Linked by Manish Bansal on Wed 18th Aug 2004 18:53 UTC
Windows Recently I upgraded my home PC and I thought, well, how about loading it with only freeware/open source software (On top of Windows XP)? So I started looking around and found some excellent freeware, along with a lot of trash. It took some work to evaluate all the applications but in the end, it was worth it.
Order by: Score:

Hmmm...
by benn on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:07 UTC

There are lots out there, but most of those you mention are closed source and don't use the OSS style development cycle. This out lines a nice system using free components, though.

by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:11 UTC

I also pondered this question, but chose less than an hour for a full Linux install instead of many hours searching the web.

Firefox memory issues
by georgy on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:12 UTC

I can't speak for/against memory leaks by FireFox, but I do know that many people get confused between Mozilla memory leaks and memory cache use.

Please check Tools->Options->Privacy->Cache before concluding memory leaks as a culprit. "Why is my browser using 90 MB?" "Because it takes 20 MB to run and is storing 70 MB of porn images you've been surfing for the last week."

Flushing the cache and rechecking the memory may give surprising results.

Open Source Software CD
by Greyweather on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:12 UTC

Another good CD compilation of open-source software for Windows is the Open Source Software CD.
http://pmw.myip.org/oss/

Some remarks :-)
by J on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:12 UTC

Personally, I use foobar2000 (http://foobar2000.org/) for audio playback. I've used Winamp previously, but I prefer fb2k due to the minimalist interface, the extensibility and the small memory footprint compared to others. (Fb2k uses 7 mb on my machine, iTunes used about 50 mb.)

For video I use BSPlayer (http://bsplayer.com/). It's functional, fast and takes up very little screen estate using the right skin. Well worth a try.

I have no experience with CDmage, but Deamon Tools (http://www.daemon-tools.cc/dtcc/portal/index.php) has always worked great for me.

I got Thunderbird installed, but though I'm a fan of the Mozilla foundation, I use Eudora (http://www.eudora.com/) for my mailing activities. It's powerful and free. (Assuming you can survive a non-intrusive advertisement panel. Non-spyware, that is. If you don't want it, you can switch to the Lite version by entering the Settings panel, but this disables some advanced features.)

Pegasus Mail (http://www.pmail.com/) is also an excellent e-mail program.

Sorry for getting carried away... ^^

must haves
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:13 UTC

Free/OSS FTP server and FTP clients @ filezilla.sourceforge.net

k-lite codec pack is a must-have:
http://home.hccnet.nl/h.edskes/mirror.htm

tightvnc.org

Re: Hmmm...
by dpi on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:15 UTC

Freeware is software which is royalty-free for commercial and non-commercial usage.

Free Software is defined by the 4 rules which define that which means for example the source should be available. OSI's definition is similar.

<< Title: Freeware Suggestions under Windows

Recently I upgraded my home PC and I thought, well, how about loading it with only freeware/open source software (On top of Windows XP)? So I started looking around and found some excellent freeware, along with a lot of trash. It took some work to evaluate all the applications but in the end, it was worth it.


So i'd say this article ain't about FLOSS on Windows it is about freeware on Windows which does includes a number of FLOSS applications.

(A good read it was IMO.)

Good read.
by Thom Holwerda on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:19 UTC

Nice article, to the point, no moral and fingerpointing and stuff, just gave me exactly what the title said.

Good article, I'd prefer more of these un-flameable articles.

re: must haves
by J on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:20 UTC

The K-lite Codec pack bogs down your system with a lot of stuff you don't need.

If you install ffdshow (http://www.afterdawn.com/software/video_software/codecs_and_filters...) and XviD (http://www.roeder.goe.net/~koepi/xvid.shtml - Get the file "Latest standalone decoder DirectShow filter (installer)"), you will be able to play just about anything you could scavenge off the net.

it is not a MAC !
by mini-me on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:20 UTC

How many times must one make this distinction?
MAC is not Macintosh
Macintosh is Mac for short!

Addition to Video
by Wedge on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:21 UTC

Another free video player that is my personal fav. is bsplayer ( www.bsplayer.com ) Very simple, yet very complex at the same time, check it out.

Re: Firefox memory issues
by urmensch on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:22 UTC

I just closed firefox and got back 500MB. I have my cache set to 50MB. I think there is a leak. Still the best browser for me though.

Hmm.....
by Joseph Kowalski on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:26 UTC

What version of firefox are you running. .9.1 here with 4 windows open on some pretty graphicly heavy sites takes up about ~40 megs and is stable...no memory leak here. What plugins/extensions do you have installed?

I would add these ones as well...
by Leo on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:29 UTC

I would add to that:

.Mail: Foxmail (Freeware: only mail program I know supporting remote mail on Windows)

.Web: Opera ("Free": fully functionnal but displays small text Ads)

.Desktop sidebar (Freeware customizable Longhorn like sidebar)

.VirtuaWin (GPL: provides multiple virtual screens)

.Media players: MediaPlayerClassic (GPL), Viplay (Freeware)

.Grabit: newsreader (Freeware)

.XChat (should I precise ? ;) GPL IRC client)

.LCC-Win32: Free C IDE+Compiler (*not* based on GCC !)

.DigitalMars Compiler: Free C++ FAST and very little ressource-hungry compiler&linker (again, nothing to do with GCC)

... ;)

Memory Leaks
by Chris on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:30 UTC

"I just closed firefox and got back 500MB. I have my cache set to 50MB. I think there is a leak. Still the best browser for me though."
I don't think that's a leak, but it's a common issue. The cache doesn't seem to restrict itself very well. Memory leaks are a very specific technical term folks, it doesn't apply to all extraneous memory usage.

re: must haves
by bsdrocks on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:30 UTC

The K-lite Codec pack bogs down your system with a lot of stuff you don't need.

You can disable and enable stuff what you want to install during the installtion.

winamp
by grayrest on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:33 UTC

Nothing beats good ol' Winamp (classic) here for playing songs.

foobar2000 beats winamp.

http://www.foobar2000.org/

What about games?
by dpi on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:33 UTC

What about freeware and/or FLOSS games? There are good one out there.

Neverball: A puzzle game in which you have to control a platform on which a ball resides. You have to move the ball over the the exit point and/or collect coins in the meanwhile. Runs on Linux/Win32. (Available on The Open CD and Icculus.org). FLOSS.

Jump 'n Bump: Another puzzle game. (Available on Icculus.org). FLOSS.

Clanbomber: A funny Bomberman clone. Doesn't have network support and development has stalled. (Available on Clanbomber.de). FLOSS.

RTCW: ET: A multiplayer FPS similar to RTCW but free as in beer. (Available all over on the Internet). Freeware.

RE: Hmm... @Joseph Kowalski
by urmensch on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:34 UTC

I'm running 9.3 - I do have tons of extensions running, adblock, web developer, DOM inspector, tabbed browser stuff...

