What's your favorite Linux Desktop software?
For me, it's hands down Flameshot. The best screenshot tool in the world - I've got it hooked up to my PrtScrn key for super easy screenshots.
I also love Kwrite as a Notepad++ alternative, and KolourPaint as a MSPaint alternative
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Amberol is probably one of the biggest hidden gems in GNOME apps. It's a simple easy music player whose background color changes based on the song's artwork.
Parabolic is another GNOME app for downloading videos from youtube using yt-dlp. It's super easy to use and even allows for multiple concurrent downloads.
mpv is one of those rare moments where using a proprietary implementation is objectively worse. Must install on any personal computer/mobile device.
Excuse my silly question, but what does mpv do that vlc doesn't?
MPV has automatic native wayland support, VLC doesn’t (yet, see https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/VLC_media_player#Wayland_support)
I haven’t found any other large differences in functionality when it comes to simply playing video (only thing I use either one for).
VLC is also less accurate to the source than mpv is.
See the notice on this wiki that contains some comparisons.
I don't know the full details but this is a quote I have seen from reddit about VLC:
It is probably possible to get things in order by digging into the settings in VLC, but mpv prioritizes accuracy by default.
For me I got mad at VLC cause it was opening video track in separate window for some reason.
MPV handles decoding much better than VLC, in my experience trying to watch fansubs
Both are comparable in terms of video playback (both use hardware acceleration and ffmpeg) but mpv's appeal is that it's ultimately a minimal (as in lack of apparent GUI) command line tool rather than a fully featured application like VLC. I like mpv because of it's non-features which is why it's the backend for a lot of Desktop environment video players.
If you want minimalism I advise you to use a tiling window manager instead of Gnome. If you want Wayland absolutely, use Hyprland.
I use POP!_OS right now so I'm waiting for System76 to release their
cosmic-epochto have the definitive non-GNOME/KDE wayland desktop environment.I have MPV setup to play any YouTube link when I press ctrl cmd m with a YouTube video url in my clipboard.
How does Amberol hold up with libraries in the high thousands? So many nice looking music played keep struggling with my music folders.
Really makes me miss Winamp sometimes.
Why not Audacious if you want something like Winamp?
Amberol does hold up really well with high threshold music folders in my experience. I had a 24+ hours worth of music that loaded successfully in less than a minute.
Amberol has a "restore playlist" feature which loads your last playlist quickly.
Mpv is a good engine, but I prefer something like smplayer+mpv for all the extra functionality. I also like that VLC has tons of features, like full file/codec info and stats. I know there are other ways to get that info, but it's very easy in vlc.
I use Lollypop for music, well in reality i just use MPV for that too lol but i downloaded that "just in case"
Firefox with tree style tabs, with the user CSS that removes tabs and combines bookmarks bar into the title bar.
Away from computer right now but I'll take a screenshot in an hour or so.
And Emacs. :)
Back at my computer now!
OK, here's my screenshot:
So, you can see the tree style tabs (TST) in the sidebar area on the left. I'm using the "photon" theme for TST. with another extension for TST called TST Colored Tabs. If you middle-button-click a link, it's opened in a new tab like usual, but TST also assigns it as a child tab of the page you were viewing. It's incredibly useful for keeping track of where you are and what you're doing. Especially in my DevOps job, I have dozens of tabs open and chaos would reign supreme if I used top-of-window tabs like standard. You can see the bookmarks toolbar has been dragged up into the title bar using the customize toolbar window accessed by right clicking on the title bar.
To accomplish this you need to enable a setting in about:config called
toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets, set that to true. Then exit Firefox.Then create a directory called
chromein your profile directory, which on Linux is in~/.mozilla/firefox/PROFILENAME/, which you can get from theabout:profilespage. Inside thechromedirectory, you create a file calleduserChrome.cssand add this stuff to it:And there you go! TST has more tips and configuration details in its Github project: https://github.com/piroor/treestyletab and https://github.com/piroor/treestyletab/wiki/Code-snippets-for-custom-style-rules#for-userchromecss
emacswithdoomFTW.Looking forward to learning how to get tree tabs in FF.
