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What good FREE software do you use?

gte718p

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Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
3,969
I have found two programs that I really love distributed under GNU public license (aka free). It has me wondering what I am missing?

My finds:
GIMP - an extremely powerful graphic program. It is up the with Photoshop for available features. It doesn't have all of the available Photoshop tools out of the box, but users have developed add on scripts to do most everything I've seen in Photoshop. Mind you I'm not an expert photo editor.

FreeCAD - Is a very nice parametric based 3D modeling package. It has some quirks, but does an excellent job modelling. It also has a FEA package and a rendering package.
 
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CarsonConcepts

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 27, 2014
Messages
419
Location
North East, MD
I use GNU Public Licence Software whenever I can. Here's a list of what's on my computer

Dia- Diagram Editor
FreeCAD - CAD Suite
GnuCash - Money Program
Hugin - Panorama Picture Stitching
Inkscape - Vector Graphics
IrfanView - Picture Viewer
LibreOffice - Office Suite
Scribus - Page Layout (akin to Adobe Indesign)
GIMP - Image Editing
UfRaw - Raw Image Editor
VLC - Media Player
7-Zip - File compression/extraction
CutePDF - PDF Printer
Audacity - Audio Editing Software
ConvertAll - Unit Conversion
FreeMind - Brainstorming Software

I think that's about it. I'm not sure if all are truly GNU Public Licences, but all are free for personal use.

~ Carson
 

GuyllFyre

Banned
Joined
Sep 2, 2014
Messages
378
Location
Scotia, NY
My main system at home is a Linux Mint x64 box.
The programs I find most useful are GIMP and LibreOffice.
I run the OS that came with the computer (Vista x86) in a VirtualBox. It will run seamless on the desktop and is as fast as Windows will ever be.
I can connect to the work SSL VPN and prefer KRDC for my remote desktop client.
I then manage a variety of Windows and "Other" boxes.

On my Windows 7 Pro x64 laptop and Windows 7 Pro x64 Bench system, I use a lot of FOSS. Easiest way to load it is through ninite.com
GIMP, LibreOffice, 7-Zip, etc. Some FOSS, some "Free" but proprietary.
 

rshadd

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
Messages
1,598
Location
Doylestown, PA
Belarc Advisor
DBan
WinDirStat
VLC
7-zip
Quikpar2
CCleaner
Notepad++
Filehippo Update Checker
 
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dr_clyde

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2009
Messages
6,431
Location
Holland, MI
For sure DraftSight. It's a 2D CAD program that is essentially identical to AutoCAD. It's made by Dassault Systemes who make Solidworks.

I use it for all my misc brackets and stuff that I need to send to the laser that don't warrant a 3D model.
 

Westly

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Joined
Jan 17, 2014
Messages
294
Location
U.S.A.
What good FREE software do you use?

Linux! Heave Bill Gates' mess into the dustbin of history!

pinguinos-3.jpg
 

Joe B.

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Joined
Jan 2, 2007
Messages
2,752
More of a browser add-in and a freestanding piece of software:

iMacros: http://imacros.net/overview
You can use it to automate tasks on the web. Very helpful if you ever have repetitive web tasks. I have used it in the past to monitor websites and make sure they are working properly. You can also use it to mine data off of the web.
 

StillTooManyHobbies

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 4, 2014
Messages
528
Location
Port Tobacco, MD
Hi folks, I have found two free programs that perfectly fit the "old iron" mentality some of us have. One is DOSBOX that allows older DOS programs to run in a Windows 7 environment. The other is an Excel addin called Ubitmenu that provides the pre-2007 Microsoft Office menus in the newer versions. I also use Avira antivirus, Irfanview picture viewer and CutePDF PDF writer. Enjoy!
 

Flatintoone

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Joined
Aug 10, 2011
Messages
795
Location
West Bend, WI
Aggravated Windows 8 user. No computer expert, but I'm amazed at what's available if you're willing to put in the effort to learn it.

Evernote
Paint.net
Inkscape
 
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node105

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Joined
Oct 31, 2011
Messages
309
Location
Australia
For anyone wanting to escape from microsloth office, particularly word, then LibreOffice is an excellent open source (free) option. The menu hierarchy is organised almost identically to Word, plus everything actually works. If you use tables a lot, and have ever been frustrated by ms cell merges/splits etc, then you will love LibreOffice. It is available for mac/win/lnx

Historically LO goes back to Sun Microsystems OpenOffice ( and Star Office before that. When Oracle took over Sun, the OO dev community initiated the LibreOffice version.

Personally I am predominantly Mac, and have been since earliest days in the 80's. I have not had ms office on my system(s) in 5 years.

https://www.libreoffice.org

There is a 3d modelling application: SweetHome3d that is definitely worth a look if google sketch up does not does not do it for you.
 

bczygan

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
22,002
Location
DETROIT! Arsenal of Scrappers
Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2013

Not free, but close.

$9.95 to download and $13.95 for a disc.

Available to my wife since she works for a big corporation.

Check out your company for a similar program.

For Microsoft products it's called the home use program.
 
