What app is so useful, you can’t believe it’s free?

mastermind@lemm.ee to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml – 505 points –
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VLC! No ads ever, that's insane!

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Bitwarden is one I use several times a day. They do have a support plan for like $10 a year that gives a couple extra features like TOTP support, but the base level is incredibly robust. It’s open source, too. I know a lot of folks also host their own servers with Vaultwarden, but that’s a little beyond my skill level.

I pay for it just because it's cheap and to support them

Same, the free tier is so good that I'm paying to make sure it stays free.

I pay for it just because it's cheap and to support them

I did this too when it first came out, and then the product became robust enough that I recommended we implement it at work because secrets management was non-existent. We have a bunch of licenses on the Enterprise plan now and it just keeps getting better each update.

My only complaint is that migrating the data to a new server is a pain in the ass and never works correctly, even when following the migration instructions to the letter. Always have to open a ticket with them for that. Not enough of a pain to move to another product, though.

I also still pay for my personal plan. It really is a fantastic product.

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I just recently started using their totp function and I can't believe I didn't switch sooner. Just the fact alone that it automatically copies the code to your clipboard is such a Time saver not having to open up a separate app.

It's a wild time saver. I can’t believe other folks go to a whole separate app for their codes! Hitting Ctrl+L to autofill passwords and user names then Ctrl+V for TOTP feels like a hack when I watch other people struggle with their other solutions.

I use a separate app for my codes, if someone somehow gains access to my Bitwarden if they have TOTP as wellcthrn they have all my accounts. With my TOTP in another app they still can't access them.

What do you use?

Not OP but, consider using something like a YubiKey or similar hardware key for your second factor authentication.

They usually support multiple protocols so you only need to carry one around - and storing your second factor with your passwords is like putting all your eggs in one basket.

Print out recovery codes or get an ekstra hardware key for backup and you get great security for surprisingly little effort.

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Right! I was using Authy so I didn't have to grab my phone every time, but even that was still having to open the Authy app and wait for it to load, copy+paste. But using the keyboard shortcuts for Bitwarden is just so fast. Like you said, feels like a hack. It even auto copies on Android and with the autofill, makes it so easy.

I use keepassxc which autofills. Then 2fsa has an addon that auto adds the code. I'm in in under 10 seconds. I dread the idea of keeping my passwords and TOTP in the same vault.

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Firefox. I couldn't imagine using the internet without it.

I've never thought about it, how do they make money? I've never seen an ad or sent them money.

They make a large amount from Google paying them to be the default search engine. Also they have been making additional projects that can be subscribed to as add-ons for Firefox (like a VPN and an email forwarding service that allows you to make fake email addresses or phone numbers to use on sites that will forward the messages to your real inbox/phone). You can use a limited version of the email thing without paying though so it is easy to try out. And they are always ready to take donations of any size and can be reoccurring. I personally pay .99/month for the email service even though I don't use it often. As it is nice to have if I need it, and it is basically a donation at that point. lol.

Here are links to those products if you care to read more about them or at least see pricing.
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/products/vpn/

https://relay.firefox.com/

But even just making a point to donate some one-offs here and there does help in small ways to keep a real option in browsers that isn't just another Chromium-based project.
https://donate.mozilla.org/en-US/

Everyone hated when IE was the only browser that sites were coded for, and we are seeing more and more Chromium only sites. Which means a bad vulnerability in Chromium will impact all the browsers based on it. Also privacy add-ons for Firefox tend to work better and block ads well.

  1. Donations

  2. Getting payed by google to make it their default search engine.

They get paid by Google to feature their search engine as the default primary search engine. In Fennec, the non-google-play version of mobile browser Firefox, Duckduckgo is set as default, even though both versions are maintained by Mozilla, the non-profit organization behind Firefox.

I adore Firefox but several years ago, Google Suite (Docs, Sheets, Forms, etc) decided to change their font system in some bizarre way that they're never formatted right on Firefox and cause spacing issues. It sucks because I use Docs and Sheets so frequently that I end up needing to keep two browsers installed and switch whenever I want to work on some of my projects.

This but in the Fennec flavor

Fennec is only for Android, because the desktop Firefox doesn't have have weird app-store shennanigans to begin with, so there's no point of maintaining Fennec for desktop.

And I do use Fennec for Android, just to keep the Google-Play shennanigans out of my browser.

7-zip

Yes, I totally paid for WinRar.

It's said that when Jesus comes back, you get to go to heaven if you paid for it.

The three people who did are going to be pretty lonely.

Microsoft is adding extensive archive format support (using libarchive) to Windows 11. I'd like to thank 7-zip for its service over the decades, though.

The way Msoft are going with right click options I'm doubtful it'll complete.

If you're talking about the more limited set of options you get when you right click a file in Windows 11, just hold shift while right clicking to get the original options. You've actually been able to hold shift to get additional options going way back, I think to windows XP.

There's a lot of extra useful options in there too like opening command prompts to the current folder and copying file paths to the clipboard.

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Linux

Not an "app" but close enough :) I agree anyway

On this note it's crazy there are people who will spend over $100 on a Windows license, when all they do is use a web browser or simple productivity apps like spreadsheets or word.