I updated my original comment above yours. I hope my comments/instructions are understandable, please let me know if I wasn't clear on anything!
Wine/Proton. It's a one-stop solution for gaming on Linux (for current games). Lutris is also worth mentioning as a frontend/launcher.
Also worth mentioning Heroic Launcher. Works beautifully with the Epic store.
Check out Bottles for running Wine and derivatives from a GUI :)!
Although, I find it a sad commentary that the most upvoted (even by me) in this thread is something to made to run non-linux software. :(
that's one way to look at it, but if not for WINE and proton we'd not have had the renaissance of desktop Linux that's well under way :)
And I totally agree with you. I just lament that games and other made for Windows software is what's enabling that. People should just want a free and opensource operating system as a matter of self interest... but no. It's games and Windows apps. Yet another sign that our species is just sick in the head. :)
I'm with you that we need some deprogramming when it comes to how we're far too complacent with the privacy-ignoring and humanity-disrespecting behaviour of Microsoft. But at least personally I was always someone who accepted it with gritted teeth because the alternatives sounded like a downgrade in other ways.
Now that Linux is faster, smoother, more user friendly and compatible than ever, it made the decision to delete my Windows partition much less daunting.
And now if Linux does give me headaches (it's not a perfect experience!) I'm much less likely to immediately give in and reinstall Windows because I'm now accustomed to the aspects that I didn't realise were so important to me before.
I clink my beverage with yours, dear person!
Only reason I'm holding on to my Windows partition at this point is for rare scenarios like needing to reprogram my VKB stick, which only has a Windows executable. Other than that, I've not fired it up in months. And I'm a pretty rabid gamer.
It's taken a long damn time to get here.
Oh we need it, it's just how to make linux survive in a capitalist world where things are only made for platforms that can make them money.
Did I object to making money? No. I object to allowing the making of money to be the guiding principle of software development. Make something great? Want to sell it? Fine. But only write it for Windows because it will sell better? Burn in heck.
Not sure why you're being hostile to me but I'm not interested in an argument.
Did you think the burn in heck was for you? It wasn't. It's for people who only write software for Windows because it makes them more money. No one was being hostile to you. Seriously, what the heck?
I'm a bit of a fan of Okular. It just does a good job displaying PDFs and is not annoying. The table of content works well if the document has one. There is text select and block select for when you need to get content out of the PDF. You can tell Okular to ignore DRM with a simple checkbox in the settings, for files that "don't allow" selecting and copying text or "don't allow" printing.
Okular also has vim keys for navigating.
gparted because it’s the best partitioning manager with a gui that I’ve used
Syncthing is one of the most useful pieces of software I've ever used. It just works, and it works well.
Im dipping my toes in self hosting and syncthing is just :chefs kiss:. I use it only with Obsidian, Signal & Aegis so far (and will sync my configs as well on linux), and the safety net it gives is just awesome.
Cant go without kdeconnect anymore
Graphical:
Non-graphical:
Ansible + Podman from Red Hat really a game changer in Industry Standard. Sometimes I want to just say, Fk Docker because they don't listen from security perspective, until Red Hat made Podman, and they are thinking.... (3 years), then implement the rootless container... same on HPC.. fk docker...
Fuck docker! All my homies use podman!
If based on the thing I used most then it has to be Firefox!
If you want something more trivial but personal,
openttd- the best game ever. :)KDE Connect, Spectacle
I'm glad I'm not the only one that prefers Spectacle to Flameshot. Flameshot is way too bloated IMHO.
I like KDE Connect quite a bit. Its a great tool to show of in front of my Windows friends and super usefull for media control.
I'm not gonna mention the basics like Kate. They're great but nothing new.
My 2 hidden gems that I use on a daily basis are:
Being a flutter dev (and shameless fanboy) I will suggest people try:
appflowy - a FOSS near-clone to Notion.
spotube - FOSS music streaming using the spotify API for metadata and youtube for music playing/downloading. Completely free of ads and works surprisingly well as long as the music you like is mirrored to YouTube.
honourable mentions:
Plex, Nextcloud, Radarr, Sonarr, qbittorrent. Not your usual apps for these kinds of threads but they're absolutely top-tier for linux home servers.