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hackwelder

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 12, 2014
Messages
224
VLC, Gimp, Libre Office like many others.
XLD for CD ripping and Audacity for audio editing.
VirtualBox for running one OS within another, in my case I run Xubuntu Linux within OS X.
StreamRipStar for recording internet radio
 

tarbellb

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Joined
Apr 17, 2011
Messages
5,738
Location
Oregon
Question:

Anybody using a Mac (and not a dual boot operator ie running OS and MS/linux/etc..)

that can recommend a good, simple 2D program
for CAD and converting files to .dxf or .dwg files?
 

dale500

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2012
Messages
137
Firefox

Thunderbird

MozBackup - Backs up all your Firefox settings and favorites. Backs up all your Thunderbird emails and settings

AutoVer - File copy program. I use it to instantly copy anything saved in my documents to a second hard drive.

CDBurnerXP - Best freeware disk burning program I have found.

Karen's Replicator - Fast backup program for copying files to a second drive for backup. It's old but it still works and works well.

I have never had a drive crash but I like being ready just in case. I use Autover to backup up my files to a second drive in real time. Then I use Karen's Replicator and MozBackup once a week to copy my files and emails to a third drive that I store in a fire safe.
 
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smokeysevin

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Joined
Aug 17, 2013
Messages
131
Location
Houston
I am a fan of paint.net but serif also offers the free version of a lot of their software.

Sean

Sent from my C6603 using Tapatalk
 
OP
G

gte718p

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
3,969
I'll update this thread. I have two new cad programs I'm currently enthralled with Autodesk Fusion 360 and On Shape. On Shape is browser only, but has some cool features including FEA. Fusion also has some really cool tools, but is limited to 2.5 axis CNC in the free version.
 

highland_hunter

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Joined
Aug 5, 2014
Messages
108
Location
NH
Anyone that struggles with passwords and wants something more secure than post its under the keyboard should check out Password Safe, a version for Mac and Andriod too..
 

UncleJoe

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Joined
Dec 2, 2008
Messages
908
Location
New Bern NC
I am a network engineer with more than 30 years in the business and I have to say that without a doubt the best free software for me is OneNote. Yes it comes from that "Evil" micro$oft but it is now free and hands down the best software in the world. Period.

If you don't know what it is or how to use it check out some youtube videos like this:

I have a tab for each client with everything about that client in the notebook for that tab and I have a section for my workshop with all the things I do in my shop.

Just one of the many crazy things it does well is instant OCR. If for example I place a photo in onenote and that photo has text on it I can search onenote for that text. I uses screen captures to grab important details off of the servers I work on and I can search those images for text. How cool and useful is that.
 

cludwin

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 12, 2013
Messages
122
Location
San Diego
I program for a living.

I use Linux as my OS.

VIM as my text editor
Screen as my terminal multiplexer (although I've hear good things about tmux)
Chrome as my browser of choice
Gimp on the rare occasion I need to manipulate images

90% of what I do is either in ssh'd into a shell on a remote server or working out of a browser on my machine.
 

kramarj

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 17, 2015
Messages
138
Location
Durand, IL
Not sure if these are useful, but I used to use these for 3D modeling for gaming and just building random things.

Blender
3DS Max (student version)
Maya (student version)

I have also found a free version of Photoshop, although it was an old version, but still free.
 

brianh

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2010
Messages
1,299
Location
grahamsville NY
Not sure if these are useful, but I used to use these for 3D modeling for gaming and just building random things.

Blender
3DS Max (student version)
Maya (student version)

I have also found a free version of Photoshop, although it was an old version, but still free.

These programs I use for models on my cnc router they are used by gamers too

http://www.makehuman.org/

http://pixologic.com/sculptris/
 

MrJason

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2013
Messages
438
Location
Bakersfield, CA.
I am a network engineer with more than 30 years in the business and I have to say that without a doubt the best free software for me is OneNote. Yes it comes from that "Evil" micro$oft but it is now free and hands down the best software in the world. Period.

If you don't know what it is or how to use it check out some youtube videos like this:

I have a tab for each client with everything about that client in the notebook for that tab and I have a section for my workshop with all the things I do in my shop.

Just one of the many crazy things it does well is instant OCR. If for example I place a photo in onenote and that photo has text on it I can search onenote for that text. I uses screen captures to grab important details off of the servers I work on and I can search those images for text. How cool and useful is that.
No offense, but the fact that you are using this on the job - using client screen captures is a little scary.

The practice is frightening, simply based on the fact that the IT industry doesn't have anything to really provide in lieu of OneNote, that can do the same thing.

It's comparable to hearing a doctor tell me that their PHI is located in their consumer grade Dropbox. Yikes!

You're a seasoned professional, so you know what you can and can't save offsite. HIPAA and PCI compliance issues could abound in someone less cognizant, as I'm sure you could imagine.

Clever? Yes. Scary, yep, just a little.

Jason
 

code4pay

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2014
Messages
237
Location
Jervis Bay Australia
Ubuntu Linux for all our p.c's including my work mac book. Inkscape for drawing, chrome or Firefox for Internet, Libre office for spreadsheet and letters, thunderbird for work email.
 
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