I can get if you're using some adobe products, or some game that hasn't been updated to the Linux compatible EAC, but for the vast majority of people paying over $100 (or having that cost passed onto you from the manufacturer if Windows is preinstalled) is crazy.

Bitwarden and firefox

I don't use it but blender is another one

What is blender for? I would Google it but I imagine it would mainly be kitchen accessories

Blender is an open source 3D art/graphics program, on-par with what companies charge hundreds of dollars per month for. Unlike some things where people say "Use GIMP instead of Photoshop!", Blender is actually industry standard everywhere I've worked

For the self-hosters out there, there's VaultWarden, which works seamlessly with all Bitwarden plugins and apps.

It's very lightweight and easy to setup and run. It has support for multiple accounts, so you can use it for your family, or business, or whatever!

Linux.

The world would be a very different place if linux didn't exist.

No Android phones, insanely outdated internet, software development confined to what corporations allowed.. Yea things could have been a lot worse

Insofar as BSD is very different. Linux emerged while BSD's legal status was in serious doubt, and had already gathered considerable inertia by the time the court case ended, but the court case ended favorably for the BSD community, so we'd have ended up on that if not for Linux.

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ITT people throwing out names of things with 0 mention of what they are or what they're used for.

Like, I appreciate being to look at everyone's recommendations, but man that's a lot of googling

It seems evident that the effort put into a comment would mirror one's investment in the topic. With these bare minimum answers I always assume the quality of the recommendation matches.

With a catch: If it's something absurdly popular, then no. Something like Google Maps, you really don't have to say why it's both surprising and unsurprising that it manages to be ad free. The whole conversation is self-evident and no more words are needed.

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Firefox, ppsspp, termux, VLC, Tachiyomi(SY), and KeypassXC/DX are coming to my mind. Probably there are a lot more. These are for android. Although they do apply to desktop except termux and Tachiyomi.

Edit: I haven't added the various FOSS tools as they don't really come in "App" Category. Some of them:

  • Linux kernel
  • git
  • gcc

+1 for Firefox and VLC. Always amazes me that such good programs are available for free. Remember to donate to FOSS projects, people!

Thanks for the reminder about VLC. I don't use it much any more, but back in the wild west days of audio/video codecs (some of which were paid), VLC would play everything.

VLC is still one of the most powerful video/audio player in existence.

I just wish it had a dark mode. All the fan skins are so bad and hide functionality. I just want the exact same UI but darker.

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Genuinely free? VSCode

Freemium: Discord

You pay with your data: Google Maps

If there's one service that I'm okay giving my data over for, it's Google maps.

Without that, we wouldn't have traffic data or how busy a business is. Crowd sourcing information is the only way to get a service as good as google maps. It's actually amazing to me that it's free given all of the satellite and street imaging done.

I used to contribute to google maps. I had the same vision you do. But then I learned about their dark way of stealing people's data. All your contributions to google maps are now property of google. You are giving away your efforts so one of the richest world companies becomes richer. And keep abusing their users. So now I use openstreetmap.org

I remember when I tried OSM maps for navigate my city a lot of years ago, awful experience. Today is almost perfect and changes in roads are updated so fast. I love OpenStreetMap.

I had the same experience with OSM maps years ago, but you've convinced me to give it another chance. I'm looking forward to seeing if it handles public transport in Vancouver as well as Google Maps does.

Yeah why the fuck is that? VSCode has no business being as good as it is. It's developed by Microsoft, after all. Are they planning to take it away from us and charge money for it in a few years? Why does it work on Linux so easily? Is it a government conspiracy to fill our brains with subliminal messages somehow? Wtf is the catch?

My best educated guess is that's it's a ploy of some kind. If Microsoft makes a free code editor that's really good, maybe no one will make a free open source one that's as good so that they will have control over the 1 most viable code editor? There are other things similar to VSCode but they cost money and are too big a pain to pirate because VSCode is better than them anyway.

It's not only VSCode, it's also Github and C# and TypeScript to a lesser extent as well, probably. They want to have control over the "coding" ecosystem. And look at what they already did with github, they trained AI on all projects on it, and they then sell access to that AI.

Github Copilot is worth the money. I've had it finish out functions for me after just a few lines. There's usually an error or two, but the consistency with which it can predict what I'm doing or trying to do is pretty impressive.

Copilot was trained on copylefted code while itself being closed. What was brought to attention by @ralC@lemmy.fmhy.ml isn't efficacy, but Microsoft's lack of ethics and social responsibility when it comes to their bottom line.

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They learned their lesson with the old Visual Studio. Spending all of that money to maintain an IDE where the core 90% of it was no better than any open source or shareware alternative.

The only reasons people needed VS specifically were all features that could easily be turned into self-contained plugins.

And with everything turning into cloud services, there’s pretty much no point in trying to sell installable local apps that are impossible to fully DRM and have no justifiable subscription fees.

And when an enterprise goes to pick a cloud repo service, cloud code workspace, cloud hosting, devops system, AI development assistant, etc… Who are they gonna pick? Maybe the one from the same company that makes “that one app all our devs rave about”?