I never know spotube, this is first time! WOW!
I think I can start put it into my uncle smartphone.
I do still pay for spotify premium, because their service is awesome. Welp...
It's not a drop in replacement for spotify, of course. It just uses Spotify's public API for fetching playlists and routes them through Youtube to play the audio of music videos hosted there, but as a free option it's one of my faves :).
If you want podcasts or certain spotify-only remixes you'll still need spotify.
Wow it's available for Android too, it's even on the Play Store (which I didn't expect)!
Yup, it's Flutter so it's easy to port to other platforms. There's Mac, Windows and iOS builds too!
How I never heard of Spotube?
Bottles. Best non-steam gaming solution hands down.
Could you compare it to lutris?
Way better UI, no hussle with configuration, flatpak support is seamless. Very good experience over all, such a smooth game adding -> configuring -> playing experience.
The kernel. I literally can't use my computer without it!
Jokes aside, I'm a big fan of Kolourpaint too.
tbf the zen-kernel is a really cool thing to have if you get it package correctly into your system.
It is, and I've used it for a while. I don't recall why I stopped it, it was a long time ago; perhaps I didn't notice any meaningful difference in performance? Stock kernels are good enough for most purposes.
It's probably Neovim. I spend most of time in a day while working on it. Its suitable for almost all code and text editing jobs.
Also I should have to add okular which is really nice for reading pdf's and mangas.
Krita. It is so good I cant believe it is free
Honestly I didn't know Kirta was free because the first time I saw it was on Steam, later found out it was free but it's such a good product I'm happy I found it there first.
In order of preference :
Does VSCodium not already do everything meld does with extensions though?
Probably. But back in the day I was using another text editor and there was no option for comparing files, so Meld stayed in my toolbox!
Fair enough, if you're interested there's an extension for Vscode/ium called Diff & Merge that seems to do the job. Code also has support for diff and merge for git repos I believe built into the git extension
I've replaced Flameshot with Spectacle on my system because it is preinstalled on Plasma, has almost the same set of features and, in my experience, work snappier. Also, Flameshot can have issues working on Wayland
xmonad- tiling wm because I'm too lazy to place windows by handsfirefox- since a lot of things I'm working with is web based and I like my adblock and don't want google spying on meurxvt- a terminal that is fast enough for most applications yet doesn't use as much memory as fancier onestmux- a terminal multiplexer - terminal tabs are not as nice plus lets you leave stuff running remotelyneovim- I need a text editor and it works great for that purposes covering all my needsTmux with continuum is the best
The question is weird to me, but I'll plug Strawberry Music Player. It's a fork of Clementine, which was a fork of Amarok from when Amarok was still good.
The most popular that I use are:
shutdowncommand (i use it daily)Honorable mention: Molly (the FOSS version, a privacy focused client for Signal)
Edit: Almost forgot about QEMU+kvm for virtualization
Konsole
I dunno if it counts, but I use libreoffice more than anything else. It's a very well made piece of gear.
I've written multiple novels with it, short stories, essays, a home brew ttrpg system, etc. It doesn't just do "good enough", it is on par with anything else I've ever used.
Honestly, I installed it on my windows PC recently, and I found it really clunky. And it sounds like there's no dark mode?
I do IT for a living, and for as big of a bitch Office is, it does work pretty damn good... When it's working. I felt like I went back in time a decade when I was working with Calc.
I'm not trying to fight, but I'm genuinely curious, do you only use Writer? Have you worked with Word lately to compare how they've changed? Thanks
Not OP, but I like that libreoffice:
Works on Linux without wine/bottles
Isn't 9GB
Has no hooks into 0365 or Office.com or any other web junk I don't need
Can be updated in less time than reimaging a workstation
Doesn't change major elements of the GUI including available options and default styles each major update
I also trust the document recovery options more, and enjoy using 'free' software when possible
Dark mode is coming to the latest release of LibreOffice, or very soon, so I've heard.
It's possible in current and recent older versions to change the default colours to almost-but-not-quite emulate a dark mode. I have to admit it's not a quick thing to do, nor is it perfect once done, but it can be attempted. (That said, maybe I gave up changing things at "good enough" which is why it's not perfect.).
