Useful Apps for First-Time Windows Users? 980
pauljoyce asks: "I'm a Mac fan who is intrigued by the possibilities of Apple's Boot Camp software. Now that I have a chance to painlessly dip into the Windows world, what I'd like to ask you is, what Windows software amazes you? I want to build a list of unique, elegant, can't-do-without apps, so all us new Boot-Camp babies can finally experience some of the great innovation happening over on the Windows platform.
I roughed in a quick blogpage to collect the info, and to house any useful discussions. It'll probably deteriorate into a flame war at some point, but hopefully I can get a few contributions to each category before then. Would those interested please chime in with their list of favorites?"
flame war? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:flame war? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:flame war? (Score:5, Funny)
That's not how you start a flame war.
Now THAT'S how you start a flame war...Re:flame war? (Score:3, Funny)
These days, you have to right-click on My Computer, select Manage, then use the Microsoft Management Console to select Storage Management, then manage your partitions there. Windows XP.. it's all about the eXPerience!
Re:flame war? (Score:5, Funny)
The only must have Windows software is fdisk.
So you can get rid of Linux?
Re:flame war? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:flame war? (Score:3, Informative)
(screw that SFU garbage - if you even moderately secure your system, their service just hangs on startup without even the courtesy of an error message).
Re:I missed one. (Score:3, Informative)
Just checked, it is still there. Clicked on the free download link at opera.com and the download of a nice mac disk image started.
In other words... (Score:3, Funny)
Did I mention that I fully support the merging of the European Union and the United Nations as a division of ICANN?
~=@:O
Re:flame war? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:flame war? (Score:4, Funny)
Isn't that an oxymoron?
Some Slashdotters have no window in their basement
Re:flame war? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the key here is that he is looking for innovative software that runs on Windows. Not necessarily Microsoft software. For example, Firefox and Thunderbird work in Windows just fine, although I don't consider either one particularly innovative. There are thousands upon thousands of programs that run in Windows. A very small portion of these are written by Microsoft. He is looking for the rest.
Re:flame war? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't mean to start a flame war here, but none of these apps are worth dual-booting for. They're mostly apps to "fix" windows, and small utilities. There are awesome equivalents for OSX. So what's the point?
What software amazes me? (Score:3, Funny)
Java. Because it means that I can move the hell off of Windows and use a Mac instead.
Whoops. Did I just say that out loud?
Re:What software amazes me? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's take a realistic point of view. We have a computer user who seems to be well experienced. They even have a nicely designed blog online where you can write in your favourite Windows-only applications. Yet they claim that they have never been a windows user before (Making me wonder where they have been for the past 10+ years where windows has been the ubiquitous consumer & business software platform.)
Now let us pretend for a moment that this actually is some computer user who has already mastered implementing RSS+Atom into their blog, yet simultaneously never even noticed that Windows has existed alongside the Mac OS, nor ever even dabbled in it until the release of boot camp last week(I can hardly imagine them rushing out to a store and purchasing a copy of MS Windows for their not-even year old Intel Mac) So why would they be interested in beta software like MS Max? (Which is really only ever going to be as good as last years version of Apple's iLife?) And why is it that their top 10 Mac apps seem to resemble the top rated list from macupdate.com.
Now lets come back to the real world: If you haven't dabbled in windows ever then you're either a recent jail escapee or very good at digging one's own head deeply into sand. This story doesn't add up, and is coinciding with a new wave of windows advertising. Which is fairly interesting as it's before a major release is due. I think our friends in Redmond are just trying to peddle off some Windows sales. Now excuse me I have to drink coffee with a pretty lady from getty-images.
I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:4, Informative)
I worked in a mac-based office (not a design firm, a real office) and have done years of development exclusively on macs. My servers are OS X servers.
I do not know how to use a PC more than basic point and click. I have no idea what a DLL is. I don't know what it means to flash BIOS. Why? Because I have never needed to know, nor have I wanted to know.
As for the atom feed and stuff, that stuff is basic when you setup a blog. Come on.
Maybe this is astroturf, but I am a very tech savvy individual and have hardly any knowledge of Windows or experience using it. And I love it.
