16 (or so) apps I'm thankful for
It's Thanksgiving day for those of you in the United States, time to reflect upon the things for which you're truly thankful. While I'm sure there are many more noble things to list, this is Downloadsquad, after all, and what would be more fitting than a list of programs I appreciate?
16. Cabos. I rarely use a Gnutella client any more. When there is the odd song stuck in my head that necessitates a one-off download, Cabos is what I use. It's got a clean, simple interface, and it works - and that's really all I'm after.
15. Flash Player. Damn you, Adobe. Now that v10 has taken care of some of the CPU and memory issues, it's hard to begrudge Flash. There are just way, way too many addictive little games and excellent web applications that have been built using it.
14. FastCopy. My boss also runs a DJ business, and transferring his multi-hundred gig library from drive to drive was starting to drive me insane. After stupidly giving Windows a crack at the job once, I quickly hunted down a better tool for the job. FastCopy with the buffer cranked up made (relatively) short work of the task.
13. Find and Run Robot. It's not quite a flashy as the more popular Launchy, but it's much lighter on resources and gets the job done just as well. There are also tons of great extensions for it. For those who swear by the power of the keyboard, FARR is a must have.
12. MalwareBytes Anti-malware. My favorite weapon against infested customer computers. If it were fully portable it'd be even better, but since I can install and update it safe mode I'm not too concerned. MalwareBytes scans quickly and does an amazing job at finding and uprooting all kinds of fiendish software.
11. VirtualBox. In my continuing quest to find one Linux distro that I can finally stick with, VirtualBox is my right-hand app. Now that I've got some decent hardware to virtualize on, I was able to ditch my frankenlaptop and give it a well-deserved rest. I can't even guess how many times I formatted the poor devil's hard drive.
10. LastPass. I admit it. I was guilty of at least one of my "five ways to surf like a complete moron." I used the same password on just about every site. In my defense, it was very strong. Now, however, I leave the grunt work up to LastPass. I've got one memorable but insanely difficult master password and let it remember my sites for me. It's got a form filler now, too. Who doesn't want to avoid repetitive typing?
9. ImgBurn. I only started using ImgBurn after seeing it pop up repeatedly in comments on some of my posts. You guys were right - it's a great burning app, and it's doing a fantastic job at backing up my WII games. Being out one $60 disc with no copy is enough for me, thanks.
8. Skype. When my wife and I were having serious withdrawals while being away from our son for the first time, Skype came to the rescue. Thanks to its excellent video conferencing we were able to hear our son tell us that he didn't miss us at all face to face - and follow it up by telling us to talk to grandma because he was all done.
7. Chrome. Though I only use it occasionally, I really appreciate its existence. Because of Chrome and the competition over browser share, we're more likely than ever to see great developments in all our favorite web browsing applications.
6. Photoshop. I really want to love the Gimp, but it still frustrates me from time to time. For example, why does my image not redraw when I crop it? Why is working with type such a pain sometimes? Photoshop is still the grand master of image editing kung fu, and it keeps getting better - CS4 even runs in native mode on my Vista x64 install.
5. OpenOffice.org. The big reason I love OpenOffice: it helps me combat retail customers who beg for a pirated copy of Microsoft Office. It looks and acts enough like the original that I've yet to hear a complaint back. Except, of course, that their workplace computer doesn't know what to do with OOO's native formats. Sigh. Maybe someday.
4. Free antivirus. Thank you, Grisoft, Aliwil, Avira, Comodo, Clam, et al. With so many great, free options available to home users, I'm always surprised to see a system come in with no protection at all. It's even harder to imagine people that get suckered into paying $90 for rogue apps like SuperWin Antivirus Zapper Gold 2009 Pro Edition Plus.
3. Your DVD backup solution. It's my stinking movie, and I should be able to have a security blanket in case the disc gets damaged. Also, thanks for including all those trailers and disabling the menu button on the DVD I bought. I use Handbrake and DVD43 to get the job done, but there are plenty of other good options out there.
2. Your torrent client. I'm still using uTorrent, and I'll probably never switch. It's tiny and works well, and I've never used another client that was appreciably speedier. Regardless of which client you use, .torrent files provide countless hours of fun and excitement for us all - legal or otherwise!
1. Firefox. Hands down the most used application on my computer. Firefox is a great browser, and the development community keeps pumping out great extensions for us to install. Michael Arrington once called Google Chrome a "Windows killer," but surely Firefox (and its thousands of platform independent XPI addons) is a more likely executioner.
