Linux Software
This page lists and comments interesting software on Linux
Image Viewers
New
- Shotwell
- Fotoxx (supports .RAW import)
Reviews
- Comparison of image viewers on Wikipedia
- 10 Best Image Viewers for Linux - TechCityInc
- What is a good image viewer? « Linux Photography
- Recommends Ristretto for simple use case, and gThumb for more advanced uses.
Image Managers
- digiKam is an advanced digital photo management application for Linux, Windows, and Mac-OSX.
- F-Spot is a full-featured personal photo management application for the GNOME desktop
- User comment: Has apparently the bad habit to save files without notice...
- My comment: Extremely bad! Can't browse a complete folder with a simple click on a photo in the folder and can't access the full interface. Very slow. Crappy slideshow with fade-in fade-out that can't be disabled at first sight!
- XnView is a free software to view, organise, convert graphics and photos files or to create slide show, contact sheet, HTML pages.
Middle Solutions
- an image browser that features single click access to view images and move around the directory tree
- gThumb is an image viewer and browser for the GNOME Desktop.
- My comment: Very promising! Fast image viewer, easy browsing, can view all the photos in one folder by clicking a file in Nautilus, and then go back to the full interface (à la ACDSee).
- Gwenview is a fast and easy to use image viewer for KDE.
Simple Viewers
- Comix - GTK Comic Book Viewer
- Comix is a user-friendly, customizable image viewer. It is specifically designed to handle comic books, but also serves as a generic viewer.
- Eye of Gnome - The GNOME Image Viewer
- The Eye of GNOME image viewer is the official image viewer for the GNOME Desktop environment
- My comment: Interesting! Fast simple little image viewer. Default image viewer in GNOME.
- Tool focused on viewing very large collections of images at once, with smooth zooming from thumbnail down to original size
- Picasa from Google
- Picasa is free photo editing software from Google that makes your pictures look great.
- QIV - Quick Image Viewer
- ... is a very small and pretty fast gdk/lmlib image viewer
- user comment: very fast. looks very sparse to begin with, but has everything you need without cluttering up your display.
- My comment: Very interesting! Very fast command-line image viewer. Type
qiv -tf *
to view all photos in current folder in full screen mode and best-fit zoom. Press F1 for help.
- Ristretto is a fast and lightweight picture-viewer for the Xfce desktop environment
- The historical image viewer and editor for Linux
Web Tools
Web Developer Tools
Web Developer Tools includes
- Dean Edwards Javascript Compressor
- Css Minifier
- Css Button Generator
- Cool Button Generator
- RGB / HEX Color chart
- VTE Terminal
- WYSIWYG HTML 5 Editor
Diff Tools
Some GUI-based tools:
KDiff3
KDiff3 compares and merges 2 or 3 files or directories.
Meld
Meld is a visual diff and merge tool. You can compare two or three files and edit them in place (diffs update dynamically). You can compare two or three folders and launch file comparisons. You can browse and view a working copy from popular version control systems such such as CVS, Subversion, Bazaar-ng and Mercurial.
Diffuse
Diffuse is a small and simple text merge tool written in Python. With Diffuse, you can easily merge, edit, and review changes to your code.
diffuse file1 file2 file3 # Compare a Set of Files
diffuse -m # Review Local Changes or Fix Merge Conflicts
diffuse -r rev1 -r rev2 file # Compare Specific Revisions
diffuse -c rev file # Inspect a Revision
Some command-line based tools:
diff
The standard well-known diff tool.
colordiff
A diff wrapper written in Perl that adds color to diff output.
Search Tools
Links:
- An excellent review on TuxRadar.com on Google Desktop, Beagle, Recoll
Beagle
Available in Ubuntu repository (package beagle). Open-source alternative to GD that had a very bad reputation of consuming lots of memory. According to TuxRadar.com's review, beagle is now excellent with complex search options.
Google Desktop
Available here for Linux. Tools from the famous search engine. According to TuxRadar.com's review, very fast but lack some additional filters.
locate / slocate / mlocate
locate (or its equivalent slocate and mlocate) build a database of filename, which can then be browsed rapidly to find files by name. Locate database is usually updated thanks to a cron script.
Recoll
Available in Ubuntu repository (package recoll). Favorite of TuxRadar.com's review, very very fast, very lightweight. Index can be build manually. Additional filters can be installed to support additional file types, support multiple indexes.
Personal review:
- (+) Quite fast query results
- (+) Can index IMAP Maildir directly, even attachments!
- (+) also return files matching similar keywords (stemming).
- (-) Indexing hangs on some .zip files (with 5G+ memory, and lot of swapping). Removed *.jar, *.zip, *.tgz, *.gz, *.tar from list of files to index.
- (-) Only 10 results / page! This can't even be changed!
- (-) Relevance low. Aggravated with the point above. Files with search keywords in the filename, or title, or at beginning of the file are not returned first. Stemming makes it even worse.
- Fix: From the documentation, stemming can be disabled by keyword if they are capitalized (like floor will find flooring, floored, but Floor will only return floor). Stemming can also be disabled from the menu.
- (-) No way to narrow down the results by PDF only or DOC only (both is considered text). Only way to do so is to perform a new advanced search.
The version in Ubuntu universe repository is an old version. Install back-port repositories from launchpad.net as follows::
# This is not necessary anymore...
# gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv 9DA85604
# gpg --export --armor 9DA85604 | sudo apt-key add -
# gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv A0735AD0
# gpg --export --armor A0735AD0 | sudo apt-key add -
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xapian-backports/ppa
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:recoll-backports/ppa
- The following recommended package should be installed (to allow indexing office files, etc.)
sudo aptitude install antiword catdoc ghostscript libimage-exiftool-perl poppler-utils unrtf python-mutagen xsltproc
Miscellaneous
Shutter
A feature-rich screenshot program
Gnome Terminator
A multipane terminal emulator based on Gnome Terminal.
Install it with
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:gnome-terminator
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install terminator
My default configuration
- Set background to transparent 6% (through ~/.config/terminator/config)
- Set scrollback to infinite scrollback
Disk Usage
Some disk usage report and monitoring tools.
Tools using treemaps:
- Baobab aka Gnome Disk Usage Analyser (package gnome-utils)
- gdmap
- kdirstat, very similar to WinDirStat under windows
Other GUI-based tools:
Command-line tools:
Audio File Tagger
- Mp3tag
- Probably the best audio file tagger under Windows. Works under Wine.
- PuddleTag
- As referenced on UbuntuGeek, PuddleTag looks like the ultimate choice for audio tagger under Linux. PuddleTag is inspired from Mp3tag.