You just installed a shiny new fresh install of Linux mint. What are your must install apps/tools?
LocalSend for quick local network file sharing from my phone that just werks. I prefer it over kde connect because the latter uses lots of random ports that kinda bloat my firewall whitelist. I know there is an alternative called warpinator, but I don’t see a reason to change my preferences for now.
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Qalculate
At the very least:
Yazi Eza Kitty Fish Fastfetch Feh Trash-cli Micro Spotify-player Nmcli Polybar Rofi (fuzzel for wayland) Librewolf
Darktable. A replacement for adobe lightroom.
I’ve actually found RawTherapee to be slightly faster for what I’m doing (slight edits to my amateur photography)
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System :
- zram (who says you can’t just install more RAM 😄 )
Terminal :
- kitty (terminal emulator)
- fastfetch (must take screenshots to show off every new Linux install, it’s in the EULA)
- zsh (thought I’d like to try nushell one of these days) with zsh-syntax-highlighting, zsh-completiions and zsh-suggestions
- GNU Stow (to manage symlinks, I store my dotfiles in a repo witch contains
home
,etc
andusr
folders, and I use GNU Stow to symlink them respectively to/home/username
,/etc
and/usr
, that way all my config is in the same place so I can back it up easily and have version control) - rsync (to sync backup folders)
- btop (system monitoring)
- clamav (antivirus)
- brightnessctl (for screen brightness control, but I should probably use brillo instead https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGOaSS8nEQA)
- yt-dpl (for downloading videos from YouTube/TikTok/wherever else)
- ani-cli (for watching anime from the terminal, obviously a must-have for any
ArchMint user) - figlet (to write text from fonts made of ASCII art)
- cpipes, asciiquarium, cbonsai, matrix for when I get bored in meetings
- hollywood and rust-stakeholer if I ever need to pretend I’m doing something productive
- lots of TUI apps from https://github.com/rothgar/awesome-tuis
General GUI apps :
- Sway (tiling WM) though I’d really like to try niri (instead of several workspace it has a single one of infinite length that you can scroll through)
- rofi and rofi-calc (app launcher that can also do a lot other stuff if you want like file browser, ssh menu, calculator, emoji selector, it’s very light and superfast), also rofi-emoji (emoji selector)
- VSCode (code editor)
- KeepassXC (password manager)
- lutris, steam, protontricks, ProtonGE (gaming)
- FontManager
- Ventoy (for making USBs with multiple ISO on them)
- LibreOffice
Internet :
- Waterfox + LibreWolf (web browsers) with the following extensions : uBlock, Consent-O-matic, DownThemAll, KeepasXC-Browser, Copy PlainText, Copy Link Text, EPUB Reader, Markdown Viewer Web Ext, Sponsor Block, Return YouTube Dislike, YouTube Anti Translate, CanvasBlocker, Font Fingerprint Defender, WebGL Fingerprint Defender (I had to give up on User-Agent Switcher because it causes me to be blocked on too many websites)
- qBittorrent (BitTorrent client)
- FileZilla (FTP client)
Media :
- XVview (image viewer)
- ksnip (GUI screen capture)
- Gimp (image editor)
- Inkscape (vector image editor)
- MPC and VLC (audio/video players)
- Libation (to liberate Audible audiobooks from your account)
- cheese (camera)
I’m on Arch so the package names might be a bit different
Whatever you need to be productive.
Brilliant.
This is like somebody asking you what you want for breakfast, and you say “Food”.
I’m not sure if you’re being sarcastic, observant, or something else. There have been many a meal where I was asked what I wanted to eat and it’s rare that I go beyond the words “surprise me”, knowing full well that the person asking would eat the same as I was offered, making the “surprise”, less of a risk and more of an adventure.
In this case, OP asked a completely unanswerable question to which there was absolutely no reasonable answer, since we know nothing about the person, their interests, their experience, the hardware they have access to, or anything remotely resembling a needs analysis.
So, even my answer, generic and random as it might appear, was based on how I use a computer, namely, to be productive. I’ve been using them for over 40 years, mostly like that, with some sojourns into art and personal expression, not nearly worthy of public scrutiny, but not specifically “productive” as such.
So … what were you attempting to say?
I didn’t interpret the original post as “What would a generic user consider necessary installs?” I interpreted it as “Could you suggest some software that you consider absolutely essential so that I could discover some that I might’ve overlooked?”
➕ 💯
This is the correct answer. 👆
Not one of the other replies (so far) addresses the question to the OP: “What do you want to accomplish with the machine?”.