Feel free to chime in with the apps you'd put on your list - everyone at Downloadsquad appreciates your suggestions!
16. Cabos. I rarely use a Gnutella client any more. When there is the odd song stuck in my head that necessitates a one-off download, Cabos is what I use. It's got a clean, simple interface, and it works - and that's really all I'm after.
15. Flash Player. Damn you, Adobe. Now that v10 has taken care of some of the CPU and memory issues, it's hard to begrudge Flash. There are just way, way too many addictive little games and excellent web applications that have been built using it.
14. FastCopy. My boss also runs a DJ business, and transferring his multi-hundred gig library from drive to drive was starting to drive me insane. After stupidly giving Windows a crack at the job once, I quickly hunted down a better tool for the job. FastCopy with the buffer cranked up made (relatively) short work of the task.
13. Find and Run Robot. It's not quite a flashy as the more popular Launchy, but it's much lighter on resources and gets the job done just as well. There are also tons of great extensions for it. For those who swear by the power of the keyboard, FARR is a must have.
12. MalwareBytes Anti-malware. My favorite weapon against infested customer computers. If it were fully portable it'd be even better, but since I can install and update it safe mode I'm not too concerned. MalwareBytes scans quickly and does an amazing job at finding and uprooting all kinds of fiendish software.
11. VirtualBox. In my continuing quest to find one Linux distro that I can finally stick with, VirtualBox is my right-hand app. Now that I've got some decent hardware to virtualize on, I was able to ditch my frankenlaptop and give it a well-deserved rest. I can't even guess how many times I formatted the poor devil's hard drive.
10. LastPass. I admit it. I was guilty of at least one of my "five ways to surf like a complete moron." I used the same password on just about every site. In my defense, it was very strong. Now, however, I leave the grunt work up to LastPass. I've got one memorable but insanely difficult master password and let it remember my sites for me. It's got a form filler now, too. Who doesn't want to avoid repetitive typing?
9. ImgBurn. I only started using ImgBurn after seeing it pop up repeatedly in comments on some of my posts. You guys were right - it's a great burning app, and it's doing a fantastic job at backing up my WII games. Being out one $60 disc with no copy is enough for me, thanks.
8. Skype. When my wife and I were having serious withdrawals while being away from our son for the first time, Skype came to the rescue. Thanks to its excellent video conferencing we were able to hear our son tell us that he didn't miss us at all face to face - and follow it up by telling us to talk to grandma because he was all done.
7. Chrome. Though I only use it occasionally, I really appreciate its existence. Because of Chrome and the competition over browser share, we're more likely than ever to see great developments in all our favorite web browsing applications.
6. Photoshop. I really want to love the Gimp, but it still frustrates me from time to time. For example, why does my image not redraw when I crop it? Why is working with type such a pain sometimes? Photoshop is still the grand master of image editing kung fu, and it keeps getting better - CS4 even runs in native mode on my Vista x64 install.
5. OpenOffice.org. The big reason I love OpenOffice: it helps me combat retail customers who beg for a pirated copy of Microsoft Office. It looks and acts enough like the original that I've yet to hear a complaint back. Except, of course, that their workplace computer doesn't know what to do with OOO's native formats. Sigh. Maybe someday.
4. Free antivirus. Thank you, Grisoft, Aliwil, Avira, Comodo, Clam, et al. With so many great, free options available to home users, I'm always surprised to see a system come in with no protection at all. It's even harder to imagine people that get suckered into paying $90 for rogue apps like SuperWin Antivirus Zapper Gold 2009 Pro Edition Plus.
3. Your DVD backup solution. It's my stinking movie, and I should be able to have a security blanket in case the disc gets damaged. Also, thanks for including all those trailers and disabling the menu button on the DVD I bought. I use Handbrake and DVD43 to get the job done, but there are plenty of other good options out there.
2. Your torrent client. I'm still using uTorrent, and I'll probably never switch. It's tiny and works well, and I've never used another client that was appreciably speedier. Regardless of which client you use, .torrent files provide countless hours of fun and excitement for us all - legal or otherwise!
1. Firefox. Hands down the most used application on my computer. Firefox is a great browser, and the development community keeps pumping out great extensions for us to install. Michael Arrington once called Google Chrome a "Windows killer," but surely Firefox (and its thousands of platform independent XPI addons) is a more likely executioner.
Feel free to chime in with the apps you'd put on your list - everyone at Downloadsquad appreciates your suggestions!