-A
Re:I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:5, Funny)
It stands for "Display List List", which is a list of the Display Command Lists used by your Atari 7800 to render graphics to the television. This amazing technology is based on arcade hardware, making the 7800 the most advanced Atari ever! Just imagine, you'll soon be able to play such amazing titles as:
* Ninja Golf
* Fatal Run
* Desert Falcon
* Scrapyard Dog
* Plus all your favorites like Ms. Pac Man, Donkey Kong, and Mario Bros.!
And that's not all! With your new Atari 7800, we'll include the arcade hit Pole Position II at no extra charge! Isn't Atari just amazing?
Have you played Atari today?
Re:I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:5, Informative)
A DLL is a Dynamic Link Library. Basically it's a collection of executable code that's not meant to be executed directly, but rather to be called by programs. Orignally the idea was to cut down on resorce usage as you only needed one copy of the code on disk or in memory. These days all programs get their own compy in memory (for stability reasons) and programs often include their own copies on disk to ensure they get the version they want. Their primary uses today are:
1) To allow the easy use of 3rd party code. Say I want to encode MP3s or something, but don't want to write it all myself. Instead, I can just get LAME complied as a DLL, and put calls to that with my software. That also allows for the MP3 encoding section to be upgraded without messing with the main executable.
2) To reconsile incompatible licenses. In my previous example, you could use a LGPL program (LAME) that requires source release without releasing your entire source wince it's called as a library. To link it in your own code would require opening up that code. Conversely, an OSS program can make calls to non-OSS software, with no problems. It never needs access to the code, just calls the library.
Flashing BIOS is much simpler, it simply means to update the system BIOS. The BIOS is what loads when you first turn your system on. Some comptuers call this boot ROM, firmware, or a host of other names. Regardless, on the PC it's what loads when you turn the power on. Sometimes, computer makers with to put out fixes or improvements for that. To flash your BIOS is to apply the new update. Generally these days you just download and run a Windows program and it takes care of it.
Re:I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:3, Informative)
I didn't know Windows always creates copies of DLLs for stability reasons... that kind of defeats the purpose of dlls, but I can see if the library itself was unstable there may be some advantages to that. There is actually another legacy reason for DLLs - the code can be loaded or unloaded as needed, so a large app could use a much smaller memory footprint (and load much faster) since all functions of the app don't have to be loaded when the program starts up. This became more of a non-issue much
Re:I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:3, Funny)
Seriously, the "quarter" quote is a reference to one of the most famous Dilbert strips of all -- in which the hairy, Birkenstock-wearing UNIX guru tells Dilbert to go buy himself a real computer.
Re:I have used a PC for 15 minutes, and it sucked (Score:3, Insightful)
Au contraire. No recent macs use BIOS. And when they did, the overwhelming majority of Mac users had little need to even be aware of it, since . . . (wait for it) . . . . Macs just work.
I switched from Windows 3.1 to Mac System 7 in the early 90s, and I've never looked back. I'm vaguegly aware of DLLs and the Registry, since I've heard so many complaints about them (at places like slashdot). The frustrating issues I had to contend with on Windows, such as IRQ conflicts, have b
Re:I have used a PC for 15 minutes, and it sucked (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I have used a PC for 15 minutes, and it sucked (Score:3, Informative)
And I didn't think I needed to go into the whole "Apple supports multi-button mouse" thing. I thought that it was a given that I was thinking it, even if I didn't write it. It would have distracted from the purpose of the story, which was to annoy the one-button-mouse trolls. The story is true, by the way.
Re:I have used a PC for 15 minutes, and it sucked (Score:3)
Homie does right-click... (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, the trackpad on a Mac laptop only has a single button. Boo hoo hoo. You just whip out Mr. 2-b
Re:I have used a PC for 15 minutes, and it sucked (Score:5, Funny)
Of course not. Between the time you power up a Mac and the time the OS loads, the computer runs on magic !