I should qualify that I had been running firefox for about 2 days without closing it. However this does seem to be a leak whether it's coming from extensions or not.

free
by blk on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:34 UTC

if you wanted some free software you should've started with FREE - i like debian.org but windows can't be a good start for free!

You read my mind
by emagius on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:35 UTC

Virtually all of the software (Irfanview, Miranda, Kerio, 7-Zip, WinAMP) the author recommended would be what I myself would recommend (though I prefer the avast! antivirus to either of the other two listed, and I would note that Kerio 2.1.5 is far superior to the new 4.x series -- there's no direct link to 2.1.5 on the Kerio site, but if you browse their download server, it's in the same directory as the 4.x downloads). And while I much prefer the lithe Miranda over the bloated GAIM (and so on), the author did list 'em both. ;)

One piece of software that ought to have been on the list, despite not truly falling within any of the categories (productivity, maybe?), is Arachnophilia 4.0. It's the very best text/HTML/RTF editor around and used to be one of the most popular, but the new Java-based 5.x series has left Arachnophilia a shadow of its former self.

LeechFTP is a solid (although dated) free FTP client, but I've now switched to CoreFTP Lite as the latter supports SFTP and FTP over SSL.

For web browsing and mail, I use Opera, which is arguably free (the free version has a small row of Google text ads at the top of the window) -- if that qualifies for the "free" moniker, it's a hands-down winner over Firefox, Thunderbird, and Eudora.

I like
by hmmm on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:37 UTC

crazybrowser @ www.crazybrowser.com

And I noticed they already mentioned CDex.

Then there's Cygwin with XFree86 or possibly Xorg which should support rootless X11 windows on Windows.

And Linux for Windows, which I haven't had the time to check out.

RE: Firefox memory issues
by Nanobaka on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:37 UTC

"I can't speak for/against memory leaks by FireFox, but I do know that many people get confused between Mozilla memory leaks and memory cache use. "

You know it's not the cache when you set your cache to 0mb and it still gobbles up your ram faster than you can say "1-2-3."
People in the Mozillazine forums will tell you the memory issues are well known and the developers are in no hurry to fix them. (Or won't fix them at all.)

I use firefox as my main browser (and won't use anything else) but these memory issues drive me nut. (try using it on a box with 128mb ram or less) It seems that when they say "lean" and "not bloated" they mean the download size of the program only.

@ Leo
by dpi on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:40 UTC

"Grabit: newsreader (Freeware)"

GrabIt is a "usenet binary leecher". GrabIt ain't a "newsreader" like Agent, PAN, XNews and Forte are. It has only very little support for reading; in contrast it is excellent for grabbing binaries.

Available on http://www.shemes.com. It works in WINE as well minus a cosmetic bug, but decent enough IMO.

ClamAntivirus
by Figa on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:41 UTC

Don't forget ClamAntivirus. It works under Windows very nicely. Its actually came from the Clam Antivirus for Linux.

http://www.clamwin.com/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=1

one item no windows user should do without
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:44 UTC

XPLite or 98Lite from http://www.litepc.com
Nuff said.

.
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:49 UTC

Paint,Web,Dtp: http://www.freeserifsoftware.com

Imageview: www.xnview.com

AG antivirus can be better choice when anyone uses Outlook [Express]

Leak, jojojo
by fedetxf on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:53 UTC

The guy has no idea what a memory leak is. Of course there are memory leaks in mozilla/ff (search bugzilla), but you can tell because there are bugs issued and confirmed spotting them, not by running the program for a few days and watching the windows task manager! How do you know all the memory used in not properly allocated and being usefully referenced? A memory leak is a situation when there is an allocated memory block that cannot or will not be freed even when it is not needed/referenced anymore.

Ghost and other free software
by Darius on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:56 UTC

Anyone know of a free Ghost alternative, one that supports NTFS and the various Linux file systems? Also, looking for a good freeware telnet app that has a tabbed interface.

Also, this is a good read. I thought about writing an article like this, because anytime Linux pundits go into the cost issue, they immediately figure $500 into the cost Windows for MS Office, and assume that you'll need to pay for anti-virus, firewalls, etcl.

As for other freeware apps, check out:
- Trillian (the free version)
- Crimson editor (Text editing)
- SmartFTP (Awesome FTP app, but non-commercial only)
- MyIE2 (Best IE 'shell' browser there is, for those times when you NEED to use IE. Piss on Crazybrowser)
- RBTray (Best 'miminize to system tray' app there is)


Some additions
by David Ross on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:57 UTC

Good article, a few more good ones

- HijackThis (http://www.spychecker.com/program/hijackthis.html) for very simple but helpful spyware diagnosing

- MPC (http://sourceforge.net/projects/guliverkli/) for a lightweight video player

- Palm Desktop (http://www.palmone.com/us/support/windt.html)

- MBSA (http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/tools/mbsahome.mspx), for keeping the OS security patched up

samurize
by o6nH on Wed 18th Aug 2004 19:59 UTC

I would add samurize: http://www.samurize.com . It's like superkaramba or gdesklets, only much better, faster and with tons of plugins.

And I forgot:
by Leo on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:00 UTC

FTP/Web server: BRS WebWeaver

Free Small (~1Mb) and easy to use ftp/web server.

:)

other suggestions
by Slapo on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:02 UTC

Hi, there are some other suggestions on my site: http://www.slapo.net/. Javascript has to be enabled to see the menu.

What appears to be memory leaks...
by Jonathan Thompson on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:08 UTC

May not technically be memory leaks! What may be happening (I have no way to confirm/deny in this case) is that the memory management is simplistic and doesn't at all worry about a common long-term problem: fragmentation. An application can technically be completely free of memory leaks, and yet have the memory usage balloon up to a huge amount in terms of what the swap space/system reserves for it. A web browser is one of the worst things in terms of fragmentation potential: you have the small strings, with the contrasts of blocks of memory from a few times that, to huge blocks (from a few K to many hundreds of K or more) that are allocated and freed. If you don't take efforts to reuse lists of holes for similar sized blocks, even if it seems wasteful to put something a bit smaller in a block and only treat it as that whole larger block (for example, if it is 32769 bytes and storing it in a 65536 byte block seems wasteful at first, as does storing 40000 bytes in that same block) in the longer term it may end up preventing memory usage in the total system from getting completely out of hand.

This is a very real issue with a server system or an embedded application: fragmentation can end up eventually eating up all available memory in the system and make it impossible to allocate a large enough block for some particular task. I have seen this on systems that use a combination of resources under Windows that don't have a way to unify memory management, such as a combination of COM, OpenGL, MFC, STL, etc. all in use in the same application, along with perhaps other libraries. While the application in question (in this case, it was press brake software) had no resource or memory leaks, the memory usage eventually got to a point where it was too much for the requirements: this required a warm restart of the application, because there wasn't a method to release all the fragmented memory blocks and unsnarl the heap for the application otherwise.