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I feel like the Google maps algorithm has gotten worse over the last year or so. Maybe it's the Android auto interfacing with my car, but it sends me on weird routes sometimes even with a similar eta. I think it might be related to the eco settings but man is it annoying.

Discord also makes you pay with your data.

Their privacy policy says they don’t sell your data.

Not that you should automatically trust any communication platform (present Lemmies excluded), but exchange of data for services is at least not the business model on paper.

In a sense, you still “are the product”, because people won’t buy Nitro if there’s noone to talk to.

But that’s different from like… tracking micro-motions of your mouse to categorize your personality traits and increase ad conversions.

Please have a look at this about Discord Terms of Service:

https://tosdr.org/en/service/536

Looks like that's based on an outdated TOS. Even then, those terms are pretty tame except for the one about transferable license for uploaded content, which has thankfully been narrowed by a lot in the current TOS. (Now it just means: We're allowed to store your images on S3, resize them, and show them to people you specifically selected to send them to.)

For a company that's worried about 230 safe harbor, GDPR, CCPA, and wants to promote their first-party products at you, this is all standard.

Also:

This service does not sell your personal data

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Jellyfin, it's literally free Netflix if you own even just an old computer and some storage. Also open source that is another huge plus

One thing I like about Plex is that there's literally an app for every device I own. What's the Jellyfin support there?

There's an app on f-Droid, there's an app on the Linux app store (Pls don't get mad at the name, i switched to Linux less than a month ago) that's as much as I need, I don't own a "smart" TV, I don't own a car with an iPad, my fridge is dumb so the only screens I need supported are the Linux pc and the phone, and those screens are supported.

I gave Jellyfin a full year, and at the end of that year, the problematic Chromecast support did me in. Back to Plex I went.

LibreOffice for word processing and spreadsheets.

Honestly the open source office suites are pretty amazing now. It's what put me off Linux initially all those years ago, how Word/Excel just felt way better than LibreOffice, but now even the browser based stuff is on par.

I've only ever used Google Drive suite for my office work so that was super easy on Linux. I've heard people who crunch huge datasets in Excel don't have an alternative though

Home Assistant. It is an incredibly powerful smart home solution that is far more capable than any other solution one needs to pay for.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

OpenStreetMap is a free, editable map of the world, created and maintained by millions of volunteers. It includes data about roads, buildings, shops, points of interest, and more.

Many of the benefits of Google Maps without all its spying and advertising.

Bonus in line with this: OsmAnd.

Edit: a more lightweight, but fully FOSS OSM client: Organic Maps. Blazing fast and under constant development.

Edit 2: Here is a Lemmy community dedicated to OsmAnd: !osmand@lemmy.ml

Taking the opportunity to get on my soapbox and remind everyone that free software still requires someone's time and effort to maintain. If you've been using a free app for a while and you and you enjoy it (and you have the means to do so), consider sending a donation to the developers/maintainers! It's a good way to help ensure that the great, free app you enjoy stays great and free.

Or, if you don't pay for the product, you are the product.

If I might add to your excellent reminder, that if you're lacking on funds but have some coding skills, most projects are in need of some help. Stick your head into the dev forum and try a low-hanging bug.

If you can't code, MANY projects need help with documentation, translation, marketing, fund raising, etc.

Writing a comprehensive positive review on an app store or review site can have an impact.

If you do have a few bucks but need more for them than a donation can offer, buying their products (when available) - even just stickers and mugs helps to spread the word around while also supporting the developers.

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Weawow is a completly (also ad-)free weather forecast app run basically solo by a Japanese guy. I was surprised when I found this app that it was so good in every aspect that I had to donate the guy. It has has more than half a Mio. reviews on google play with an average of 4.9 . Idk of any free app with that many reviews having this kind of rating, well deserved.

Further honorable mentions:

  • Vivaldi browser
  • Joplin notes app
  • nextcloud
  • wikipedia (obviously)
  • Öffi
  • Signal
  • keepass
  • rif for reddit (R.I.P)

Just downloaded Weawow - one of the more impressive things for me is that it's only 144kb.

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I love weawow! Agreed about making a regular donation to the Weawow dev... or it'll face the curse of other top, rated free apps - the developer has tons of users, dealing with all their support requests, and can't make a living from it, then rightly sells up to some sh!tty company who then turns the app to shite. Yes, that's the story of the legendary Quickpic app.

yeah you can see all donation transparently on the donations section (unless u opted for anonymous) and fortunately it's looking like it's going quite well. I assume the creator actually has some more employees now or at least professional help for all the translations of the app as it seems to be available in a lot of languages.

Nice find, I just downloaded it and it looks amazing, thank you!

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Syncthing, Joplin, and Libreoffice are programs I use on a daily basis.

What do they do?

Syncthing allows you to sync directories between devices. I have different folders synced between by Windows desktop, Pi4, Android, tablet, and laptop.

Joplin is an open source note-taking app that I use with Windows and Android. I use Syncthing to sync the notes between my different devices.

Libreoffice is a replacement of MS Office.