Re:I have used a PC for 15 minutes, and it sucked (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure, I'm a rare occurence. But while I've wandered around the web enough to come across the terms (especially on bash.org), I've never had a need to find out exactly what they do. I think there's a difference between DLL and
You know why I don't know? Because I don't care. I'm a geek who uses macs, and I don't care about the hordes of people who told me I was doing it all wrong when apple were going down the tube, and I still don't care about the hordes of people who think I'm a moron for using macs. I have no need to know anything at all about the windows subsystem, and so when I come across the terms I see them but ignore them completely. I simply have no need to know what they mean, in the same way that when I see arcane sigs here, I can recognise them as being *nix terms or cryptography (I have familiarity but not mastery of the linux stuff, and I've read Cryptonomicon) - but their meaning isn't obvious simply by looking at them, and I don't have a reason to learn the meaning of each and every single one of them by looking them up or figuring them out.
I may have more understanding of what they are than the average Windows user, just like the gpp. But by no means does that mean I understand them completely, nor that I care to know what they do. I don't need to.
Re:I have used a PC for 2 weeks (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What software amazes me? (Score:4, Interesting)
Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm a software developer. I've worked for IBM. I maintain and develop several Open Source software applications. And I haven't been a Windows user since Windows 3.1.
I always have to laugh when some Windows user thinks that it is simply not possible to exist in the computing world without using Windows. However, it's quite a bit easier to live outside the Windows world than you think.
How did I do it? Long before Windows 95 existed, I used a fine 32-bit, pre-emptively multitasking operating system called OS/2, which I used for most of the 1990's. Towards the late 1990's, when OS/2 was on the decline, I started working for IBM as an OS/2 developer, where I also did a lot of Unix/Linux work. Around the same time frame, I started running Linux at home in parallel to my OS/2 machine as a way of running software through X that I didn't otherwise have access to.
With the serious decline of OS/2 in the 2000's, I moved over to Mac OS X (along with running a lot of Unix systems). For the last number of years much of my paid work has been in Java comsulting, where I get to pick what platform I use.
So I haven't had a Windows machine since 1993 at this point. True, I have encountered them here and there over the years, but I've been able to avoid being assigned to a Windows machine in my home or at any place of work I've held in all that time. The trick is damn simple for the most part: be so freakishly good at what you do that people will be happy to comply with your platform requests, and let them know up from you have no interest in working with Windows. So far, it's worked every time here.
Yaz.
Windows Free since '93.
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:5, Insightful)
I hope you don't mean you NEVER use Windows or a newer version than 3.1...
You owe it to yourself to fully understand what is out there, and the development division of Microsoft has done some really cool things in the past 10 years. Not always perfect, but different and worth knowing to at least get ideas or very least know your competition.
Even looking at the *nix market we see the classic 'taskbar' in everything from KDE to GNOME and other variants. It is kind of sad that MS was the first one with a taskbar like this, but it isn't such a bad idea, so I don't mind see others parrot it.
I find too many experienced IT people that I interview and they are non-Windows people which is fine, but when asked what they are working on or why they like one OS, etc.
I find that many times they have NO idea how much the industry has passed them by. I get answers like, I use XXXX because I want a real 32bit OS, or real Multi-Tasking, or I am developing this cool application idea (an idea that has been built into Window or other OSes for YEARS) and they think they are being innovative.
Basically you can't be innovative, unless you know what else is out there.
Getting off of Windows is great, but don't close your mind to the stuff from Redmond, they surprise many great developers sometimes, by statistics alone, it has to happen. For example at the PDC in September they shook up the way a lot of us developers view software, and even some of us are developing on other platforms, their ideas were something good to build from.
I assume you don't mean you haven't used Windows to at least explore the competition, but in case you haven't or others in here haven't, it is worth your time...
Nice VMWare or other tool and at least run a test version somewhere. (Hint, if you are using VMWare or another comperable tool, you can use the 180day Free version of WindowsXP and just reinstall it.)
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:3, Insightful)
You'd have a great point, that is if MS actually *was* the first one with a taskbar like this...
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:3, Insightful)
So don't leave us hanging, which GUI do you think had it first? Personally, I'm going with Acorn RISC OS, but would be interested if there's another contender.
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:3, Informative)
In OSX, the Expose function allows easy switching between apps and numerous windows within them. Does MS have something like that? The taskbar gets pretty crowded fast and then it becomes hard to figure out which one is the right one.
