Favorite (Linux) software?

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scottc

08 Jul 2014, 14:22

The Linux world is full of people with superiority complexes who put users down for liking user-friendly tools. Disregard them and use what works for you - that's what the whole ecosystem is all about!

That said, vim4lyfe. ;)

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DanielT
Un petit village gaulois d'Armorique…

08 Jul 2014, 17:26

But do you have a Vim key cap ? :P

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scottc

08 Jul 2014, 17:33

I do indeed, a Cherry profile one too! ;)

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RC-1140

10 Jul 2014, 16:48

I still need a vim keycap.

Anyway:
vim (vimwiki, airline)
urxvt
screen (I've never really seen the advantages of tmux)
mpv (a mplayer fork, more features, more active development)
mpd + ncmpcpp
irssi
redshift
Evolution
mosh
dwb (the best lightweight browser I've tried so far. Customizability is amazing as well)

Oh and now that somebody mentioned youtube-dl: youtube-viewer. It's a package on Arch. It's a small perl program allowing you to view youtube videos from the console. It has a search feature and uses mplayer to play the video.

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sth
2 girls 1 cuprubber

14 Jul 2014, 08:31

Uncleleech wrote: 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.
Nano is great for what it is. At this point I'm not very used to it and I screw up more than I do in vi/vim :lol: But the biggest reason I thought it was worth learning is just that it's on practically everything I've ever come in contact with in my career. Most linux boxes come with nano but I did at one point have to work with some BSD derivatives and knowing the basics of vi made it a lot easier.

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DanielT
Un petit village gaulois d'Armorique…

14 Jul 2014, 09:38

RC-1140 wrote: I still need a vim keycap.
A Vim GB in DSA profile is live now, 8 days to go, you can still grab one. ;)

davkol

20 Jul 2014, 11:20

Rawstudio. It's about as simple as UFRaw, but the experience feels much smoother, and it's quite user friendly compared to Darktable. I still want to try AfterShot Pro some day though.

andrewjoy

28 Jul 2014, 10:56

I love Surf and UZBL
http://surf.suckless.org
http://www.uzbl.org/

I also like ST
http://st.suckless.org/

when i do boot up the old Linux box ( not as much as i would like )they are my staples

Apologies if this conflicts with the no DE or WM but this i technically a terminal multiplexer
http://tmux.sourceforge.net/ :mrgreen:


If you are like me and want to do as many things as possible from the command line( as its faster and why use resources on a computer when you don't need to) you may find the flowing very interesting, i know i do
http://inconsolation.wordpress.com/
https://kmandla.wordpress.com/

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sth
2 girls 1 cuprubber

28 Jul 2014, 11:35

andrewjoy wrote: I love Surf and UZBL
http://surf.suckless.org
http://www.uzbl.org/

I also like ST
http://st.suckless.org/

when i do boot up the old Linux box ( not as much as i would like )they are my staples

Apologies if this conflicts with the no DE or WM but this i technically a terminal multiplexer
http://tmux.sourceforge.net/ :mrgreen:


If you are like me and want to do as many things as possible from the command line( as its faster and why use resources on a computer when you don't need to) you may find the flowing very interesting, i know i do
http://inconsolation.wordpress.com/
https://kmandla.wordpress.com/
i like yer style :maverick:

teclat

21 Sep 2014, 18:41

Some that I love and haven't seen a lot here:

byoubu / tmux / screen - http://byobu.co/
script - http://www-users.cs.umn.edu/~gini/1901- ... cript.html
ttyrec + ttyplay - http://0xcc.net/ttyrec/index.html.en
socat - http://www.dest-unreach.org/socat/

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pietergen

07 Oct 2014, 15:48

Uncleleech wrote: I keep getting called a noob for this but I really like nano for simple text editing.
I like nano too :D

Great suggestions here. My additions:

- ranger From the archwiki: "ranger is a text-based file manager written in Python. Directories are displayed in one pane with three columns. Moving between them is accomplished with keystrokes, bookmarks, the mouse or the command history. File previews and directory contents show automatically for the current selection."

- llpp "Very fast PDF reader based off of MuPDF, that supports continuous page scrolling, bookmarking, and text search through the whole document" http://repo.or.cz/w/llpp.git

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Hypersphere

07 Oct 2014, 16:04

I like nano! And I still use a terminal and pine (now alpine) for my email client; pine and alpine use nano commands.

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pietergen

07 Oct 2014, 16:43

Hypersphere wrote: I like nano! And I still use a terminal and pine (now alpine) for my email client; pine and alpine use nano commands.
Hyper, I'm about to install a local email client. I was thinking mutt+offlineimap. Did you use mutt as well? Perhaps alpine is better?

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Hypersphere

07 Oct 2014, 17:47

pietergen wrote:
Hypersphere wrote: I like nano! And I still use a terminal and pine (now alpine) for my email client; pine and alpine use nano commands.
Hyper, I'm about to install a local email client. I was thinking mutt+offlineimap. Did you use mutt as well? Perhaps alpine is better?
No, I don't use mutt.

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fireglow

07 Oct 2014, 18:18

pietergen wrote:
Hypersphere wrote: I like nano! And I still use a terminal and pine (now alpine) for my email client; pine and alpine use nano commands.
Hyper, I'm about to install a local email client. I was thinking mutt+offlineimap. Did you use mutt as well? Perhaps alpine is better?
I recommend you do NOT use offlineimap as it's simply a mess.
Have a look at mbsync (http://isync.sourceforge.net/mbsync.html) instead. Works very well.

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pietergen

08 Oct 2014, 12:37

I'll look into mbsync, thanks for the suggestion. My employer uses a &^$%# Exchange server :evil: POP3 is blocked. The web client (outlook web access) sucks beyond belief. I'd like to have the emails locally plus Gmail. Some form of downloading is needed (I was thinking offlineimap, but I'll look at mbsync), plus I need to properly "bounce" them to Gmail, that is: send forward, but maintain the original sender. It's also called redirect. mutt does that, I'll see if alpine has that possibility as well.

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Cherry1990

13 Oct 2014, 01:01

File Commander for Linux.

andrewjoy

13 Oct 2014, 11:35

my favorite linux software is now avrdude as it got my XT working :D

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matt3o
-[°_°]-

13 Oct 2014, 14:09

aria2c is also a very nice software

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