Now, if you also have some portions leaking memory in addition to fragmentation overall, yes, you've got BIG problems! ;)

As an interesting experiment (if there are those out there that don't completely reboot their Windows systems often) you'd like to think that Windows and Explorer don't have memory/resource leaks. It seems to me they don't, but the DO suffer from memory fragmentation (Explorer, be it IE or Windows Explorer) based on my observation. If I've left my system running for a long enough time between restarts of the applications in question, the system memory usage grows to the point where things really slow down. When I completely restart Explorer (don't need to restart XP that often unless some other issue arises) that memory is released, and the system is decent again. Note that this takes possibly several weeks or a couple of months...

(yes, I've had XP and Windows 2000 running without clean restarts for more than 2 months heavy use)

favorite media player...
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:23 UTC

I'm surprised iTunes wasn't mentioned as a free MP3 player...

Available for free download from Apple and it works great for me!

Another free antivirus software
by incubus on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:23 UTC

Quite informative. Both - article and comments.

I'd add Avast antivirus to the list http://www.avast.com .
There's a free Home version available. The software itself is not bad at all and the website forum is also very helpful when problems are encountered. I'm using it myself and I'm quite happy with it.

@ Darius
by dpi on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:25 UTC

<< Anyone know of a free Ghost alternative, one that supports NTFS and the various Linux file systems?

>> Yes.

Ghost for Linux (http://freshmeat.net/projects/g4l) i have no clue on this.
Partition Image (http://freshmeat.net/projects/partimage) i've used this and i found it excellent.
Recovery Is Possible (http://freshmeat.net/projects/recoveryispossible) is a CD which one can use use to backup and restore NTFS, Ext3FS partitions. Plus many more than that alone.

#1 and #2 are for Linux but you might get them ported, or they are ported in Cygwin. #3 is a CD and thus is OS-independant.

Better choices
by Ronald on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:28 UTC

ISO Burner: ISO Recorder Power Toy http://isorecorder.alexfeinman.com/isorecorder.htm

FTP Client: SmartFTP http://www.smartftp.com/

MP3 Player: iTunes http://www.itunes.com/

Pretty good picks
by Dewd on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:30 UTC

Thanks for sharing them. Most of them I already use, though :-)

RE: What appears to be memory leaks...
by Nanobaka on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:35 UTC

"....you'd like to think that Windows and Explorer don't have memory/resource leaks..."

I experience the same problem with XP. Explorer.exe would eat up a lot of ram and things started to slow down. (I copy/move/delete files a lot using Windows Explorer.) I had to kill the process and restart it. I didn't have this problem with 2000. (I just upgraded to XP from 2000.) Actually, it doesn't take several weeks, I managed to do it in a week of use. That's why I liked 2000 much better than XP.

Btw, anyone uses KeePass Password Safe? A pretty good program to safely store all my passwords. It's light weight and free.

Freeware
by Justin Sane on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:41 UTC

The best site I know of for Windows freeware is

http://www.snapfiles.com/freeware/freeware.html

Groups stuff nicely by category

js

Firefox
by omnivector on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:42 UTC

if you honestly think it's a good idea to use IE right now, and alllll those security warnings didn't drive the point home, it's a security nightmare. not to mention the spyware you'll get just browsing the web. even with a patched system and antivirus. in other words, do NOT use myie2. it's as bad.

you're not having memory issues. firefox naturally uses 70mb. it's just caching as much stuff as it can for efficient usage.

more software
by Naito on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:46 UTC

putty
media player classic
virtualdub

can't believe these didn't get mentioned!

Good Article
by Eddie on Wed 18th Aug 2004 20:55 UTC

I've seen many good programs here for Windows. Only thing I don't really see is a good Ghost clone for Windows nor do I see a clone of Lotus 1-2-3. Don't get me wrong, Open Office is great but it's not Lotus. Guess I'm an 80's relic or so. Above all, I try to keep my Windows Open Sourced, especially since I use Windows and Linux.

Coolplayer
by element on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:01 UTC

Winamp, Foobar2k? No way! Coolplayer rules them all!

Features:

* GNU General Public License
* Freeform Skins
* Simple User Interface
* Advanced Playlist editor
* Internet streaming
* ID3 Multitagger
* File Renamer
* Fast mp3->wav converter
* MAD mpeg engine
* OGG Vorbis support
* Winamp input plugins support
* Smallest executable programmed in blazing fast 'C'
* Continuous play
* 8 band precision equalizer
* Lot's more...

http://coolplayer.sourceforge.net/

more
by my name on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:02 UTC

>> I have nothing against Micro$oft or any other ISV
>> making money though.

When you have nothing against Microsoft because they have to make money, why are you writing it with that dollar sign in it?

Anyway, some more FREE (not OSS) software for Windows:

- Pandion: http://www.pandion.be
Instant messenger for XMPP and Jabber networks, looks pretty good.

- ArtRage: http://www.ambientdesign.com
Painting package for a realistic and fun simulation of using paint on a canvas, along with pens, pencils, crayons and other tools. Personally I think this one rocks, it doesn't take huge amounts of memory like Painter (of course it has much less features than Painter) and it's absolutely lovely for doing quick drawings or paintings with it.



btw. Funny that not any site about Linux noticed that MainConcept released MainActor 5 for Linux (!), a cheap video editor that used to be Windows-only:
http://www.mainconcept.com/index_noflash.shtml
(the url to the linux page is at the no_flash link above, so don't go straight to mainconcept.com where you'll get some other flash ad)

VideoLan
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:06 UTC

I've personally found VideoLan to be pretty buggy when trying to play DVDs. It's crashed when I try to switch audio tracks, bring up menus, and so on.

some alternates
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:18 UTC

ADAWARE
ADOBE reader and type manager
BURNATONCE 0.99
CUTEPDF WRITER 2
FILEZILLA_2_2_8A
FLASHGET 1.6
GOOGLETOOLBARANDPOPUPBLOCKER
IRFANVIEW 3
MACROMEDIA FLASH PLAYER 7
OPEN OFFICE 112
PRINT FOLDERS 2
QUICKTIME 6.5
REAL ALTERNATE
SPAMBAYESFOROUTLOOKANDPOP
SPYBOT SEARCH AND DESTROY 1.3
SUNS JAVA 142_05
WINRAR 330
ZONEALARM 51_011

freeware, nagware, open source.....

about 7-zip
by hobgoblin on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:25 UTC

i find the gui on that tool anoying, there is no extract all button that i could find...

personaly im currently using tugzip: http://www.tugzip.com/
a very nice program that can even eat 7-zips 7z files:)

Deliplayer
by Jessup on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:35 UTC

I don't like Winamp as much as Deli Player:

http://www.deliplayer.com/

I haven't used Winamp in about four years now.

Nice article
by ralph on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:38 UTC

Especially for a Linux zealot like me who doesn't use Windows very often and has problems finding the Software he is looking for.

I was indeed searching a free CD burning app and now I found it.

