My list of essential Windows tools
- 7-Zip
handles practically any zip version you could imagine. It will
decompress tar, gz, rar, zip, bz2, rpm, arj, cab, cpio, 001, and deb
files. It also allows for plugins to add further file type support.
- Adobe Acrobat Reader or Foxit PDF Reader
are essentials due to the ubiquitous nature of PDF documents. Foxit is
lighter, much faster, and a smaller install. It's preferable on a
system with limited resources, like a laptop. Adobe's tools can be
resource hounds.
- Avast is
completely free, lightweight, and effective. No antivirus is impervious
to bad (user) behavior. However, this tool allows you to add an element
of protection while not requiring you to open up Active X controls or
slow your PC down with a bunch of bloatware. I especially like the
script blocking tool, which will stop a multitude of website based
assaults on your Windows PC.
- Audiograbber, because we all listen to mp3s and it makes it very easy to rip them from your CDs.
- Burnatonce
allows you to burn ISOs, and has a very simple interface to help you
create CD images. It's not a robust point and click interface like so
many commercial CD burning tools. But, seldom fails to perform. It's a
nice, tiny CD burning tool.
- Filezilla, from the people that brought you Mozilla (and Firefox) gives you point and click command of FTP and FTP over SSL and SSH2.
- Firefox is the smaller, Mozilla family browser that allows tabbed browsing and various plugins and extentions that makes browsing much more pleasant and useful.
- KeePass to keep an encrypted list of all your passwords.
- HashCalc by SlavaSoft to quickly create a file hash for MD2, MD4, MD5, SHA-1, SHA-2( 256, 384, 512), RIPEMD-160, PANAMA, TIGER, ADLER32, CRC32.
- Irfanview
is a very utilitarian image editing tool that allows you to quickly
create a batch of thumbnails, modify images, crop, modify size, change
color scheme, file type, etc.
- Notepad ++ is an extremely lightweight and useful text editor. It offers tabbed file edits and color coding for code tags.
- Open Expert
can be useful for Windows power users because it "enables you to
specify any number of suitable applications for each file type."
- Open Office
handles most any Microsoft Office document with more efficient use of
resources and most importantly, FREE! It includes a spreadsheet,
presentation, document (writer), html WYSIWYG, and other document
management essentials.
- Putty is a free Telnet, SSH1, and SSH2 client.
- Tight VNC
makes sharing desktops (relatively securely) between Linux, Unix, or
Windows PC and laptops painless. It takes all of five minutes to set up
a server and client. The windows ap is extremely simple and very light
on resources.
- Trillian
is a simple, though somewhat heavy, instant messenger that allows you
to combine all your IM worlds in one tool: MSN, Yahoo!, AOL, Google,
and Jabber (used by Google's IM network). It doesn't have painful
popups, which is my primary reason for using it over any proprietary IM
client.
- True Crypt Open
gives you the ability to hide data and encrypt it. If you are carrying
any type of work related data with you, it's essential you protect it.
Encryption isn't bullet proof, but it adds a layer of security.
- VLC video player or BSplayer that plays MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, mp3, ogg, and a ton of other codecs.
- Winmerge
allows you to do a "diff" or compare to similar files to see quickly
what the differences are and select your preferred version of each
difference, saving your munged version to a new (or old) file. There's
much better programs out there, but this one is extremely simple,
mostly functional, and free.
- XviD allows you to view Divx. If you're going to watch these video files, it's important not to install some adware, etc.
- Songbird
is an Open Source music player. The nice thing is that it supports
open standard codecs and will likely grow in popularity and
functionality due to its Mozilla roots.
From the website: "Songbird supports MP3, FLAC, and Vorbis on all
platforms; WMA and WMA DRM on Windows; and AAC and Fairplay on Windows
and Mac."