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:3, Interesting)
But, eventually, I found that a lot of the mainstream stuff just wasn't available. It took a long time to compile software on a 486 und
Re:Living off the grid -- easier than you think. (Score:3, Insightful)
You certainly do assume quite a lot. First off, no matter how good a developer someone is, they can't go around and fix every
Re:What software amazes me? (Score:3, Funny)
I missed the joke. vi doesn't sound at all like "loadlin".
Games. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the only reason I have a Windows box - to play my games, b/c most of them don't run in WINE.
Re:Games. (Score:5, Informative)
AutoCAD? Nope...
Solidworks? Yea right...
Pro/E? Didn't think so...
Electronics Workbench? Nope...
and the list goes on and on...
Re:Games. (Score:5, Informative)
What might have been more Informative (moderators, note) is to do a little research and see what Macintosh products might replace these. As a person who, I assume, does industrial work, this might have been quite valuable.
You see, it's easy to throw out application titles and say, "See? You can't CAD on a Mac because there's no AutoCAD!" But what about VectorWorks [nemetschek.net], VersaCAD [versacad.com], or the products from Ashlar-Vellum [ashlar.com]? A trip to Apple's database gives me those three.
Of course, you have to look for them. I remember being told that Macs couldn't do accounting because there was no QuickBooks. There was plenty of other accounting software available for the Mac. But the only accounting software that this person knew was QuickBooks and if that didn't run a Mac, well, you couldn't do accounting.
Check out some of the Mac solutions. You might be surprised.
Re:Games. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Games. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Games. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wrong (Score:3, Informative)
Wow...
First off Pro/ENGINEER was first available for Linux with the release of WildFire. That'd be version 24 for you old-schoolers. As of right now they only support RedHat on SUN or HP hardware. And that's just Pro/ENGINEER
Funny you should mention... (Score:3, Insightful)
Embrace, extend, destroy - sound like another company we know?
Not quite equating Apple with Microsoft here, but there's certain trais the companies share.
Re:Games. (Score:3, Informative)
Can I suggest (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, maybe not that funny, but its required here
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
It's called "foobar," not "bar none" (Score:3, Funny)
Internet Explorer (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Internet Explorer (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Firefox
2) Wikipedia
3) Google
And tell them to go exploring.
Games (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Games (Score:5, Insightful)
That is not to say that console gaming is bad. In fact, console gaming kicks the piss out of PC gaming in many ways. I would never want to play Mario or a driving game on a PC unless I had a game pad. Consoles are awesome because you can invite a bunch of friends, crash on the couch with four controllers, and beat on each other. Console games have their place, but so do PC games.
VLC Media Player (Score:2, Informative)
Videolan Website [videolan.org]
Re:VLC Media Player (Score:2)
VLC Media Player is a fantastic media player for Linux [videolan.org], Mac OS X [videolan.org], and Windows.
It's hardly a reason to run Windows.
Re:VLC Media Player (Score:2)
Decent file manager (Score:5, Interesting)
Hmm (Score:2)
Must have (Score:3, Informative)
The first couple of stops should be to AVG [grisoft.com] and Firefox [mozilla.com]
Being a mac user, you know windows has viruses, and well firefox speaks for itself.
Post is a troll? (Score:2)
The Only Windows Software you Need... (Score:3, Funny)
Record Streams with SDP (Score:2)
Depends on what "useful" means. (Score:3, Informative)
You might also find Tunebite [tunebite.com] useful, if you subscribe to any online music services.
don't you mean (Score:3, Funny)
first thing I'd get (Score:5, Informative)
First app I'd buy is vmware (hey, it might be free now!) so you can run OS X on it.
No, really, all seriousness aside, I am a big user and fan in XP of:
This is really a tiny partial list. It's a shame I have so many programs I like to run in XP, cuz I always prefer the linux or some variant of unix environment. But, this is a small sample of what gets me through an XP kind of day.
Adding a few more... (Score:5, Interesting)
* uTorrent [utorrent.com] Is there an open source Torrent Client in under 200k? Does it have RSS searching, bandwidth scheduling, automatic resume, and trackerless support? Yes? Oh, good then.