Thanks.

firefox memory
by adamw on Wed 18th Aug 2004 21:41 UTC

dunno about windows, but i'm running firefox 0.9.3 on a 128MB linux box here and it's fine. with adblock enabled and some fairly heavy adblock rules, it uses 38MB of memory.

bashing were you can
by a on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:00 UTC

> Needless to say, do not trust Windows firewall that comes with XP SP2

Please alleviate this kind of propaganda.. please..

re:deliplayer&mozilla
by hobgoblin on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:03 UTC

now that looked like a sexy player, thanks for the info:)

and im running mozilla 1.7.3 here at around 40megs so most likely the writer of the original firefox post have a extention or something thats going haywire. better check for updates or try to uninstall/disable some of them...

RE. it is not a MAC !
by Guy on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:14 UTC

"I use both MAC and iTunes.... With (M)PEG (A)udio (C)ollection"........

Always amusing when the Mac Brigade leap to (wrong) conclusions to defend their honour ;-)

FileZilla
by Matt on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:23 UTC

I don't think it ha been meantioned, but my favorite FTP/SFTP client is FileZilla, which is free and entirely open source.

http://filezilla.sf.net/

Works very well and can handle multiple transfers at the same time. We use it here at work.

Auditing
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:43 UTC

Not exactly something for the average user, but 'Snare for Windows' http://www.intersectalliance.com/projects/index.html is damn handy for system administrators who want to collect all their eventlog information into one place.

Some of the other things that always seem to end up on most of my windows boxes include:
* Perl
* Tight VNC
* putty/scp
* cygwin

Pricelessware
by Anonymous on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:51 UTC

I can't believe it. So many comments and nobody mentioned http://www.pricelessware.org yet.

Re: favorite media player...
by Archangel on Wed 18th Aug 2004 22:56 UTC

iTunes WAS mentioned. He just said he preferred Winamp, which is fair enough since the two aren't particularly similar.

For all the people going on about "memory leaks" - Programs are _meant_ to use RAM. Firefox is probably caching every single thing it can find in RAM on the off chance you might visit it again - if something else needs RAM all that cache will be dropped. There's no point in having 512MB of RAM if you keep 70% of it free the whole time.

Personally I'm a fan of Trillian - the free version would slot perfectly into here. Gaim hasn't impressed me at all - maybe I should try Miranda.

@mini-me
by Smeggy on Wed 18th Aug 2004 23:14 UTC

@mini-me (IP: ---.media.umb.edu) - Posted on 2004-08-18 19:20:23
How many times must one make this distinction?
MAC is not Macintosh
Macintosh is Mac for short!

He wasn't talking about a Macintosh computer, he was talking about MPEG Audio Collection.

Funny Stuff...
by mystilleef on Wed 18th Aug 2004 23:56 UTC

A memory leak occurs when objects that are created in memory don't get destroyed or released. Experts use advanced profiling and monitoring tools to detect memory leaks.

Here we are on osnews discussing the memory leaks we discovered using Windows' Task Manager. Incredible!

Quicksilver clone?
by Chris H on Wed 18th Aug 2004 23:59 UTC

anyone know of any XP apps out there that are similar in function to Quicksilver/LaunchBar on OS X?

Yea...still doubt the leaks
by Chris on Thu 19th Aug 2004 00:16 UTC

"I use firefox as my main browser (and won't use anything else) but these memory issues drive me nut. (try using it on a box with 128mb ram or less) It seems that when they say "lean" and "not bloated" they mean the download size of the program only.
"
I used it on a system with 56MB of system RAM, and I was also running Gaim and usually one other small application. The swapping was in no way unbarable.
I think they aren't about to fix it because it's a memory usage thing, not a memory leakage thing. I think you'd be getting into a memory vs cpu argument, and obviously the mozilla developers think people whould buy enough RAM and not waste CPU cycles to do uneccassary things to cut memory usage.
My only problem is with images. I've gotten Mozilla to use over 250MB of RAM. Course once I close the tab it frees my memory (it didn't used to).

My current usage is about 65MB, 35 of which is reported as shared (I realize most of that shared is prolly XUL and nothing else is going to use it but thunderbird).
I'm finally liking firefox, I used to despise it because I found it unstable. .9 was the clencher for me, .8 was barable but not a pleasure.
Like I say, I don't think it's leaks because I see Mozilla cleaning it up at predictable times. I guess I only keep a browser window in use for several hours though, maybe that 10 millionth page load is the clencher?

Dont Forget CoolPlayer
by Anmol Misra on Thu 19th Aug 2004 00:17 UTC

dont forget CoolPlayer has really less memory foot print and minimal interface

Power DVD Eye Candy
by CeSDEP on Thu 19th Aug 2004 00:23 UTC

Sure. It looks nice. But can you figure out which dohickey opens the play list? Was it the square or the triangles that switch it into file mode?

Pardon my rant, but the only (PC) DVD player I have used with a comprehensible (I won't talk about intuitive) interface was Windows Media Player. And that's really an audio player interface. Why can't DVD player manufacturers learn from the likes of Winamp and XMMS? They are simple enough (just like analog devices) despite the non-standard GUIs.

I may not like Microsoft's OS, or their buisness tactics, but they do make the best tweaking software for Windows. I have gotten lots of mileage out of their free Windows XP PowerToys. It's a package of tools that provide random hacks (autologin) through GUI (no registry editing) and handy but simplistic tools like the HTML slideshow generator.

My absolute favorite Microsoft Powertoy is the Virtual Desktop Manager. It's a clone from Unix, of course, and much slower than the origional, but it still helps me keep my desktop organized.

If you want some fun experimenting with unusual login screens, I recommend LoginLoader. Also, MacroMaker is a handy tool for registering hotkeys so they point to usefull functions. It can use hand scripted or recorded macros. I recomend writting them by hand. Most of the time, I used it for things that didn't need all the features, greatly reducing the complexity of use.

more
by pandasuit on Thu 19th Aug 2004 00:24 UTC

context for text editing (too bad textpad is not free)
avast antivirus
inkscape
bfilter - http proxy for removing adds and such from webpages...highly recommended
cygwin - *nix console apps and more
bloodshed dev-c++ - c and c++ ide...very good

I try to use the same apps on my primary Linux machine and my work and gaming Windows machines so I use alot of free and open software in Windows.

Lock Toolbar Icons
by JohnDeHope3 on Thu 19th Aug 2004 00:27 UTC

I'd love a program that keeps my "Always Hide" toolbar icons from showing back up again. Only in Windows does "always hide" mean "hide until the os decides they should be shown again".

Excellent Image Viewer
by Acidream on Thu 19th Aug 2004 00:41 UTC

Irfanview is a great little image viewer with a small footprint and lots o' options.

http://www.irfanview.com

A few comments
by walterbyrd on Thu 19th Aug 2004 01:19 UTC

Great article.

Check out pricelessware.org for the highest rated freeware.