Comments
35
Subscribe to commentsGeirNov 27th 2008 5:31PM
I would add Opera, PuTTY, NOD32, and Thunderbird to that list (assuming Windows is implied as the OS here). Others that may qualify are FileZilla, FileHippo Update Checker, TeraCopy, TrueCrypt, 7-Zip or WinRAR, and RocketDock. I probably didn't think of a few that should be on this list, but I think these are strong candidates....
Daniel CheungNov 28th 2008 7:59AM
Anyone got a better usage guide for FastCopy? The author's website documents the program in great detail, but his English is not that great.
sigskyNov 28th 2008 10:22AM
How about IrfanView? It's all I use to view images
watercressNov 28th 2008 12:20PM
im definitely thankful for:
AVG, 7zip, imgburn, utorrent, notepad++, spybot, ccleaner, audacity, handbrake, dvd shrink, media player classic, foxit, irfanview, free download manager and last but not least, johns background switcher :)
claubervsNov 28th 2008 11:56AM
I would add:
Belvedere (Automatically move, copy, etc files from a selected folder to other folders based on rules set by you);
AutoDelete (Delete files that are older than a date you set);
Qliner Hotkeys (Give you the ability to change/add the "win" keys shortcuts) Rainlendar;
SandBoxie (Install softwares in a sandbox, you can easily delete them later, can also run your browser sandboxed and any changes your browser makes to your pc while sandboxed can be easily deleted)
Unlocker;
And I would definitely add Music Match Jukebox for XP users and Vista users like me, I'm accepting opinions because Yahoo! Music just sucks (I'm using Media Monkey but its not MM and tried Songbird but was too early in dev to compare to MM).
avicNov 28th 2008 6:33PM
I also use: AIMP2, KMPlayer, InfraRecorder, BurnAware, SUMO, Maxthon, WinPatrol, SuperAntiSpyware, Ares, Bit Che, jZip, Defraggler and Revo Uninstaller. All of these are freeware. And last but not the least, the best file manager for Windows: Directory Opus!
Frank Schulte-LadbeckNov 29th 2008 7:33AM
Alright, it is a nice list, with other great mentions in the comments, but I would like to add two: notepad++ (since I find myself using this on an almost daily basis), and Inkscape (which I just started experimenting with- it is nice to have a free illustrator out there).
Ntw1103Nov 29th 2008 1:10PM
For me, it would be:
1. Winamp.
2. Trillian.
3. Firefox
4. vlc (+ the K-lite codec pack)
5. notepad++
6. winrar.
7. visual studio 2008 (full)
8. DreamWeaver.
9. the gimp
10. Alchohol 120%. Note. 52% is free, and works wonderfully.
11. Hamachi
12. VirtualBox
13. LogmeIn. (it does get installed on your computer so it should count.
That is it for me.
AbdoNov 29th 2008 1:28PM
Which of the anti-virus programs mentioned above is best to run on a laptop (uses least RAM), and is generally the best one?
NoRelationToNedNov 30th 2008 6:20AM
Programs I can't live without include many of the above but a couple I haven't seen mentioned are -
Miro: A great centralised Internet Video channel manager, the source of much info and entertainment for me.
Picasa3 : Just re installed Picasa after leaving it alone for a version or two but the latest version 3 is unbelievable value (being free). So many new features make it an almost complete graphic handling package.
StevieG21Nov 30th 2008 12:12PM
DVDFab is a great DVD ripper which is updated often. There is a free version which will still let you copy DVDs.
mattklumpDec 1st 2008 10:52AM
So Lee, what is your pick for the best free AV software? I've used free AVG for a long time, but am tired of having to reboot my Vista system every time an update comes through.
scottDec 1st 2008 2:04PM
Cabos does not work for me on my XP machine. It tells me Java is not installed on my system, though it most certainly is. Looking through the app's forum, others are having this same problem, with no resolution.
NeuromanJan 9th 2009 4:18PM
I'd add a few I'm surprised not to see:
- Robocopy and/or xxcopy for scripted/command line file manipulation
- FCIV for file hashing, tho' not very flexible, it's free, which is a good price
- Ztree - for Xtree lovers
- 7zip together with WinRar
- Ultraedit is, to me anyway, more robust than Textpad or others, with great regex support
- Threatfire seems good, but the new norton gaming ed. looks worthy of consideration for a personal machine...
Someone please recommend a good Acrobat reader and distiller application...
Thanks
AnnetteFeb 12th 2009 8:14AM
What am I doing wrong?? ALL these programs eventually ask for money! Nothing is free.... can you advise?
Thanks!