Additive Manufacturing

FreeCAD Linkstage - RealThunder's fork of the FOSS CAD package is less buggy, has improved rendering, and is much easier to use.

PrusaSlicer - A snappy alternative to Cura for slicing 3D models for printing. A lot of awesome features and it's constantly under development.

Blender - I've done a little here and there with Blender, but Cycles works great for product renders. It's such a vast and amazing program that can accommodate so many different use-cases.

Music Production

LMMS - An FL Studio-like DAW with a simplified workflow and robust features. Lackluster plug-in support out of the box, but the addition of a VST host and waveform editor make it a fully-featured way to make music.

Element - Fully open-source VST host with support for VST3. Also works as a standalone application, which means you can create plug-in chains without touching your DAW. You can also save presets of those chains, and do crazy signal routing with the two-dimensional geometry nodes-esque UI.

Vital/Vitalium - It's literally FOSS Serum. You can follow Serum tutorials, and have them turn out. A wavetable synth that's so darn easy to use, you'll never want to use anything else. This is the quintessential FOSS future bass producer's synth.

Dexed - DX7 cartridge manager and emulator. It sounds like an awesome 80s FM synth; what can I say? Must-have for synthwave and noodling around with new sounds.

Sforzando/SFZ - An open standard and a free player for said open standard. Allows for what are essentially lossless, unzipped soundfonts.

VSCO/VSCL - A few decent symphonic instrument libraries based around SFZ. Both are CC0.

Freepats - A decent place to find more SFZ instruments. A few classics like a dry Tele and a few CC0 pianos live here.

Audacity- The only FOSS waveform editor worth using. It's extremely flexible, has a ton of useful built-in effects, and makes for a great companion to LMMS when you need to make more in-depth edits to samples.

Cardinal - FOSS fork of VCV as a VST, which enables you to create crazy virtual eurorack creations and play them with MIDI. You can also use it standalone, and the sheer number of built-in plug-ins basically guarantees your dream of automatic music generating machines are only a few clicks away.

MusicGen - A recent ML tool by Facebook that can be run locally; essentially SOTA on few-shot text-to-waveform music generation. If you have a somewhat-high-end GPU, it will probably work for you. A great tool for sampling into weird ambient tracks.

RVC - A recent tool that is fast to train and provides extremely realistic voice-to-voice conversion, especially for vocals. Ever see those AI SpongeBob singing memes? This is probably how they did it.

Photo Editing/Design

PhotoGIMP - While I'm still using Photoshop, PhotoGIMP is an add-on for GIMP that attempts to port the Photoshop UI to... GIMP. It's mildly successful, and potentially can ease the pains of transitioning to a new program. I'm honestly too lazy to switch at this point, but it looked promising when I peeked the last time.

Inkscape - I suck at vector anything, but this program proved to be useful on occasion. I believe it's a serious competitor to Illustrator if you bother to learn how to use it properly.

A1111's Web UI - Now totally FOSS, this absolutely insane piece of software integrates with so many different useful plug-ins to accomplish basically any conceivable image generation or AI-with-images task imaginable. You can literally do anything from normal text-to-image generation to upscaling or colorizing, and even img2img; it's multi-modal to no end.

EDA/PCB Design

KiCAD - Hands down the best EDA package I've used. Granted, it's the only one I've used. Still, this is how FOSS software for engineering purposes should be designed. I wish they would send their UX people over to help FreeCAD out. If you need to design a PCB for anything at all, use KiCAD, period.

Programming

NodeJS - The sole reason JavaScript is worth learning for more general computing tasks; with the sheer variety of packages on NPM, it feels like you can do anything.

VSCodium - All of what makes VSCode worth using, and none of the creepy MS telemetry.

General Computing

7zip - The one program to conquer all archive formats. It works, and it's absolutely tiny. I've even installed this on Windows 2000, and of course it worked fine.

LibreOffice - Occasionally buggy, but certainly the best FOSS office package currently available. LibreOffice Writer and Calc are especially usable and work great.

VLC - Is there anything this traffic cone can't play? Superb video and audio codec compatibility, although it won't play a MIDI unless you feed FluidSynth a soundfont to atone for your sins.

Strawberry - For when you want to listen to tons of music, but you hate the clunky nature of other audio managers. Strawberry basically doesn't use a DB, and instead edits metadata directly. It will also instantly update when you add new songs or change metadata, so you rarely have to restart it. It's the fastest way to manage tons of music I've found.

PCPartPicker - A website, but still worth mentioning. This is basically the only tolerable way to part out a PC, and it makes sharing specs of your recent projects trivial.

Rufus - Someone else mentioned this one, but it's basically the only tolerable way to create bootable installation media. Works well, and it's FOSS.

Operating Systems

Manjaro KDE - The closest you can get to SteamOS's desktop mode. Based on Arch, like SteamOS, and the same DE as SteamOS.

ZorinOS - Tolerable derivative of Ubuntu LTS, especially for Windows natives.

Games/Emulators

Quadrapassel - Best Linux Tetris clone ever conceived. It's in my Steam Deck library, for Pete's sake.