DVDShink does a decent job of copying a movie DVD. Does anybody know of one that's better?

I don't know if MyIE2 counts, since - I think - that runs on top of MSIE - it isn't a free standing application.

Re: Freeware
by Eric Gardner on Thu 19th Aug 2004 01:32 UTC

I'm sure that I'll overlook some but here goes.

Cygwin and GNU Emacs: As a user of Unix/Linux for 20+ years, I couldn't live without these. (http://www.cygwin.com/, http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/)

FireFox: I seldom have to revert to IE anymore. Yea! (http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/)

Sam Spade: Nice general network utility with ping, dig, traceroute, DNS, whois, etc. (http://www.samspade.org/ssw/)

Space Monger: Very nice visual disk usage tool. (http://www.werkema.com/software/spacemonger.html)

ISO Recorder: Nice dll which adds windows explorer menu options for writing and copying ISO files with a CDR. (http://isorecorder.alexfeinman.com/isorecorder/isorecorder.htm)

WinCVS: CVS client for Windows. (http://www.wincvs.org/)

WinSCP: SCP client for Windows. (http://winscp.sourceforge.net/eng/)

TeraTerm: Terminal emulator with an optional SSH extension. (http://hp.vector.co.jp/authors/VA002416/teraterm.html)

Inkscape: Very slick SVG editor similar to Illustrator. (http://www.inkscape.org/)

Dia: Visio-like drawing tool that I haven't used much yet but it looks promising. (http://www.gnome.org/projects/dia/)

GIMP: I own an old version of Photoshop on an old Mac but I never use it anymore. GIMP is on all of my desktop Windows and Linux boxes. (http://www.gimp.org/)

MyIE2 and gecko
by Anonymous on Thu 19th Aug 2004 01:43 UTC

MyIE2 is now called Maxthon. I heard that maxthon can even use Gecko instead of IE for rendering. Anybody tried that? Can I use Firefox engine instead of Mozilla. I really don't want to install big and ugly Mozilla just to try that.

older software...
by spud on Thu 19th Aug 2004 02:06 UTC

http://www.oldversion.com/ is a good site to bookmark.

My Apps
by Roberto J. Dohnert on Thu 19th Aug 2004 02:40 UTC

For CD Burning CD Burner XP Pro
For MP3 and Audio Playback I use Zinf
For IM I use Gaim
For Productivity I use Openoffice or 602Software
For browsing I use Netscape
For web page authoring I use NVU
For mail I use Thunderbird
Anti-Virus I use Avast Home Edition
CD Ripping CDEx
For C++ and Java Development I use Eclipse
For C# and Visual Basic .NET development I use SharpDevelop and Borland C#Builder
For Virtual Desktops I use Microsoft DeskMan powertoy
For FTP I use FileZilla

Well....
by somedude on Thu 19th Aug 2004 02:50 UTC

Keynote (http://keynote.sourceforge.net) is the opensource version of treepad and it supports webpages and iimages.

Zipgenius is also a very awesome free zip program. no trials no nagging no nothing.

re: MyIE2 and gecko
by hobgoblin on Thu 19th Aug 2004 02:55 UTC

firefox should do i think. still i dont understand why they have not made gecko available as a freestanding library. maybe its an effect of it rendering the whole gui in mozilla? in so then gecko is in fact mozilla:)

Re: snapfiles
by Eric Gardner on Thu 19th Aug 2004 03:16 UTC

Snapfiles is great. Thank you!

CD imaging...
by Jeremy on Thu 19th Aug 2004 03:51 UTC

This has been a great article and thread! One thing that I'm missing, though, is a tool to grab data CD images so that I can keep them on my hard drive and load them through something like Daemon Tools. Any ideas? Thanks.

Me
by Amos Vryhof on Thu 19th Aug 2004 03:52 UTC

First, for a stand alone Gecko, look for MozillaControl.

Archiving: IZARC
Remote Desktop: Ultr@vnc

Depending on The system for productivity:
* Low Resource (32-64Mb/RAM) = AbiWord + Sygmiphic Software's Spreadsheet
* Mid Resource (64-128Mb/RAM) = 602 PC Suite
* Most modern Systems = OpenOffice

Audio = Winamp Classic, Audacity, LAME
Video = Media Player Classic, XMMS Win32
Paint = Irfanview,Pixia
PDF = PrimoPDF/Acrobat Reader
IM = Gaim
Web = Firefox
E-Mail = Thunderbird ... If I need Outlook, I use Outlook 98

Memory Leaks
by Wolf on Thu 19th Aug 2004 04:21 UTC

To all the people who says Memory leaks are detected using special profiling tools, i must say that yes you are right, but Task Manager is a good first hand indication that something wrong is going on, if a program's memory shown in task manager, keeps on increasing over time.

I have yet to see a program which keeps eating up your RAM and doesn't have a memory leak or other design problem.

QCD
by Greg on Thu 19th Aug 2004 04:41 UTC

I like QCD, aka Quintessential Player, for audio.

http://www.quinnware.com/

RE: re: MyIE2 and gecko
by aditya on Thu 19th Aug 2004 04:56 UTC

"firefox should do i think. still i dont understand why they have not made gecko available as a freestanding library."


there are plans to seperate it from version 2.0

a full list HERE
by johnny on Thu 19th Aug 2004 05:11 UTC

The OSSwin project: Open Source for Windows!

http://osswin.sourceforge.net/

As we all know, there's a lot of commercial, closed source software out there. Many people (including me) don't agree with the fact that the source remains closed and believe that releasing the source code helps improving the software in many ways. There *do* exist Open Source alternatives for most of the non-free, closed source stuff out there. One of them is the GNU/Linux Operating System.


Unfortunately, as a computerscientist/geek I've noticed that a lot people are afraid to install a Free Operating System like Linux. That's why I started looking for Open Source Software (OSS) under Windows.

Within this document, you should be able to find software which is able to replace much of the proprietary software most Windows-users use nowadays. Feel free to download, install, copy and use them: it's completely legal to do so!

http://osswin.sourceforge.net/

@Wolf
by Jonathan Thompson on Thu 19th Aug 2004 05:28 UTC

Task Manager gives an incredibly rough view of things, at best. Where Windows is managing all the heaps used in the application, fragmentation can still be an issue, because modern versions of Windows don't require or allow you to use memory handles for small segments of memory.

Task Manager won't tell you when an application is actually leaking memory very precisely. If you use C/C++, you can readily instrument your memory management/allocation to count what you've allocated and compare it to what you free at the end of the program. Even if you have everything released properly, fragmentation can still happen within the process address space as Windows works on finding room for whatever it does with various structures in the process space for that application. Of course, the application I mentioned previously really was a rather interesting beast in terms of all the things it included. I don't know that the memory usage would remain climbing upward until it ran out (I don't think so, but I'm not 100% certain: I haven't worked there for awhile, and wasn't there to see it completed) on a heavier duty machine, but because of what it was and the hardware requirement for RAM and speed, it became unacceptable. Including several different memory hungry libraries (COM/ADO/OpenGL/MFC) made things rather interesting, as it wasn't easy to make them all work together nicely for memory usage. There were no leaks, but the memory usage was not optimal. MFC doesn't make it easy to subvert their "optimizations" in certain places, because some of the memory management done in MFC is inline. And of course, OpenGL (as of that time and on Windows NT/9x) had no provision for replacing the memory management.