Oh, I've used it, and it isn't worth the price. They could offer it for free and I still can't say I'd switch. It isn't that there aren't differences, there are. They just aren't enough to matter.
Writer, that's the bread and butter. Calc is mainly for tracking timelines, "lore", etc. Draw isn't a common use.
Dark mode isn't as superior when writing long form though. It's nice, but it's easier to catch weird patterns for me (dyslexia). Calc vs excel, well that's not really a competition for professional use, though calc functions well enough for the kind of use I put it to.
xorg. I used its predecessor a lot in the past, and I still get PTSD when I see an XFree86 config file.
I use KeePassXC on the daily, so that's definitely going on the list. Spectacle does screenshots amazingly well. neovim is a great fork of vim, handles all my text editing and IDE work. GIMP is basically a given for image editing. And also a fan of LMMS for whenever I work with audio/music.
Docker, btop, grim, foot.
+1 for
btop- so much easier to find and kill runaway processes.By far it's Kate, even though I'm now a neovim user. It's just a great IDE.
S rank: Firefox MPV KeepassXC
A rank: VLC Bitwarden KOreader
B rank: KDEnlive Gimp Libreoffice.
Mixxx is the only Linux-native DJ software that I know of, but it's still amazing. If it's missing featutes compared with Serato or Recordbox I'm not good enough to miss them yet, and the features it doea have are damn impressive.
Likewise, Inkscape and Gimp are both great. I know that Gimp takes a lot of heat for not being as "good" as Photoshop, but it's just different. The few times I've tried Photoshop were as painful to me as Gimp seems to be for others. And since I don't need the CMYK functionality that Gimp is missing, I'm happy with Gimp.
LaTeX has a steep learning curve, but using anything else for documents is like stone knives and bearskins in comparison.
Have you seen or tried "typst" yet? It's a modern alternative to LaTeX. Haven't tried it yet but looks promising.
Thanks for that, it looks much nicer than Latex!
To add to Inkscape and GIMP, Krita is also pretty damn nice.
Based on time spent using them, Firefox, Steam, and Terraria. Wait, do games not count?
The real answer is actually probably Gnome itself. The DE, I mean. The workflow suits me perfectly, and I even like a lot of the basic Gnome apps, although their naming convention get on my nerves sometimes (your official web browser is called "Web" and your official music player is called "Music"? But the one that makes me actively angry is calling their official text editor... "Text Editor." C'mon, folks.)
This has been the case for me since Gnome 3 dropped. Which was quite a surprise for me since I thought of Gnome 2 as a less user friendly, uglier XFCE and kinda hated it. I still kinda feel that way about Mate, but Memo kicks ass and it's much better than Gnome 2 was overall.
Interesting, maybe it's because I wasn't in the community yet when Gnome 2 was a thing but I always disliked Gnome 3 and love Gnome 40. The changes aren't even that big but I simply wasn't able to adopt to the Gnome 3 workflow and with 40 it clicked immediately.
Oh I definitely prefer 40+. And I think the changes are actually fairly big; not the basic idea of the workflow, but the way it's implemented has definitely gotten better.
I prefer KDE and I'd have to echo the same. Putting K in front of everything is cringy.
Oh man I thought I was the only one when it comes to the naming conventions. I've seen it on Cinnamon as well and it's absolutely annoying if you want to figure out the exact name of the software, only to get hit with "Text Editor" but I suppose this does make it easier for those new to Linux to get accustomed to their new environment (probably also the real reason they do this) though I still wish we could switch that behavior off somehow.
Well... kind of. The difference is that the official Gnome text editor's actual name is Text Editor. It's not a case of the desktop calling, for instance, Pluma or Xed "Text Editor". The Gnome music app is literally called " Music."
Not sure if it counts, but
obsidianfor notes and my daily journal, andlatte-dockto replace the stock KDE app bar.Oh, and
emacswithdoomfor general text editing and most coding tasks.Firefox, emacs, grep, konsole
Been really liking hyprland recently. Also I couldn't live without syncthing. Neovim has a special place in my heart also but not just for desktop.
Kate, Terminator, k4dirstat and the amazing clipboard history app in KDE.
