On my old computer, I had a ton of software I’d acquired during college on education licenses and … by … er … other means. Photoshop, Flash, Dreamweaver, Cool Edit, and assorted other programs. My new computer was built by a coworker for about $350, and I’m currently trying to populate it with good software. But I’m staying on the up-and-up this time. I’m sticking to all software I can afford. Thanks to the $20 copy of Win XP my coworker got me when he visited Microsoft, I didn’t get Linux, although I considered it. Here’s what I’ve found so far in my foraging for software, all free:
- Expressions 3: My drawing program. MS took over the company that had made this software, and has for some reason made it free. I’ve been quite happy with it so far, although there’s a bit of a high learning curve, especially if you’re used to doing all your illustration in Photoshop.
- Star Office 7: My office suite. Sun’s slightly gussied-up version of the open-source OpenOffice project, which I have maligned in these very pages. I haven’t had to do any hardcore word processing at home yet, and I don’t know if I will, but I think if I do, this should be fine.
- The GIMP: My photo-editing program. Pretty capable, although I’m so used to Photoshop that I haven’t had the patience to really get down and learn it. I could not deal with the interface until I got this plugin, though.
- RagTime Solo: My page layout program. A beauty from a German software company. The version of the software for personal use is free, and is exactly the same as the commercial-use version, which costs Њ845.
- Audacity: My audio-editing program. Decent, although I’m considering trying ProTools Free again now that I have a computer than can handle it.
- Picasa: My photo organizer. Why I need a photo organizer, considering Win XP’s photo display features are perfectly satisfactory, I don’t know, but it’s free. Whatever.
Other sundry free excellent software:
- Blender: 3d graphics program. Just check out the image gallery.
- Sea3d: An amazing open-source 3d Settlers of Catan application.
- Notepad++: An HTML text editor that’s oddly comforting.
Any others?
6 comments
Out of curiosity, why didn’t you go Linux? I’ve been all-Linux for the past year and a half and haven’t looked back.
There’s still time! Download and install Fedora!
I don’t know about Matt, but my fear with Linux is all about the drivers. I just have no confidence that I will be able to connect to a wireless network, or hook up a printer, or a digital camera, or whatever. What say you to THAT, Holovaty?
To that, I say give it a try. You’ll probably be pleasantly surprised. When I installed Fedora, everything Just Worked — and I’m on a laptop, which means trickier hardware.
Actually, I’m posting this via my wireless Linux laptop, which found my apartment’s wireless connection automatically when it turned on. (No initial configuration needed.) I transfered some digital-camera photos just the other day. And even my funky little USB keychain works.
Fedora ain’t your grandfather’s — er, older, geeky brother’s? — Linux.
Anyway, just spreadin’ the good word.
I apologize for misspelling “transferred.”
Alls I have to say for myself, Adrian, is that I was skurred. That once I turned my back on the arch-browser, I should be shut out of the broadest annals of software society, doomed to populate my computer with buggy beta-releases of sketchy open-source imitations of corporate software. And the sleek, seductive WinXP, with its shiny buttons, trumped all the screenshots of the various cartoonish-looking Linux clones, especially for $20.
I don’t know. I’ll continue to mull, given that I’m currently downloading a few dozen open-source imitations of corporate software.
So Snarkmarket has reached the awesome point where I am actually searching the archives for stuff I vaguely remember. Case in point: I just got a new computer (stats to come… suffice it to say for now it has a 24″ monitor) and after I finished the Great Purge of Dell pre-installed crap I wanted to start filling it again… filling it with open-source goodness!
And, in other picking-up-a-two-year-old-comment-thread news, Adrian is now rocking Kubuntu (Ubuntu + the KDE GUI) and I have to admit, it’s purty. Just about as purty as WinXP with the fancy Royale theme, in fact. Maybe I’ll slice off a sector of this brand-new hard drive…
Oh, finally: Notepad++ is still pretty fantastic.