The application was run for 24 hours a day for several weeks on end using Visual Test scripts to make it run at top speed (limited by mechanical machine time limitations) and the memory management wasn't optimized at that point. Even when we made it reinitialize all the data structures after cleaning up all allocations of resources, Windows STILL didn't return the mapped memory to the system: the heaps weren't reduced properly. Perhaps this was/is a flaw
in the MFC libraries, I don't know. With .Net now out and about, and Longhorn coming sooner or later, perhaps MFC applications will become more of a legacy thing like Cobol program maintenance ;)

I suppose it could be readily argued that the "design problem" involved using all those technologies together ;)
Perhaps if I had a greater knowledge of how to manage memory with OpenGL resources, it might have been more viable. Actually, an interesting thought just occurred to me: I wonder if the OpenGL drivers for the cards we were using (can't remember what they were: they weren't anything spectacular at all) had memory leaks themselves??? That would be undetectable to us with our tools, and we didn't get the time to test all the technologies in isolation from each other due to time constraints.

"To all the people who says Memory leaks are detected using special profiling tools, i must say that yes you are right, but Task Manager is a good first hand indication that something wrong is going on, if a program's memory shown in task manager, keeps on increasing over time.

I have yet to see a program which keeps eating up your RAM and doesn't have a memory leak or other design problem."

Sweet as! thanks everybody!
by Wesley Parish on Thu 19th Aug 2004 05:43 UTC

I've been looking for a set of "free as in beer" apps to roadtest ReactOS with, written to a wide variety of MS Windows versions, and this has just made my day! Thanks everybody for contributing, and thanks to Manish Bansal for compiling his list.

Please note - I said Free as in beer, not Free as in Association of Recreational Drano Drinkers of America - I'm not interested in Software Piracy.

Video editing
by Anonymous on Thu 19th Aug 2004 06:07 UTC

Forget about Movie Maker, get an Avid for free
http://www.avid.com/freedv/index.asp?pageElement=flyout

Avid makes a free cut-down version of their software.

burnatonce
by k-dawggg on Thu 19th Aug 2004 06:07 UTC

Haven't used CD Burner XP Pro, but I'll throw a vote in for burnatonce, a simple, small cd-burning utility I've come to favor over Nero. It's essentially a freeware gui for cdrtools like mkisofs and cdrecord.

http://burnatonce.com/

Similar Setups
by Yamin on Thu 19th Aug 2004 06:48 UTC

It looks like we all have similar setups to an extent ;)

browser=firefox
mail=thunderbird
cal=sunbird
av= avg
imageviewer=irfanview
vnc=tightVNC
Cpp IDE=bloodshed
C# IDE = borland C# personal edition
ftp=smartftp
telnet=putty
image editing=the GIMP (only had to use it a few times, and it did what i wanted it to do)
Spy sofware=adware, Spybot S&D
Zip=Ultimate ZIP

But a quick note, when i first got my new PC, I tried to only use open office. To put it simply, it works ok, even with its own files...but it simply does not to word documents. I made my basic resume in it (simple text, indents...). exported to word, imported in...and it had errors. so i'm back on ms word 2000.

The open cd
by Steffen on Thu 19th Aug 2004 07:13 UTC

I suggest looking at the open CD:
http://www.theopencd.org
It has loads of OSS software for windows all with a nice installer and good descriptions of each application.

Another addictive taking notes app
by digge on Thu 19th Aug 2004 07:32 UTC

Here is another free note taking application thats realy good.

http://www.shirusupad.tk/

Nice Apps
by Michael on Thu 19th Aug 2004 07:40 UTC

Firefox users complain too much about not being able to visit certain web sites. Not for me.
Opera is a great browser but is incompatiable with it's environment. Cannot even export favorites properly.
Kerio firewall is ok if you buy the full version. Or else you may as well use sp2 firewall instead.
Same for Avid, free is missing all the useful stuff.
Freeware is useless if it cannot work for you.

Rainlender has no mention yet. Fully operational, free, no spyware.

image viewing
by brett on Thu 19th Aug 2004 07:48 UTC

Google's free image viewer picasa is great, only software out there for windows thats similiar to apple's iphoto. Not great to open u[p an image just so see it, but for cataloginh albums it cant be beat.

RE: WinAMP
by zakon on Thu 19th Aug 2004 08:27 UTC

WinAMP is the worst choise for the audio player, anything can beat it, unless you listening crappy sound files and don't like music.

WinLibre
by ben on Thu 19th Aug 2004 08:59 UTC

Take a look at WinLibre.
http://www.winlibre.com/en/

WinLibre is a free software (FLOSS) distribution for windows aimed at replacing the most common proprietary software.

* Office : OpenOffice.org 1.1.2
* Internet : FireFox 0.9.2, ThunderBird 0.7.2, FileZilla 2.2.7c, Nvu 0.30,Gaim 0.80
* Create : Gimp 2.0.2, Inkscape 0.9pre, Blender 2.33a, Audacity 1.2.1
* Multimedia : Zinf 2.2.1, WinLame rc3, CDex 1.51, VideoLanClient 0.7.2
* Tools : 7-Zip 3.13, ThightVnc 1.3dev5,NetTime 2.0b7, ClamWin 0.35

EAC
by JK on Thu 19th Aug 2004 09:47 UTC

I'm amazed nobody has mentioned the best audio ripper:

http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/

It gives me perfect rips of copy-protected CDs that fail to rip properly in any other software I've tried.

"Mozilla won't run on less than 256MB of RAM"
by r3m0t on Thu 19th Aug 2004 10:03 UTC

Hello? Are you sane? My old computer used to have 128MB of RAM with Windows XP. After logging in, It was almost completely used up!

This convinced my dad to find some more RAM to give it. We upped to 384MB (or thereabouts) and it ran fine.

Oh, well...
by Marco Radossevich on Thu 19th Aug 2004 10:22 UTC

Well... if you like free/open software why don't you change your OS too ?

http://www.reactos.org/

Multi-tab terminal (or multi-tab command prompt)
by Woollhara on Thu 19th Aug 2004 10:48 UTC

Anyone know of such an application (shareware, freeware or open source software) for windows? It's one of these apps I can't live without.

my stuff
by stupid_newbie on Thu 19th Aug 2004 11:44 UTC

-text editor - crimson editor (similar to editplus/textpad)
-http server - abyss
-pic viewer - XnView (found it to load images faster then -Infran)
-file cleaners - CCleaner and BeClean
-Writing prose (ie. not text editing) - cryptedit
-Calender of sorts, Rainlender (not too powerful, just useful).