Yuzu - Pairs well with a PC handheld and a "screw Nintendo" attitude. The Switch emulator that is often marginally faster (and often slightly less accurate than) Ryujinx.

OpenRCT2 - RCT, especially the first two games by Chris Sawyer, are some of the best tycoon games ever created. OpenRCT2 is a faithful reimplantation that is going places.

Great list!

I'd definitely replace Manjaro KDE with EndeavorsOS nowadays, it's just way better without all the weird drama. And HoloISO if you want to go as close to SteamOS 3 as possible.

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This is an amazing list. I will +1 Dexed cos FM is great, and add a few more music production apps to the list.

BBC Symphony Orchestra Discover - A great all-in-one orchestral vst with decent samples. Great for people wanting to bridge the gap between writing with sections and writing for specific instruments. Lacks articulations like Legato and Marcato, but is ridiculously good for the price of jack shit

SPAN - An excellent mixing and mastering vst that gives you a highly configurable fft spectrum analyzer, with a few presets for translation checks. My favorite feature is the correlation meter, which helps me visually check interference in stereo mixes

Kontakt free library - Has some solid samples for a selection of instruments, but I mostly use the Jazz Guitar and Bass Guitar from here for basic sketching

Equalizer APO - System wide EQ. Extremely configurable. I've since hopped over to SoundID Reference, but prior to that, I was using this. It's great for making all your headphones and speakers sound like any other pair of headphones, and there's a huge library of headphone presets that tell you how to get a neutral signature on just about any pair of them

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I use KeePass every single day

How is it compared to Bitwarden?

As a recent convert, Bitwarden feels so modern. I'm not 100% comfortable not having my keyfile locally, but I've kept an old copy that I'll maintain with some of the more crucial passwords.

ffmpeg

I genuinely want to use it but I have no idea how or even how to start. Any advice?

Ask Google what you're trying to do and you'll find your answer, or ask ChatGPT.

Krita. I don't use it at a professional level so I don't know if it's missing important features, but as far as I know it's also used by skilled artists. Also, the documentation is great.

Any mentions of Krita on the internet come attached with one of two conversations.

  • How good it is, for how more obscure it is versus other art. Often put alongside Paint Tool SAI in the tier list. With 90% of the onlookers claiming to not have ever used either of course.

  • A weird, borderline unhealthy obsession with discussing the necessity of software mascot characters.

And the latter is then split absolute evenly between nerds who for some reason really dislike Libre Office's mascot and want to shit on all software mascots. And between people who want to fuck her and also fuck anything ever designed by Tyson Tan. And I gotta say, you freaking degenerates, I WANTED to play Freedom Planet 2 but every time I think of that game I also think of this shit and how one of you made this gigantic copypasta about the bat girl and....

What was I talking about?

LibreOffice has a mascot?!

Krita is good, intuitive wise on the same level as Photoshop for me 😵‍💫

I don't use Krita for art either. I use it as a PaintdotNET replacement and it blows it 20km out of the water

Krita really is exceptional for free software, started doing digital art in it just for fun and it's crazy how many tools are avaialble

I was looking for alternatives for Photoshop Touch (A great photo editing android app) as my new phone does not support 32bit apps. Found this and it even have an Android app. 10/10 rn

Others have mentioned most of my favorite tools. One thing I'd like to add is SageMath. It's a mathematical software that's comparable/better than commercial offerings like Mathematica and MatLab. I've rarely seen anyone in the academia using anything else these days. If someone does use something else, it's just because they're more used to it. SageMath is by far the best tool for most things math.

Also, while typing about Sage, I was reminded of how great of a tool LaTeX is. If you want to write anything that'll be more than a single page, LaTeX is probably the best way to do it.

Maps. Gives me accurate directions,live traffic data and anything else I need on the road e.g restaurants,hotels,petrol stations etc.

Well, you pay with your data so there's that...

Fwiw, OpenStreetMap is pretty amazing

I've just recently started contributing to OSM like a madman. That shit is incredible and exciting.

Same, downloaded StreetComplete few days ago and it's really fun to solve quests and map things all at once :)

Oh man, I've been doing the same. It's arguably the best "game" I have on my phone currently.

Yep but honestly live traffic and occupancy for buildings, as well as my own location history for me personally is just too useful. I can find out where I was for essentially any point in time since ~2016 data that would've been lost to me several times if I were to have kept the data myself.

Seriously it has sort of changed the world. I know I'm just handing all my location data to Google but the way it works and the features it offers are amazing and I cannot imagine a world anymore in which I might get lost if I just take a wrong turn somewhere. That combined with the free messaging has made "finding" anything location related a non issue. I can send people a location to meet, I can look up an address someone gave me, I can send my spouse my live location while I'm on my way home to let her know how far I'm out, I can find a hardware store in a town I've never been to because I need to tape to fix my bag or whatever, people write helpful comments about where to park or whatever. Maps will suggest different routes for pedestrians, cyclists, drivers or find you a public transportation route if you wish, including (usually) the exact time your train or bus or whatever leaves. It's fantastic

Look into OpenStreetMaps site for desktop PCs, and pick one of many android apps for the mobile phones that use OSM (i prefer osmAnd, it has a free premium version on F-droid software store) and you won't be needing to send all your location data to Google ever again.

