vlpronj
Well-known member
OK, I figure we've got...
(*)home mechanics using OBD scan software.
(*)eBay guys need picture editing and sorting
(*)designers, woodworkers, heck almost everybody can use SketchUp
(*)anybody watching movies or playing audio from the PC has players for that
What software do you have (and use) on your Garage PC?
What have you found indispensable for what you do in the garage?
I'm setting up a "new" one, but it's just an old Dell laptop, with only a 12Gb HDD, 1.5Ghz Celeron M, 2Gb RAM, and Win XP SP3.
I've got...
(*)Jarte (fastloading, small word processor built on WordPad)
(*)LibreOffice - Writer, Calc, & Impress (MS-compatible Office Suite)
(*)ACDSee 5.0 Image Viewer (last version I paid for, I like it)
(*)MicroGrafx Picture Publisher (I've got PhotoShop, need to use it more)
(*)CyberCalc (weights & measurements conversion calculator)
(*)EasyScan (simple scanner software)
I'm undecided about SketchUp, but it would give me a chance to play with it more. I use eBay a lot, so I use ACDSee to view pix and do quick adjustments (crop, exposure). EasyScan will be nice to digitize owner's manuals when I set up a scanner for that PC.
I still need to decide whether to buy a multi-card reader, since I work with a few older digital cameras, or just use the 99 cent SDHC readers I already have a few of.
I've got a bunch of other PC maintenance stuff, too. They aren't garage-related, I just like to have them on most PCs I use...
(*)SequioaView (view file sizes in directory - graphic chart)
(*)Recuva (deleted file recovery tool)
(*)Defraggler (disk defrag tool)
(*)Volumouse (lets me use CTRL key and scroll wheel on mouse to adjust volume)
(*)AVG 2011, Spybot Search & Destroy, AdAware (all free)
(*)Daemon Tools Lite (use CD images from HDD, USB, etc)
(*)Glary Utilities, 7Zip
(*)mute.exe (just lets you 2x click an icon to quickly mute system audio)
Nice things about the Dell I'm using:
(*)home mechanics using OBD scan software.
(*)eBay guys need picture editing and sorting
(*)designers, woodworkers, heck almost everybody can use SketchUp
(*)anybody watching movies or playing audio from the PC has players for that
What software do you have (and use) on your Garage PC?
What have you found indispensable for what you do in the garage?
I'm setting up a "new" one, but it's just an old Dell laptop, with only a 12Gb HDD, 1.5Ghz Celeron M, 2Gb RAM, and Win XP SP3.
I've got...
(*)Jarte (fastloading, small word processor built on WordPad)
(*)LibreOffice - Writer, Calc, & Impress (MS-compatible Office Suite)
(*)ACDSee 5.0 Image Viewer (last version I paid for, I like it)
(*)MicroGrafx Picture Publisher (I've got PhotoShop, need to use it more)
(*)CyberCalc (weights & measurements conversion calculator)
(*)EasyScan (simple scanner software)
I'm undecided about SketchUp, but it would give me a chance to play with it more. I use eBay a lot, so I use ACDSee to view pix and do quick adjustments (crop, exposure). EasyScan will be nice to digitize owner's manuals when I set up a scanner for that PC.
I still need to decide whether to buy a multi-card reader, since I work with a few older digital cameras, or just use the 99 cent SDHC readers I already have a few of.
I've got a bunch of other PC maintenance stuff, too. They aren't garage-related, I just like to have them on most PCs I use...
(*)SequioaView (view file sizes in directory - graphic chart)
(*)Recuva (deleted file recovery tool)
(*)Defraggler (disk defrag tool)
(*)Volumouse (lets me use CTRL key and scroll wheel on mouse to adjust volume)
(*)AVG 2011, Spybot Search & Destroy, AdAware (all free)
(*)Daemon Tools Lite (use CD images from HDD, USB, etc)
(*)Glary Utilities, 7Zip
(*)mute.exe (just lets you 2x click an icon to quickly mute system audio)
Nice things about the Dell I'm using:
- I'm planning to get an expansion module to hold a 2nd HDD; ~$15 on eBay. That'll let me store a lot more files out there.
- It has 4 USB ports. So I'll have it up on a higher shelf, with a cable running to a USB hub at working level, for a disposable keyboard & mouse, flash drives, card readers, etc., and can still have some items plugged directly into the PC.
- It's got an s-video port; I'll run that to an old CRT TV on top of some cabinets.
- It's old enough to still have serial and parallel ports on the back; I can play around with PC controlled mechanisms with my kit74
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