I'm thinking maybe I'll switch in a year or two. I know about Libre Office and VLC.

  • atomkarinca@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    1 year ago

    these are my essentials:

    • blender -> 3d graphics software, and with the blenderbim addon it turns into an architecture/engineering beast,
    • freecad -> parametric 3d drawing program, amazing for 3d printing, also has a bim addon,
    • qcad -> cad drawing software,
    • qgis -> topology software,
    • kicad -> circuit design software,
    • krita -> it used to be just a painting program, lately it's become a great graphics software,
    • gimp -> it's always contested but still my favorite image editor,
    • ardour -> my favorite daw,
    • lyx -> great latex editor,
    • at last but not least: vim -> the greatest editor of all time
  • Zvyozdochka [she/her, pup/pup's]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    For the distribution itself, I usually recommend Linux Mint to most people just jumping into Linux for the first time, it's easy to use, has a familiar(ish) layout, and should work on just about everything out of the box. Fedora is another choice, but I try to stay away from corporate backed distributions.

    And for the software side of things:

    1. Matrix / Element for decentralized, and end-to-end encrypted communication
    2. Firefox w/ uBlock Origin & Arkenfox's user.js for web browsing
    3. LibreOffice for an office suite
    4. Spotube as an open-source alternative to Spotify's proprietary client if you use Spotify
    5. VLC media player for playing multimedia files & streaming videos
    6. qBittorrent for torrenting
    7. KeePassXC for local encrypted password storage, no cloud services needed

    That should have you covered for most day to day browsing and content consumption!

      • jaeme
        ·
        1 year ago

        Seems like nothing really is stopping you from switching to GNU/Linux (besides of course the new learning curve and hardware).

  • daisy
    ·
    1 year ago

    Some favourites of mine. All open source, all available on both Linux and Windows, and none which require any sort of online account or subscription.

    KeePassXC, a secure password manager that never ever touches the cloud, and plays nice with lots of web browsers. There's an Android version called KeePassDX that reads the same password file format and plays nice with Android apps as an auto-fill app (fingerprint unlocking, avoids putting passwords on the clipboard, etc). You do need to figure out your own way to sync the password file if you want to keep your logins on different machines in sync. Which leads to...

    Syncthing, a way to reliably sync files across devices on the same LAN without using any internet services. This one has a bit of a learning curve to set up and use, but nothing too difficult for anyone already considering using, or used to using, Linux. It also has an Android version available.

    Kdenlive, for video editing. I've never done professional video work, so I couldn't speak to how feature-filled it is, but it's stable and has enough features for my own basic editing needs.

    Tenacity, for audio editing. This is a zero-telemetry fork of Audacity, whose developers burned a ton of goodwill in the community with their questionable mandatory-telemetry decisions.

    Krita, image editing. Far ahead of long-obsolete GIMP in both features and interface. Great for both illustration work and photo editing. Anyone still using GIMP in 2024 need to give Krita a try.

    FreeCAD, for 3D modelling. It has a learning curve like a vertical wall, but if you're into 3D printing and can't afford/don't want to pay Autodesk's ransom fees for 3D Fusion, it's worth learning.

    Either VSCode or VSCodium. A high-quality open-source cross-platform programming IDE from, of all bizarre places, Microsoft. VSCodium is a variant with Microsoft stuff pulled out, akin to how Chromium is a variant of Chrome with (most) Google stuff pulled out.

    • sovietknuckles [they/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      VSCodium is a variant with Microsoft stuff pulled out, akin to how Chromium is a variant of Chrome with (most) Google stuff pulled out.

      A variant with even more Google stuff pulled out is Ungoogled Chromum , though it still has a Chrome user agent and therefore still helps Google with browser market share metrics. The only major browser that you don't help Google by using is Firefox.

      • blobjim [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        "Chromium" itself is just the name of the open source project (controlled and developed by Google of course) that Google Chrome is I guess a "branded" version of. There is a Chromium download, but it looks like it's of an unstable version and exists for testing purposes. I think people just get Chromium and Ungoogled Chromium mixed up.

        • sovietknuckles [they/them]
          ·
          1 year ago

          There is a Chromium download, but it looks like it's of an unstable version and exists for testing purposes.

          Most Linux users who use Chromium use a stable, tagged version (see Arch Linux, Ubuntu, etc.).

          "Chromium" itself is just the name of the open source project (controlled and developed by Google of course) that Google Chrome is I guess a "branded" version of.

          There are some differences between Chrome and Chromium besides just branding. For example, most Chromium builds will use open audio and video codecs instead of proprietary ones like H.264. Chromium also does not report crashes, and they claim it never reports user metrics (though Chromium does still send a ton of data to Google from Chromium. For example, "Improve search suggestions" is enabled by default, "Make searches and browsing better" can be enabled optionally, and any "smart"/predictive/adaptive features send data to Google).

          From the Chromium source tree, see: https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/6e4b151958ca/docs/chromium_browser_vs_google_chrome.md

          • blobjim [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            That's good to know, I didn't know most Linux distros also had their own builds.

    • FloridaBoi [he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      Krita is so good and easy to use. I combine that with Inkscape for SVGs and text and I can basically do any and all kinds of image editing

      • daisy
        ·
        1 year ago

        Inkscape is another great one. I very rarely use it, but I can appreciate the results that others have created with it.

  • jaeme
    ·
    1 year ago

    I have my own personal list for people switching to libre software here hosted on Codeberg.

    Note these are all free software programs. Proprietary software sometimes is ported to Free operating systems (old names like Vivaldi, Discord, Spotify) come to mind. It's mostly due to the fact that these same programs are built off existing free software.