* As -U- Type [asutype.com]. Spell check anywhere. It's a great piece of software, if you can get over the fact that the author barely speaks any english.
* 3 Plane Soft Screensavers [3planesoft.com]. Ok, they're screensavers. And they're a rip off. But damn they're nice.
* Trillian [ceruleanstudios.com]. 'nuff said.
* The Bat! [ritlabs.com] The second best mail client created, behind only KMail.
* IZarc [izarc.org] If there were need for zip clients anymore, this would be the one to have. Also handles about 50 other file standards, integrates really well with explorer, is small and efficient, and did I mention free? Best unzipper out there, including the pay options.
* Folder Size [sourceforge.net] Shows you how big your folders are. If explorer were made by Apple, it would do this by default.
* True Crypt [truecrypt.org] Data so secure even it doesn't know if there is more to be found in a file.
* Thumbs Plus [cerious.com] Arguably there are a lot of good applications in this space, and there are ones out there with better interfaces. But it is the only thumbnail application I've ever used that can handle upwards of 20,000 files in a single directory. If you take lots of pictures, this is the one.
* DVD Decrypter [mrbass.org] Recently bought out by Macrovision to shut down it's decryptey goodness, DVD Decrypter is really a no-nonsense, no-fuss DVD ripper and burner. Want to rip a movie from a DVD so you can watch it later? One button. Want to rip it back to a DVD? Another button.
* Microsoft Power Toys [microsoft.com] Nifty stuff from people who both hate and make the operating system.
And remember to use an antivirus, a firewall, and two anti-spyware suites. My personal favorites are AVG Antivirus [slashdot.org], Kerio Personal Firewall [kerio.com], Spybot [safer-networking.org], and Ad Aware [lavasoft.de].
Re:Adding a few more... (Score:3, Interesting)
* AutoIt for simple automation tasks and creating small programs with graphical user interfaces [autoitscript.com]
* Firefox [mozilla.com], of course. Opera [opera.com] is also a good choice.
* Daemon Tools [daemon-tools.cc] for mounting ISOs as virtual CD/DVD drives
* Trillian [ceruleanstudios.com]--AIM, ICQ, IRC, MSN, and Yahoo messenger client
* QuickTime Alternative [free-codecs.com]
* RealPlayer Alternative [free-codecs.com]
* IrfanView [irfanview.com]--small, free, fast image viewer
* SysInternals utilities [sysinternals.com]--useful for admins
* Scanner [steffengerlach.de]--shows hard drive usage as stacked
Re:Adding a few more... (Score:3, Interesting)
- Crimson Editor
I use CE on Windows and love it. However, TextWrangler for OS X is comparable. Everyone has one or two killer features in their editor of choice. In this case, both do a great j
Picasa (Score:5, Informative)
1. Picasa lets me 'monitor folders', something iPhoto will not let me do. I hate having to 'import' pictures into iPhoto everytime I want to see my new pictures there.
2. Picasa will let me put my photo album anywhere I want, including external drives. There is no straightforward way to change your album location in iPhoto (Yes it can be done, but it's a hack)
3. Picasa will let me add photos to the library without actually copying them to the Picasa storage folder. iPhoto insists on copying all photos to the iPhoto folder everytime you add pictures to it. Why is this important? As a photographer I have tens of gigabytes of pictures that I do not wish to store on the mac hard drive because the storage I have on external drives far outstrips my hard drive size . Also they are organized the way I want them with proper folder names and heirarchies. If I 'import' them to iPhoto, it creates one big lump of a library which I have to organize painfully by hand if I wish to see my original configuration. Also, the folder organization in the iPhoto folder has no connection to the original organization I had.
4. Non-destructive edits. I can touch, crop and do anything I wish to my pictures in Picasa and it doesn't hurt the original picture at all. I can come back later and undo everything I did. If I wish to retain my changes, I can simply export the current state of the picture. On iPhoto, the edits you do are non-undoable once you are done with the edits. Very painful for a photographer who wants to quickly try out some edits before opening up the full-fledged Photoshop.