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Obsidian - fantastic Markdown editor with rich base functionality and a huge garden of plugins.

So I just tried this, on Android. Yes it is pretty nice. Wish it would do plain .txt files too. Or even source code and syntaxes highlighting for different file types. Limited to just MD files sucks. Not really interested in the whole "canvas" thing. UI is a bit clunky on Android, but not terrible.

Currently using Acode front F-Droid for Android, which addresses the issues named above. And it's FOSS, which Obsidian is not.

Obsidian isn't meant to be a general purpose text editor, it's a personal wiki; None of the things you mentioned are its goals, though it can highlight source code in code blocks.

It's meant to be a second brain, with interlinking between notes and ideas a la the Zettelkasten method. I use it for keeping everything from DND notes to local documentation on my home lab, to meeting notes... Think Notion or the like, if you're familiar.

Here's a great overview by one of my favorite YouTube channels: https://youtu.be/DbsAQSIKQXk

For general purpose editing, I personally use Neovim in Termux.

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Blender. The leap from 2.79 to 2.8 and beyond was astonishing

Can't agree more. Blender is very solid 3D editor software with a lot of features for creating 3D models and scenes, whereas other software of such level of functionality is very expensive. I'm no way a professional 3D modeller, but I am very grateful for enthusiasts behind Blender to make it possible for random people to even touch the world of 3D modelling, not even speaking about to create quality assets for their pet projects.

GNU!

Just had to give a shout out to Stallman & GNU. I've seen a lot of mentions of thanks to Linux on here, but Richard will never let us forget that Linux ain't shit w/o GNU software to interact with it.

Just think of the number of GNU programs you've used, just in a typical day on the terminal.

My hat is off to you, Richard.

It's really a shame Stallman and many of the other free software pioneers are absolutely creeps to women.

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I can't believe Photopea (https://www.photopea.com/) is free. It has nearly all the same features as Photoshop and works in just the same way. But it runs in the browser! Super quick, regularly updated, and free. Amazing.

  • OsmAnd. Navigated me through numerous countries on holiday. Found us places to eat. So useful it persuaded me to start updating the map locally to help any fellow travelers

  • Joplin notes. Use this every day without fail

  • Nextcloud. Self hosted cloud that Ive come to rely on

DaVinci Resolve was the last app to really surprise me. It's a fantastic app for video editing with a ton of functionality. Most of the paid functions seem like composite fuctions of the free functions or overly professional tools, but for getting started with simple 2D- or 3D-animations or short film editing, it's beyond amazing.

Obsidian

The plugins for obsidian are staggering in their scope and possibility. I haven't even had occasion to look at how to develop a plugin, because every need I could possibly have is met already.

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Darktable photo editing software. It has an awesome suite of features and functionality and supports almost every digital camera raw format.

Nice to see another darktable user! I also learnt so much about photo processing thanks to their tutorials. It's very technical stuff that went ober my head mostly but it was fun to read.

I gave a shot. The UX was downright hostile.

Sadly it's the case for a lot of open source softwares I feel. I've had the same feed back on GIMP.

But honestly once you get used to it, it has some really great tools that actually make it just as powerful (if not more depending on who you ask) than its direct competitor: Adobe Lightroom.

It's a little rough to get into it, but imo it's worth the investment.

For sure. Darktable is very powerful. I don't understand why FOSS struggles with UX/UI so much. We know what works and what doesn't. Can we have a baseline that's at least somewhat usable? Blender does a great job, but I don't know if that counts as FOSS

Audacity.

Is the source code still tainted or did they remove the telemetry after the backlash?

As far as I know it never even made it to the program, it was just something they were planning - and subsequently cancelled due to the backlash.

Limiting myself to free as in freedom (no ads, not free to use because you are the product): KeePass/KeePassXC, GnuCash, Firefox, LibreOffice, digiKam, GIMP.

Digikam runs on my old thinkpad and handles hundreds of photos a session without batting the proverbial eye. It really is fantastic.

FreeCAD. All the CAD you need without the subscription and blocked off features.

I can believe it's free, coming from professional cad software it's basically un-usable.

Agreed. Using free CAD feels so substantially worse than literally any other option.

I believe SketchUp is also free for most users, and I'd much rather use it if I don't want to pay. It's not FOSS, but FOSS ≠ good

I also agree. Use audodesk inventor for work and fusion 360 for personal use. I tried freecad and could not do it.

For both professional and personal use, I can list 2 that you likely haven't heard of:

https://github.com/meowtec/Imagine Imagine PNG/JPEG optimization - it basically compresses images and photos so you can email lots of stuff back and forth without using the likes of WeTransfer.

https://ditto-cp.sourceforge.io/ Ditto Clipboard Manager - a multi clipboard for Windows. Ever try to paste something, only to realise you've already copied over it? Its use and helpfulness is so ubiquitous, I just could never live without it anymore.

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I don't know if this will show up or is already in the list, but: Rufus. I burn all my thumb drives for os installs with Rufus. It also lets me bypass a lot of the windows garbage that they've tracked on to the installer, like making you sign in to a Microsoft account to install. Also, Ventoy. It's a multiple OS installer, so one big thumb drive lets me install any number of OSes from it.