The clipboard history app is great, but I still wish it let you pin/bookmark things you don't want it to auto-delete. There was a pull request to add it in a while ago, but it was nixed because it would make the tool "too competent" and app-like. Except that it's a pretty standard feature of clipboard managers, wouldn't make things any more complicated for those who feel like ignoring it, and none of the alternative apps work with global shortcuts on Wayland!
Any reason why Filelight hasn't replaced k4dirstat?
I still can't believe Discord operates in the 2015 GNU/Linux mindset of handing the user a DEB package and telling them to f off. But then again it labels its chatrooms "servers" in the client so what do I know.
I believe the linux Deb is still "unofficial"
Reaper, OBS, and Davinci Resolve.
I'd say the terminal, although its not linux exclusive and kind of a cheat answer. Flameshot is also a staple for me, I use it everywhere.
MPV comes to mind, although its also available in windows.
Shortwave is by far my favorite radio app. Simple interface, auto records songs, access to thousands of radio stations from all over the world, and when scaled down, it turns into a little retro radio interface!
Strawberry and 0AD are awesome
I prefer Lollypop for music, but can completely agree with 0 AD. I'm amazed that is FOSS.
Kasts for podcasts, since it sync with Gpoddersync on my nextcloud.
Spectacle always makes me smile with how easy and featureful it is for a screenshot app.
Okular is a better PDF viewer than any proprietary app I've used.
I'll have to try kasts and okular, at the moment I'm using castbox as a PWA which doesn't suck but generally desktop apps feel nicer to use
Emacs. Need I say more?
Nah it's all about that gVim /s
Perhaps a controversial opinion, but I quite like Mailspring as a desktop email client. It looks and feels much more modern than Thunderbird or Evolution.
Why is it a controversial opinion? Mailspring is a great email client. I've been using it for a year now.
Mostly because it isn't libre.
I really like the disk usage analyzer in gnome. The ui/visualization is really intuitive and useful, and I often wish for something similar on windows.
I use SpaceSniffer for Windows but it uses the rectangular view not the pie. I do like the pie.
If you're on Windows I highly suggest you try Wiztree it's really fast. It scans an 8 TB HDD in like <10 seconds.
I'm not sure what the gnome disk usage analyzer looks like but WizTree on windows is excellent at showing you where stuff is and how much space it takes up
Is that like WinDirStat?
Exactly like it but waaaay faster. Something about the protocol it uses speeds up things quite a bit
👍
It scans the NTFS file table instead of the individual files, which is much faster. It does require administrative permissions though.
Here's a screenshot of the Gnome one, which is actually called baobob:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Baobab_screenshot.png
Wiztree looks interesting, I'll see if I can install it, although my work machine is pretty locked down, so I wouldn't be surprised if it's off limits.
I literally live inside the combo of
And very rarely leave the comfort of my cozy habitat 😁
At work, I'm "forced" to use a Mac but thanks to #FOSS I've got the whole combo setup on my work laptop too except Evolution sadly.
That's what Linux VM's are for. Written to you via such a VM.
Can't install any virtualization software besides docker - corporate policy 🤷♂️
Ouch! That sucks!
Cinnamon is hands down my favourite DE. I always see people talking about GNOME and KDE, to me Cinnamon is the best of both worlds. Strongly recommend it with the Orchis GTK theme, which is made for GNOME but works fine on Cinnamon.
My favourite graphical app in the more traditional sense is Firefox. If CLI apps are allowed, I'm a big fan of GNU Nano, a CLI-based minimalistic editor, basically Emacs Lite.
I don't see how nano is anything like Emacs... Though if you like nano you might also like micro.
I'll definitely give it a try, thanks! I tend to categorise all CLI editors in my head as either Emacs-like or Vim-like, based mostly on keyboard shortcuts. Nano's shortcuts look more like Emacs than like Vim, so, Emacs Lite.
Micro. It's a terminal text/code editor that shares keybindings with modern text editors.
Can't you just use the zoom website?
I'd suggest Jitsi as an alternative to Zoom.
Is there any reason (like, at all) for him to insist on Zoom? Also, if he's more lenient regarding Discord, Revolt is pretty decent.