There are many more, but these are the important ones. As for features Picasa gives almost all the features I expect from a photo organizer (which, to be fair are also available in iPhoto)
Re:Picasa (Score:4, Informative)
This is easy to set-up with iPhoto. Just create an Automator task that takes the files in a folder and auto-imports them into iPhoto when activated. Create a folder to dump photos into, and enable it's folder actions to call your Automator task whenever a file is added to the folder. Done.
In the Library view, right click on the photo and select "Revert to Original". Edits in iPhoto are also non-destructive -- editing an image actually creates a new image file. The original is still present on your hard drive -- you just have to tell iPhoto to revert to the original, and you're ready to go.
These may not solve all of your issues with iPhoto, but if you feel the need or requirement to work with it, hopefully knowing these two tricks will make it a little less annoying to you.
Yaz.
Re:Picasa (Score:3, Insightful)
I bought a Mac Mini because I thought it might be a good idea to store my growing photo collection on a machine that belonged to me, rather than my employer. I allowed myself to believe the hype about iPhoto, was curious about OSX so I chose the Mac.
With 1GB RAM, iPhoto 5 takes unacceptably long to start up, stutters while scrolling through the library, freezes for seconds at a time, and generally gets in the
Microsoft Office (Score:3, Interesting)
Visio and Access for rapidly and easily designing and prototyping, powerpoint for presentations. There are other applications that can replace Word and Excel, but they don't support ythe same level of integration. Just drag and drop a table from Excel into a Word document.
Because Office doesn't support exporting to PDF yet, you'll need CutePDF writer: http://www.cutepdf.com/ [cutepdf.com]
Most important (mini)app for you Mac users (Score:5, Informative)
1. Press Start
2. Select Control Panel
3. Select Accessibility Options
4. Select the Mouse tab
5. Select the check box Use MouseKeys
6. Press ok.
7. You can now close Control Panel.
8. Press the - key on your numeric keypad.
9. Point your mouse cursor at the window or icon where you want to right click.
10. Press the 5 key on your numeric keypad.
At present I'm not aware of any apps that you can get that will convert Apple+click to a right click. But I'm sure there'll be one available from the Apple web site soon, they seem to be doing everything in their power to make running windows on a Mac as painful^H^H^Hless as running it on any other x86 hardware.
Re:Most important (mini)app for you Mac users (Score:4, Informative)
What about this [geocities.com]?
Re:Most important (mini)app for you Mac users (Score:5, Informative)
Must-have software? (Score:5, Informative)
http://free.grisoft.com/ [grisoft.com]
Ad-aware:
http://www.download.com/Ad-Aware-SE-Personal-Edit
Spybot Search and Destroy:
http://www.download.com/Spybot-Search-Destroy/300
Hijack This!:
http://www.download.com/HijackThis/3000-8022_4-10
Firefox:
http://www.firefox.com/ [firefox.com]
Trillian:
http://www.trillian.cc/ [trillian.cc]
Spywareblaster:
http://www.download.com/SpywareBlaster/3000-8022_
And just about anything from:
http://www.gamespot.com/pc/index.html [gamespot.com]
Off the top of my head: (Score:5, Informative)
Hijack This
Spybot Search and Destroy
Adaware
Microsoft Anti-Spyware (aka Windows Defender)
SpywareBlaster
KeyloggerHunter
ClamAV
avast!
That should get ya started.
Re:Off the top of my head: (Score:3, Informative)
This is sarcasm... right? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously though, there is nothing fun or amazing about the windows world (aside from games that aren't available on OSX). The only 'must have' applications are only 'must have' because my IT department says so.
I'll tell you straight up - If you are using a mac happily now, you probably aren't missing anything.
Solution looking for a problem (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not entirely sure what he wants to do, but most of these categories are just as mature under MacOS as they are under Windows. A spreadsheet application? Well, you've got Excel, you've got OO, and that's about it, for the big one and the up-and-coming, unless Lotus/Quattro is still hanging around out there somewhere. I don't know what state of the art is for spreadsheets on MacOS, but it's gotta be pretty similar to Windows. It's much the same with graphics programs and online programs, really. Utilities? What are you going to do with them? Why do you need a spam filter under Windows if you're checking your mail under MacOS? Do you actually envision booting into Windows and using it for long periods of time?