RE: Virtual Desktop Manager
by emagius on Thu 19th Aug 2004 12:45 UTC

The Powertoys tool is really weak (and slow). I've found Virtual Dimension to be the best such utility available. It also has a lot of other nifty features (can make windows transparent/translucent, can minimize windows to the system tray, etc.).

personal finance management
by newbie on Thu 19th Aug 2004 13:16 UTC

what about Personal Finance Management ?? Money 200x, Quicken 200x...

Zip Prog
by meeztor on Thu 19th Aug 2004 13:22 UTC

I have used FilZip (www.filzip.com) for quite a while now. Opens almost all formats and is very similar winzip in operation. Best free zip app I have found so far.

Re: personal finance management
by Darius on Thu 19th Aug 2004 13:43 UTC

what about Personal Finance Management ?? Money 200x, Quicken 200x...

Try AceMoney:
http://www.mechcad.net/products/acemoney/

The commercial version is $15, but there is a free Lite version available as well.

OT: Re somedude (Keynote)
by Darius on Thu 19th Aug 2004 13:47 UTC

Keynote (http://keynote.sourceforge.net) is the opensource version of treepad and it supports webpages and images.

I know this is going to be extremely off topic, but does anyone have an alternative for this program in Linux? I know Treepad Lite is available, but it's really kind of basic.

Actually though, I am looking for a program on the caliber of Winorganizer:
http://www.tgslabs.com

It's like Keynote, but better. It has much better support for images, has PIM functionality, and lets you open more than one file at the same time. And for those of you who will surely bring up Evolution or some similar program, keep in mind that this is not a PIM - it's an 'outliner' program with some PIM capabilities.

RE: Zip Prog
by Justin Sane on Thu 19th Aug 2004 16:07 UTC

I like using IZarc for all my archiving

http://www.florida.plus.com/izarc/

rss aggregator
by radu on Thu 19th Aug 2004 17:26 UTC

I like Serence Klipfolio a lot. It can render rss/atom feeds and much much more. There are a lot of klips available on klipfarm.com

Html-Kit for html editor
by Anonymous on Thu 19th Aug 2004 17:30 UTC

For a nice Html Editor, Html-Kit is hard to beat! Although not everybody likes its interface.

freeware for mac
by foo on Thu 19th Aug 2004 17:35 UTC

It'll be nice to have a similar articale for Mac OS X

a few apps
by dvb on Thu 19th Aug 2004 18:28 UTC
Firefox - memory leak problems???
by Anonymous on Thu 19th Aug 2004 18:54 UTC

"I do not prefer firefox that much because of its memory leak problems. Use it for 10 minutes and it would start taking 60-70 MB of RAM."

Hummm... what "memory leak problems"? I didn't notice any problems.

Did anyone read the article?
by Anonymous on Thu 19th Aug 2004 18:59 UTC

I noticed many people replying to the article gave their recommendations as if they weren't in the article, yet many were. Great reading comprehension. Only a fool spouts off what they know...a wise man listens. Wait...which does that make me!?!?

Miranda IM
by Carl on Thu 19th Aug 2004 19:45 UTC

I can't believe that no one has mentioned Miranda IM. It's a nearly perfect application for me. Multi-IM protocls, stable, uncluttered interface and ultra, ultra low resource utilization. For me, Trillian free was too complex and was never updated. Gaim crashed constantly. Miranda IM is sitting in my tray using 3.7 MB of memory right now. Can't beat it!

Re: Miranda IM
by Darius on Thu 19th Aug 2004 20:09 UTC

I can't believe that no one has mentioned Miranda IM.

You're right, nobody mentioned it - not even the article ;)

Excellent Article
by Jeff G on Fri 20th Aug 2004 02:21 UTC

Very excellent article. A person can only search around on sourceforge for so long.

Thanks for the useful apps.

RE: Freeware for Windows
by Peter Anderson on Fri 20th Aug 2004 06:23 UTC

This has been one of the best exchanges of information that I have seen for quite some time. I have really pickedup some good inforation.
Some of my favourites (shareware and freeware) include:
* TextPad ( http://www.textpad.com/ )
* TopStyle Lite ( http://www.bradsoft.com/topstyle/index.asp ) - for CSS
* Nvu ( http://www.nvu.com/index.html ) - a great HTML word processor
* Pretty Good Solitaire ( http://www.goodsol.com/ ) - very addictive card game
* MyInfo ( http://www.milenix.com/ ) - for organising my writing
* Python ( http://www.python.org/ ) - cause its neat
* MSWLogo ( http://www.softronix.com/logo.html ) - forget the 'turtle' and look how nice logo is for 'real' programming
* Firefox ( http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/ ) - a very good browser
That enough, I could go on and on.

It would be nice if OSNews could turn this into an on-going blog; I'm sure it would be a must read for many of us.
Regards,
Peter

Here is the direct link to all my additions with external links (source). Most of them are freeware :-p

http://www.izsurfing.com/Logiciels_all.asp

Enjoy ;-p
IZ

For audio they forgot ZynAddSubFX
by Paul Nasca on Fri 20th Aug 2004 10:02 UTC

Hi.
They forgot to list ZynAddSubFX, which is a free but powerfull software synthsizer under GNU GPL v.2.
http://zynaddsubfx.sourceforge.net

Paul

OMG - suggesting IE
by Mike on Fri 20th Aug 2004 11:58 UTC

Is this guy serious? Is someone really suggesting people should use IE for web surfing. Same as suggesting taking a bicycle to an Intersate.

Yet more freeware - filling in a few gaps
by jhansonxi on Fri 20th Aug 2004 15:52 UTC