🤷♂️ 🤦♀️
But OP is asking us. Presumably for the benefit of the community.
If you believe your answer would be more valuable to also include what you are trying to achieve, by all means, include that.
Fortune. Cowsay.
Helpful answer: vlc, libreoffice, gimp, inkscape, zathura, obs-studio
Real answer: gnome, run-or-raise, foot, fish, tmux, fzf, silver-searcher, neovim, neomutt, vifm
Curious why you would need Gimp and Inkscape? Wouldn’t one of them be enough? Is one of them better suited for certain tasks?
They serve two different purposes - Gimp for image editing, Inkscape for vector graphics.
Oh I see, thanks. I thought you could also edit images with Inkscape. I’m apparently not very well versed in these topics.
You can load bitmap images into Inkscape and manipulate them to a degree, but Gimp is much better at that. You can probably also load vector graphics (svg) into Gimp, but I’d assume they would be converted to bitmaps.
Vector vs bitmap is a good topic to be familiar with for anyone who works with computers, I keep running into professionals who really should know the difference but don’t.
Thanks for the explanation! I agree, this has been very helpful already. Now I go and do some reading on it.
For me personally I install kitty terminal and integrate it with fish asap. Then I waste a bunch of time customizing it to my liking. My preferred text editor is Kate regardless of what DE I’m using and I usually get bleachbit for basic cleanup.
Fish and Kate hell yeah 🤜 🤛
Hello Beryl. Could you help me with bleachbit settings (tick boxes)? Once when I used bleachbit, it changed back the icons of packages like Zen Browser that I have changed through Menu Edit. It also removed start up applications from the setting. I’m on Arch KDEplasma. So, I was wondering, which check box should I leave empty to preserve my icon customizations and startup apps?
People replying - how about telling us why you consider your answer a must-install tool?
I’m going to try to mention things I haven’t seen already written, though I may repeat some of the more important ones to me.
(In no particular order)
Terminal:
- Kitty (Main Terminal)
- Fish (Terminal Prompt)
- Neovim (Code/Text editing)
- Zoxide (a directory changer; once you go to a directory, you can type z and a partial name to go back to it)
- Atuin (a command history lister, can get a key and bring over commands from other systems)
- Midnight Commander (CLI file manager)
- Btop (CLI system monitor)
- Palette (I do a lot of theming in different configs as well as HTML/CSS, so its nice to have something to quick convert hex to RGB).
GUI:
- Timeshift (backup/restore)
- Eddie (for AirVPN)
- novelWriter (my FAVORITE writing tool for my books)
- Floorp (Firefox fork browser)
- Conky Manager 2 (desktop monitoring widgets)
- Rofi (keyboard launcher)
- firewalld (tried this out recently, good firewall)
- Flameshot (ALWAYS; its my favorite screenshot tool)
- MPV (I still get VLC, but opt for MPV most of the time for videos/streaming)
- Speedcrunch (A+ calculator)
- Steam
- Lutris
- Protonup-QT (to inject GE Proton into Steam/Lutris)
- Stremio (a great little streaming tool)
I would like to add that I do use Arch, but I’m fairly sure 99% of these packages, if not all of them, are available for most other distros.
For CLI lovers: Check out Terminal Trove
Edit: I did see that someone mentioned no explanations on the apps, so I tried to put a little blurb on each.
There’s a lot of letters here, but nobody is explaining what they mean. How do I know what I need? I’m not gonna install everything, or look up every single program to see.
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Timeshift is number 1
Also it’s recommended to not reinstall a bunch of stuff and just install the app when you needed it that’s the power of Linux. Unless you just want to learn the software then disregard
I found Timeshift to be a disappointment. I tested it as I was setting my system up.
- Install Linux Mint, obviously.
- Install most main software I want.
- Do a Timeshift backup.
- Install more software I might want to try eventually.
- Restore the Timeshift backup.
Result: The system still thought all the extra software packages were installed, but none of them actually worked. Like, if Timeshift is gonna uninstall packages that weren’t present in the last backup, shouldn’t it also unregister those packages as well?
To fix all that crap, I had to force reinstall all packages, which takes about as long as a full OS reinstall, but I was already happy with the rest of the configuration, so I ran…
sudo aptitude reinstall '~i'
Had similar experience with snapshots. Restore to the last working version just to find the same issue that’s been bothering me.
Then went back to the classic approach with 👻 images and Rescuezilla.
With NVME drive, it takes 7min to backup 60Gb, and 3min to restore it.
I believe Firefox is installed by default on Mint, so install uBO.
Transmission.
Veracrypt.
Audacious.