The only category that I see here where Windows definitely has a lot of options above and beyond MacOS is games. So go for that. Go down to the local video game store and look for some things on the PC shelf that aren't on the Macintosh shelf, and buy them. Over all, you probably aren't missing much.
This post sounds like the OP has a solution (Boot Camp) looking for a problem. And unless you've got a specific problem that really needs solving with Boot Camp, what's the point in using it?
Here's what I run just about every day: (Score:3, Informative)
I also make heavy use of the following:
ClocX [clocx.tk]
Windows XP PowerToys [microsoft.com] (highly useful, especially TweakUI
Notify CD [mamane.lu] (bare-bones but elegant CD player)
ReadPlease [readplease.com] (text-to-speech)
Foxit Reader [foxitsoftware.com] (a much faster PDF reader than Adobe)
Trillian [ceruleanstudios.com] (multiple IM)
foobar2000 [foobar2000.org] (audio player)
my list (Score:5, Informative)
Music: Foobar2000 0.8.3 (iTunes and dumbed down fb2k annoy me)
Video: Media Player Classic with ffdshow
Browser: Firefox 1.5 with ~20 extensions
CD Ripping: Exact Audio Copy (only Windows can rip CDs properly)
Anti-virus: Avast
Shell: Cygwin with puttycyg or a local ssh server
IM: Trillian (needs to be replaced with a Jabber client + aim/yahoo transport)
Python development: Eclipse with the pydev extension
IRC: Chatzilla
BitTorrent: uTorrent
Webserver: Apache 2
Archive unpacker: IZArc
Mail: Thunderbird
Encryption: Truecrypt
JPEG manager: iView MediaPro3
CD/DVD burning: Nero
Hex editor: XVI32
SSH,SCP: PuTTY, WinSCP
Office suite: Office 2003
Calendar: Outlook 2003
Virtual drives: Daemon Tools
Notetaking: Onenote 2003
Batch image editing: Photoshop CS2
Spoken dictionary: Encarta 2006 Dictionary Tools
Audio quality checking: Nero WaveEdit, EncSpot, Audiochecker
Time syncing: NetTime
Firewall: Sygate (needs to be replaced)
Various system tools: Startup, Tweak UI, Filemon, Peerguardian 2, Diskeeper, EVEREST
Symbolic integration: Mathematica
Packet sniffing: Ethereal
This fun game: Typing of the Dead
And I probably missed a few. Foobar2000, Directory Opus, and Firefox are by far the most amazing.
I'd add errorless CD ripper, DVD player, Avivo (Score:3, Informative)
Foobar2000 is a great powerful alternative to iTunes, but every new Windows user should know about Exact Audio Copy (EAC) [exactaudiocopy.de] for making errorless CD rips. The "jitter correction" in other rippers (like iTunes) is not enough!
That reminded me of the important fact that Windows XP does not come with a DVD dec
Here's a good link. (Score:3, Interesting)
46 Best-ever Freeware Utilities (Score:3, Interesting)
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Before, Saddam got Iraq oil profits & paid part to kill Iraqis. Now a few Americans share Iraq oil profits, & U.S. citizens pay to kill Iraqis. Improvement?
Bonzi Buddy (Score:4, Funny)
First app... (Score:5, Funny)
Cygwin (Score:3, Interesting)
Good news (Score:3, Informative)
Recommendations:
- Cygwin (Bash, SSH, GCC, and other GNU/Linux tools)
- WinSCP (SCP client)
- PuTTY (excellent SSH client with tons of options)
- EmEditor (free version is a great replacement for Notepad)
- vi (if you like vi)
- CCleaner (cleans up temp files, browser cache, etc. for tons of programs)
- Spybot S&D (effective antispyware)
- Mozilla Firefox or Opera (if you don't like IE; I keep all three for testing)
- Mozilla Thunderbird (you are using IMAP, aren't you?)
