount, grep, find, ls, ssh, apache, tail, head, dovecot

In one word: Debian
Yep, I suppose Debian is like Abraham -- father of a multitude. There would be no Ubuntu and its derivatives w/o Debian.

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 17:45
by davkol
derp

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 17:51
by matt3o
I thought pandoc was a converter.

btw, debian is too open source strict for desktop imho. at that point maybe better to get the ubuntu minimal and build your system from there.

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 18:27
by pietergen
Infinality

It drastically improves font rendering in any Linux distribution, to match & surpass the rendering in OSX and Ubuntu. Readhere how it works and what it does. Hereis the website and blog itself.

Since I've installed Infinality on my home computer, my work's PC (Windows7) makes my eyes bleed. Windows rendering is overly skinny and the antialiassing is mediocre. OSX rendering is better, yet can be too fat. Ubuntu has a nice OSXy rendering, but lacks flexibility. Infinality sits nicely in between and is endlessly adaptable. (Say, you want different rendering for font Y in application Z, but only for italics, unless the size is between 8 and 16 points? You can do that! ... :shock: )

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 18:29
by matt3o
infinality has some bugs with font rendering in gimp (at least for me). I had to remove it. Also development seems stagnating by now.

Posted: 15 Jun 2014, 19:05
by davkol
derp

Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 01:31
by wheybags
davkol wrote: Wuala (the lesser evil, when it comes to proprietary data storage),
What's wrong with dropbox?

Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 01:32
by webwit

Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 01:39
by Muirium
I like to imagine Condie is personally rummaging right through my Dropbox, if you know what I mean…

Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 01:59
by Hypersphere
I once thought all was well with Dropbox, because I stored my important files in a TrueCrypt volume....

Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 15:51
by davkol
derp

Posted: 16 Jun 2014, 15:54
by matt3o
rsync.net is all I need.

Posted: 17 Jun 2014, 17:09
by Julle
I'm going to hijack this thread for a bit: Is there a way to get a program version number from Sourceforge servers? If there is a way to do this, can I compare the obtained version number to a local copy's version with a bash script?

I've gone through Sourceforge help documentation, and found nothing useful.

EDIT: To think of it, MD5 hashes might be the way.

Posted: 18 Jun 2014, 18:28
by matt3o
I love to find uber useful softwares I didn't know before.

Today it's "Meld". Really great GUI for diff. I usually do from terminal but I had to compare directories with a lot of files and it totally saved my life.

Posted: 18 Jun 2014, 20:16
by quantalume
Hercules + x3270 (IBM mainframe emulation)
Kate (KDE advanced text editor)

Posted: 18 Jun 2014, 20:20
by Hypersphere
quantalume wrote:Hercules + x3270 (IBM mainframe emulation)
Kate (KDE advanced text editor)
Until a few months ago I was running KDE on my desktops, and I like Kate as a text editor. However, recently I switched to the Mint implementation of Xfce, and I am now using gedit. However, when I am working from the terminal, I use nano.

Posted: 18 Jun 2014, 21:26
by davkol
derp

Posted: 18 Jun 2014, 21:34
by Daniel
matt3o wrote:I love to find uber useful softwares I didn't know before.

Today it's "Meld". Really great GUI for diff. I usually do from terminal but I had to compare directories with a lot of files and it totally saved my life.

Code: Select all

[diff]
    tool = meld
[difftool]
    prompt=false

Put this in your .gitconfig and you can use meld directly from git with $> git difftool ...

Works with mergtool as well:

Code: Select all

[merge]
    tool = meld
[mergetool]
    prompt = false

Posted: 19 Jun 2014, 00:15
by matt3o
Another feature I couldn't live without is Nautilus scripts. I pretty much hate nautilus, but the ability to run arbitrary scripts on any file is fantastic. I have a script to resize images and push them automatically to a server, one that converts SVG to PNG, another that converts any image to jpg stripping meta tags, another that removes trailing spaces from text files... and so.

@thanks Daniel for the pro tip

Posted: 24 Jun 2014, 08:41
by DanielT
Vim
Comix (how else could I read my comics and BD's :D )
Transmission
Mplayer
autofs
Amarok
Not Open Source but I like it : Opera Browser

Posted: 24 Jun 2014, 16:08
by cookie
After watching this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04gKiTiRlq8
I must say that I am really tempted to learn sublime!!!

Posted: 08 Jul 2014, 06:24
by lally
This got pretty simple over time.

Emacs (I considered vim, but org-mode pushed me over) with 1+ instances running as daemons
chrome
konsole
tmux
git (I never really got into magit)
xmonad / xmobar
zsh
build tools (g++, ninja, ghc, cabal, grunt)

And surprisingly little else. Occasionally some inkscape, R, blender, and latex. inkscape is fantastic with (pdf)latex.

Posted: 08 Jul 2014, 14:19
by Uncleleech
I keep getting called a noob for this but I really like nano for simple text editing. I see the plusses of Vim and all of that but for just changing one link of a config I really like nano.

I also enjoy the youtube-dl terminal app.