It's surprising that for someone as terminal oriented as you seem, your editor of choice is viscose and not vim or emacs
I really like Setzer. It does everything I need from a latex editor and looks much nicer than other editors I have used on windows imo
Nothing beats Kile for LaTeX, imho.
Does Hyprland count? It's so effortlessly slick
Neovim.
Pinta. It's like paint.net but works on Linux. Quick and simple way to edit images on Linux.
urxtvit's
urxvtthoughI can't type somethymes
💯.txt
Carla and QJackCTL for me. So much easier than having to haul around all my amps, pedals, etc.
Definitely the clipboard manager. On kde, it's klipper. This is actually such an underrated piece of software that I can't live without. Windows has one too, but they added their's a little after all the linux desktop environments got one by default.
I guess it's probably also available for servers but the most innovative and interesting peace of software I used in years is Distrobox, I like the AUR and love Debian and Fedora so that's a bridge I have been waiting for!
I just read the comments under this thread and while most of them mention standard stuff (the things most people use on Linux) there are some interesting things in there too! :)
Zathura, Firefox, VS Code, Remmina, Virt-Manager, hexchat, drawing, Master PDF, PlayOnLinux+Wine, LibreOffice, GVIm, Pragha, XFCE Terminal (But font broken in Fedora)
Blender for 3D modeling/sculpting + rendering.
ArmorPaint for painting on 3D Models, but I learned recently about 3DCoat, and it has a Linux version…
I like listening to Podcasts (while I work on my PC) with KDE's “Kasts”. Use my Nextcloud provider to sync my listening status on the Desktop with my Android Podcast App (AntennaPod) for a flawless continuation on mobile.
Nothing Linux only but:
Well, the permanently open applications on my system are: claws-mail, Pale Moon (browser forked from Firefox), konqueror (TDE file manager), konsole (TDE terminal), and Aqualung (music player). Other good friends include kate, Inkscape, and OpenSCAD (despite its flakiness). And I get a lot of mileage out of DOSBox.
If the OP hadn't specified desktop software, I'd also name Portage.
The Caja file manager. Hell the MATE desktop environment in general is just perfect for me. Xfce is acceptable too, though the inclusion of CSD in recent Xfce releases has made me a bit more wary of it when it comes to theming.
I also use Waterfox as my browser. A Firefox fork that has the option to put tabs below address bar (where they belong imo) out of the box without needing to muck around with the userChrome.css file.
ShotCut
Have you tried kdenlive? If so, how would you say they compare?
I've used both and I prefer kdenlive
Yeah but i prefer ShotCut because of its simplicity and speed.
Easy Effects is such a great program. Very good for doing all sorts of effects on audio. Great for filters and EQ.
I do like my easy effects, absolutely no competition for anything I've ever used on windows
Kubernetes, Docker and mpv.
xpenguins
Apostrophe. The perfect, slick markdown editor.
Whenever I use gnome I install the material-shell extension. I love the tiling.
Off the top of my head, currently it's WezTerm. https://wezfurlong.org/wezterm/
I just use the one built into gnome, it's the best one I've found yet having come from lightshot on windows, it just works exactly how I'd expect it to and doesn't get in my way
As for my favourite think it's gotta be either obsidian or Vscode/ium
I can't decide which one is my favourite. But thanks for the tipp, flameshot seems really amazing!
Thanks for the recommendation, I installed Flameshot on Windows and it's quite a bit better than the built-in tool.
you're on windows, get sharex. It's miles ahead of anything else. It's the only thing I miss from daily driving windows.
Komikku
rofi/dmenu for scripts, mpv and Tauon Music Box
Either evolution nheko or console. Even though a terminal emulator is a cop out
Telegram Desktop is pretty good.
Foliate <3
I both installed kwrite and kate... whats the huge difference there? That one is more code focused and has git implementstion but still the same?
They are essentially built with the same text editing component, more specifically, kwrite makes use of kate through kparts for the editing component only, to provide a more stripped down interface as compared to kate.
So usually, when I have both and want the most features, its technically unnessessary bloat to have kwrite installed? (Except I feel like I want a stripped down interface for that moment I guess)
Maybe not the most loved, but most used software: Steam.