Son Of Spy Freeware (freeware site) http://www.sover.net/~wysiwygx/
Angry IP Scanner (identify nodes on network) http://www.angryziber.com/ipscan/
BDE Information Utility (installs the Borland Database Engine for old apps that need it) http://ibinstall.defined.net/dl_bdeinfo.htm
Belarc Advisor (system info) http://belarc.com/free_download.html
NetLaunch (Internet dialer and app launcher) http://www.blackcastlesoft.com/netlaunch/default.asp
AbiWord (word processor) http://www.abisource.com
FontPage (font viewer) http://bluefive.pair.com/fontpage.htm
CDCheck (test CD/DVD media) http://www.elpros.si/CDCheck/download.php
Break Reminder (RSI prevention) http://cheqsoft.com/break.html
PC INSPECTOR File Recovery (undelete) http://www.pcinspector.de/file_recovery/UK/welcome.htm
DocMemory (RAM tester) http://www.simmtester.com/page/products/doc/docinfo.asp
EyeDrives (drive space viewer) http://www.softtalon.com/ST_eyedrives.html
Convert (unit conversion) http://www.joshmadison.com/software/convert/
AEdiX Suite (text/hex editor) http://www.kt2k.com/download.php
Sicyon 3 (expression calculator) http://www.sicyon.com
Calc 98 (scientific calculator) http://www.calculator.org/download.html
Partition Saving (GHOST equivalent) http://www.partition-saving.com
THE Rename (mass renamer with ID3 support) http://www.herve-thouzard.com/modules/wfsection/article.php?article...
Theophilos Bible Software http://www.theophilos.sk
XXCOPY (enhanced XCOPY) http://www.xxcopy.com
Dependency Walker (programming util) http://www.dependencywalker.com
Nu2 Productions (many utils) http://www.nu2.nu
Kids Freeware http://www.kidsfreeware.com
PDFCreator (creates PDF files via a printer emulator) http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=57796
AlternaTIFF (browser plug-in for TIFF images) http://www.alternatiff.com
Skype (Internet telephone) http://www.skype.com
Psi (Jabber IM client) http://psi.affinix.com
Visual IRC (IRC client w/scripting) http://www.visualirc.net
Net Transport (download manager) http://lycos26486.l97.lycos.com.cn/default.htm
CPU-Z & PC Wizard (system info) http://www.cpuid.com
HDD Health (shows hard drive SMART status) http://www.panterasoft.com
LFN Tools (utils for Win9x-Me under DOS) http://www.odi.ch/prog/lfn/index.php
XnView (graphics viewer/converter) http://perso.wanadoo.fr/pierre.g/xnview/enhome.html
Oubliette (password manager) http://www.tranglos.com/free/
Multiple Clipboards by Gilson Fonseca Peres Filho (search Google for "multiple clipboards" and author)

RE: it is not a MAC !
by Drew on Fri 20th Aug 2004 16:39 UTC

It'd just like to point out that MAC is, in fact, properly used in this article.

<em>I use both MAC and iTunes as they serve two different purposes.</em>

He's not talking about 'a' Mac, but MAC, which is MPEG Audio Collection. Apparently, you're a little over-zealous.

Oh, and I'd like to mention <a href="http://www.nvu.com/">NVu. It's Linspire's opensource project to modernize the old Mozilla Composer as a stand alone WYSIWYG HTML editor. It's getting more and more stable every build, plus it's been ported from Linux to Win32 and OSX.

If you're more hardcore with web design, I'd suggest some combination of
http://www.scintilla.org/">SciTE Web" rel="nofollow">http://www.chrispederick.com/work/firefox/webdeveloper/">Web Developer and <a href="http://mozedit.mozdev.org/">MozEdit plug-ins.

Be ye warned, SciTE isn't as cross platform as NVu, and MozEdit is rather unstable in OSX, which is frustrating. <a href="http://www.uedit.tk/">uEdit works fairly well in their place.

freeware sites
by bruce coston on Fri 20th Aug 2004 17:13 UTC

i used to like http://www.nonags.com

Great article, i just got rid of the Norton antivirus and installed foobar 2000. Im looking for a nice firewall now. Any advice?
Thanks!

CD/DVD Burning software
by Todd on Fri 20th Aug 2004 21:32 UTC

Personally, I think "CD Burner XP Pro" is a little bloated.

And since no one else has mentioned Deepburner, I will.

I personally like Deepburner by AstonSoft better.
http://www.deepburner.com/

It's only a 2.78Meg download.

Pricelessware
by Tom on Sat 21st Aug 2004 05:42 UTC

Good article.

For those interested in more software, check http://pricelessware.org for the list of best freeware compiled annually by members of the newsgroup alt.comp.freeware.

Re: Did anyone read the article?
by ermo | Rune Morling on Sat 21st Aug 2004 21:47 UTC

Nice article, that.

As such, I feel obliged to bring to your a attention a small collection of 'Zen Garden' freeware/FLOSS software:

* Exodus - IM Client (Jabber):
http://exodus.jabberstudio.org

* Metapad - ANSI C notepad, very lightweight:
http://www.liquidninja.com/metapad/

* Leo - python based outline editor:
http://leo.sourceforge.net

<rant>
It seems that about ½ of the software mentioned here is mentioned more than once. Now, assuming that the set of clickerhappy contributors didn't bother to read through all the posts looking for duplication of effort, I suppose this little rant is lost on them too. *sigh*.
</rant>

Cheers,

ermo
--
'Typos? Here? Darn useless monkey typists!'

It looks so amateur
by Luci Sandor on Sun 22nd Aug 2004 06:51 UTC

How can you replace WMP with Winamp? Why does Winamp or iTunes looks "more freeware" than WMP? What is so freeware about MyIE2 and it is not in original IE? Gaim is freeware, but the news that Yahoo or MSN messengers are free haven't reached there.
7-zip cannot handle latest RAR archives. So much for "all the major formats"...
Speaking of RAM leaks, Mozilla is not as leaker as OpenOffice.
For audio files editing, use Audacity and dbPowerAmp.
CmdHere.. oh what a PowerToy... just add to your registry:
________________________
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryshellDosHere]
@="DOS &Prompt Here"
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryshellDosHereCommand]
@="C:\WINDOWS\System32\cmd.exe /k cd "%1""
________________________
You just listed your preferences here, it is like saying "I eat with the spoon because I have one" (or worse "because I hate forks and Microsoft", instead "I eat with a spoon because I got used to use it'

Some clarifications by the author
by Manish Bansal on Sun 22nd Aug 2004 09:22 UTC

There were some errors in my article as many people emailed me about them. My sincere thanks to all those kind souls.

1. Firefox does not have a "memory leak" problem. This seems to be an issue with cache management. I hope later versions of firefox would come with more sensible default settings.

2. 7-zip is not a proprietary algorithm. I should have used the term "invented by 7-zip" instead of proprietary. It is open source and some other compression softwares already support it.

3. This article was about freeware OR open source software. I did not make the distinction between zero-price and open source software as typical home users are not going to download the source and start compiling the applications. I understand that it's good to support open source software but that's a topic for another discussion.


Sysinternals.com
by Anonymous on Sun 22nd Aug 2004 17:23 UTC

sysinternals.com features a handful of freeware windows utilities... stuff like registry, file, tcp monitors, advanced process information, create junctions (ntfs symbolic links), show a file's alternate streams, etc. Can be very useful and interesting. Source code for some utilities is included.
<p>
PS - I wouldn't buy a shirt from sourceforge.net. Fuck them. Donate to the program author directly (or send a quick "thank you" note. you'd be surprised how few are sent).

Inkscape has me amazed. It's a vector based drawing program like Illustrator, and FreeHand. Wonderfully designed, so easy to use. It's a little unstable but that doesn't cause me a problem. I find that any errors pop up in an black dialogue window and I can minimize the window. As long as I don't close that window the program continues to run fine. I am also in the habit of saving often, so not a concern. The features on this program are already very rich and there's been great headway lately in the development. I am not affiliated in anyway, I just love the app and I'm thankful to the folks who work on it.