- Microsoft Office
- PDFCreator (make PDFs by printing)
- iTunes (if you have an iPod)
- K-Lite Mega Codec Pack (every codec you'll need plus Media Player Classic, Quicktime and Real alternatives, and a lot more)
- Daemon Tools (CD/DVD drive emulator with copy protection circumvention)
- Ethereal (for network troubleshooting)
- Nero (CD/DVD burning)
- RMClock (lets you control PowerNow/Cool 'n Quiet/SpeedStep)
- EVEREST Home Edition (excellent system information tool)
- AVG Anti-Virus (Free Edition)
- Adobe Reader 7.0
- Windows Desktop Search (corporate edition - without the MSN crap)
You might also want to install some Windows games - there are plenty to choose from.
Based on the opinions of those who know (Score:4, Funny)
Internet Explorer - You just cant use the important parts of the internet without it (at least that's what many of the webmasters of sites that refuse to be more compatible say.
Microsoft Outlook - So you can open all those winmail.dat files people send you.
Microsoft Excel for Windows - Exspecially for those sheets with macros using active-x components, they insist thier stuff just would just suck without those gems.
Microsoft Publisher - At work we regularly get .pub documents with the creators getting indignant when we say we can't open it. Of course depending on the sender, they expect you to have the version of publisher THEY have, not always particularly the latest version.
Microsot Access - Here it is the panacea of all data needs, just about every agency with accidental techies have islads of productivityware using access (ignoring the fact there is no easy way to integrate all these these different islands)
Webshots - just about every Windows workstation I see in or office runs Webshots, must be an essential utlity.
The thing that makes smiley icons and patterned backgrounds in Outlook Second to webshots are the outlook emails with all the HTML and embedded gifs, which also advertise the utility that will turn your oulook browser into a similar productive environment.
Turbo Tax, Tax Cut or Quicken Taxes - apparently we can't do our home taxes without them
Besides more vertical market "canned applications" for accounting and such that's about it.
Re:Based on the opinions of those who know (Score:3, Funny)
Uh... I just finished doing our taxes with the Mac version of Turbo Tax. Works great.
Here's a few. (Score:3, Informative)
1. Visio. The day Microsoft bought Visio, I was *so* pissed off, because I knew that there was then absolutely no chance that Visio would ever be released for Macs. Yes, there are some similar programs on the Mac side (OmniGraffle, ConceptDraw), but none of them can hold a candle to Visio Professional.
2. Duncan Munro's PSU Designer II and Tone Stack Calculator. Two essential tools for designing electron tube amplifiers that just don't exist on the Mac. Yes, a competent EE could probably figure it out in some horrible version of EDA software on a Mac, but all the Mac EDA packages I've seen are awful. As soon as I free up another machine, I'll try to install gEDA to see if that's any better (Linux or Fink/Mac OS X).
3. A whole host of software for my Amateur Radio hobby. Yes, there's some stuff out there for the Mac, but the majority of it runs on Windows. Another thing that pisses me off. This also holds true for a vast range of command and control products.
4. Ross-Tech's VAG-COM software to replace Volkswagen's scan tools. Uwe simply has no interest in porting, not even to Windows CE. Automotive scan tools are another area where all the software I've ever seen runs pretty much only on Windows, with a very few on Palm or WinCE.
5. TrueAudio's WinSpeakerz. This was originally a Mac program (MacSpeakerz), but development on the Windows side has far outstripped the Mac product. Great for designing loudspeaker systems. Most of the packages for this type of work are Windows-only.
6. Games? I couldn't care less about games, so this is really a non-issue for me.
7. VNC. VNC simply works a thousands times better on Windows (or Linux) than it does on the Mac.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not needed (Score:3, Insightful)
What?! Your crazzzzzy
.. nahh, thats out, a bit less on the sides i think, ok lets reboot back to os x (time passes..)
Boot Camp would be almost useless to a web designer or developer - you have to reboot to test it.
padding: 3px 5px 2px 2px;
Perfect in Safari, right now lets reboot into windows & check IE (time passes..)
padding: 3px 4px 2px 1px;
hmm,
Re:Not needed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Painlessly...HA (Score:2)
http://news.com.com/2061-10793_3-605969 4.html
Re:How about... (Score:3, Informative)
Firefox
Thunderbird
Gimp
OpenOffice
Putty
Filezilla
Inkscape
Other than that about it's good for is games.
Re:"Elegant?" (Score:5, Insightful)