While I'm setting up those OSes, ninite gets me my windows programs, and Snappy Driver Installer Origin gets me my drivers. No more laptops with pre-installed bloat for me!

Visual Studio Code

Cura

Blender

WINAMP + GOLDWAVE!!!!!

Unfortunately with vsc you (us) are the product

I'm checking out vscodium this week, thanks to another lemee thread, and so far it's great, without the MS surveillance.

I'm usually really against that sort of stuff, but I'm okay with it in this case since it has become somewhat of a circular loop. They pump that data into ChatGPT, which gets consumed by GitHub Copilot, which gets pumped into VS code, which gets consumed by me.

The fact that they release Cura for free, make it available on all platforms (Mac/Windows/Linux), continuously improve and update it, and have incorporated the setup of basically every 3D printer you can buy is amazing.

Also, octoprint is free and open source and is incredible as well.

ReadEra is a great freemium ebook reader that got me back into reading again.

ReadEra was the only App that was able to load my huge book collection and search it, after trying over a dozen other apps. It's very well programmed.

Koreader which is also mentioned in this thread couldn't handle it.

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Proxmox and OPNsense. Blows me away that I can get that level of functionality completely open source.

Proxmox is so good it's hard to believe. It's VMware levels of features and convenience, while also supporting LXC containers, no license shenanigans, no enshitification, and the full flexibility of Debian under the hood

The recent-ish addition of Proxmox Backup Server is the cherry on top, with de-duplicated , incremental system image level backups with support for individual file restore

As a Mechanic. Ampol Netlube, from lawn mowers and passenger vehicle to motorcycles and heavy mining/industrial equipment, I can find how much lubricant it take, what viscosity and specifications.

Tailscale's free tier is unbelievable.

I second this, incredible product all around. Even better, they recently changed the free tier from allowing 20 devices to 100. An upgraded free tier is not something you see often.

Thanks for the HU, that just got them my business!

Tailscale is a zero config VPN for building secure networks. Install on any device in minutes. Remote access from any network or physical location.

So much software is so necessary that I cannot believe it is NOT free.

That doesn't make any sense. Necessity is the driving factor for it to cost money

Except for basic human rights

Except any job should be paid.

I believe that the only basic human right is the right to participate and function in your local society (whatever that means to your individual situation). In other words, you dont really have the innate right to anything, but you absolutely have the right to participate and receive the amount of benefit from others that you provide to them. For better or worse (and im not going to argue about it) the way we do that today, in this society, is currency.

ShareX. The ability to screenshot or record a video of practically anything onscreen with any shape or form, assign hotkeys to certain tasks, and the ability to automate all of that and attach to other applications/processes for a smoother workflow? For free? Count me in.

Here's how you actually free space on your computer in a way that matters without installing some malware "fix-it" program or need a computer divining rod to find every random file:

  • WizTree: Scan your entire computer hards drive(s) in a matter of seconds and display a very useful graph and data about where your space it being taken up. It's eons faster and easier to use than the leading competitor WinDirStat to the point where I can't imagine why anyone would use something that isnt WizTree.

  • BCUninstaller: It helps uninstall as many apps and programs off of your computer automatically with little to no user interaction needed beyond hitting the "start" button

  • BleachBit: It deletes all the temporary and nonessential stuff that gets accumulated over time. It won't clear as much as BCUninstaller or deleting stuff with WizTree and a lot of apps will generate most temporary files again anyways but I do typically see a decrease of around a gigabyte or two. Worth a shot in any case.

  • Winget: While not a software in the general sense, Winget is a package manager built into Windows 10/11 itself that lets you automatically download, configure, and install a ton of programs in one command via command prompt or PowerShell.

Every single program I've listed here are available on Winget.

Didn't know about winget. But I've been using Chocolatey for years.

I tried using Chocolatey briefly but Winget is already installed and is still pretty dang fast that I have hardly any reason to look for other options.

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The only calculator you need! It has custom units, functions, it's quick, light, stays on top.

I used speedcrunch for a long time but ended up switching to Qalc and haven't turned back.

Yes both!

I use Qalc for unit conversions (I often need to convert measuring units without acces to internet) and SpeedCrunch for everything else

Rclone, Neat Downloader, VLC, FreeCommanderXE, LMMS, any Keepass program, Rufus, Gimp, Notepad++, 7zip, ffmpeg, yt-DLP

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Bit of a different answer, but I enjoy Daylio. Very simple and easy to track your mood and activities to look back on. Not really super useful, but very interesting and fun!

Honestly I like Daylio so much I pay for premium.

The only thing I don't like (not sure if this feature is present on desktop) is that you can't extract and chart activity data over long periods of time. E.g. I want to see patterns of activity, but not relative to mood or other activities.

I really should pay for premium, it's just that the free version does exactly what I wanted from it so I've never felt like I had to. But at this point I just want to support it!

Yeah that's exactly why I paid for it. Think it's a great app and want to support them over time. Agree that free version serves the purpose just as well though!

I used this for a bit as data collection to help me and my therapist to track my depression. There are a bunch of free CBT apps out there for they kind of thing too.

I love it, paid for the premium version! Love the customization, the yearly view, and you can add photos and notes, it’s the best!

Oh thank you for this recommendation. I've been wanting something like this for ages but couldn't describe it properly to find it.

BOINC. If you're a scientist, you can use it to distribute massive computational workloads for free. And there are tons of computing volunteers who will gladly do the computation for you. If you love science, it's a great way to engage with some cutting edge research projects and know that you're "doing my part!". You can help research cancer, develop new open source drugs, map the galaxy, or just do some fun math stuff. Just install and pick your projects, no PhD required! There was even a projects for a while to reverse all the minecraft seeds that some people participated in. https://sopuli.xyz/c/boinc

Definitely R/R Studio if you're in data analysis. Runs circles around commercial Software in terms of scope and customization. A little harder to get into of course, but once you get the hang of it, there's little you can't get done with it.

ffmpeg, imagemagick, povray, supercollider, blender ...

I'd also say amule, qbittorrent, fopnu (freeware, but not free), retroshare.

There are likely many others. EDIT: ... I can't quickly remember.

Awesome list.

Would add TestDisk/ photorec

Ah, yes, saved me the heaviest (and longest to make) povray scene I've ever made after accidentally deleting it.

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Libby, the ebook reader app that is synced with my library card! It works quite well, and though I technically pay for my public library via taxes, the app is free and fantastic!

Youtube hands down. Youtube is the best dad, best teacher, biggest information hub, and arguably the best meme generator in existence. The fact i can dive into any type of video content and come out feeling like i gained so much is incredible.

But it's not free. You pay for it either with money (premium) or your eyeballs (ads). Not to mention the analytics data.

Depending on how you look at it then yes its not free. Though you could use something like Libretube to prevent both ads and any form of analytical data from being collected.

Though other alternatives like revanced manager prevent ads and give premium benefits. Not sure about the analytical instance of it though.

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You just have to curate the auto-suggestions. After a little while mine basically only suggests me educational/science videos and movie reviews/analysis.

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ReVanced and SmartTube. Google would have been able to justify their premium subscription much easier if they had all of the features from both.

SmartTube for Android TV, avoid paying YouTube Premium with no ads and SponsorBlock.

Have you been able to cast to smart tube from your PC? I can only from my phone

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Duplicati. It just works. Paired with Backblaze (not free) it's been our default home backup for a long time.

Any web browser

To think that Microsoft made the push for "free" internet browsers (as a way to beat Netscape and dominate the market)

DMDE. I know they have free and paid version. Even with the free version I was able to recover 500gb of data 100% with all the folder structure intact. With the free version you will have to manually select each directories but it was worth the effort.

Also Mega. I have multiple legacy accounts that has permanent 50gb space.

Taking the opportunity to get on my soapbox and remind everyone that free software still requires someone's time and effort to maintain. If you've been using a free app for a while and you and you enjoy it (and you have the means to do so), consider sending a donation to the developers/maintainers! It's a good way to help ensure that the great, free app you enjoy stays great and free.

The Portable Apps Platform - free portable software meta app. It's there, every day, like the Windows start button is there.

Oh man, there's something I haven't seen in a long time. Saved my ass at school so many times when the school's software was garbage

Still there, still growing, it's the gateway to 450+ apps. More, if you like the betas.

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I just downloaded Libretube from FDroid, which I also just downloaded haha, and I'm absolutely loving it!

So much better than YouTube.

GNU Texmacs.

I'm never, ever again wasting my time typing in sketchy and weird latex commands. Point and click. Easy and to the point.

Your simple, every day, web browser. It doesn't matter which one. They're all free and they all are the main, basic way of accessing the internet.

I'd have used "the internet" itself, but most people still have to pay to get connected to it.

total commander (file manager + ftp/sftp client) for android,

openvpn

I used OpenVPN for years and deployed it across numerous places I worked and at home, amazing project. I feel a bit guilty for switching to wireguard a couple years back but it really is amazingly fast.

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If you can't believe it, you need to learn more about FOSS software. In other words, what you're describing is PEBCAK.

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KiCad. A full suite of software for full PCB (printed circuit board) design and development. Super cool software.

For me, Reaper without a doubt. I've been doing audio work for the better part of a decade now it's become my main DAW of choice for the last 5 years. Technically a license costs you $60, but every feature is available in the "trial" version that never expires. SWS script support and the insane amount community skins/extensions makes it well worth the $60 if you plan on buying. I've replaced many ProTools with Reaper setups.....

Warpinator. Use it all the Time, easy file transfer without and fuss.

Want to transfer files between your PC and Phone? -No Problem

Want to send some Screenshots from your Steam-Deck to your PC? - You can do it too.

tachij2k, i use it for all my comic book, manga, and hentai needs. easy to use. access to a bunch of websites. I can download for offline uses. Amazing app.

Voyager for Lemmy (previously wefwef)

Edit: But seriously, FreeFileSync is a godsend. The name is a bit meh, but the program is extremely powerful