[meta]:
(Software that I use)
[meta]: (Desktop software, server software, phone apps, everything)
[meta]: (Loek)
[meta]: (April 13 2021)
[meta]: (software, open source, server, phone)
[meta]: (/img/software.png)
## PC software
All of the software on this page is cool and I think you should try it. I also
use all of this software, and will update this page when I find new, *even
cooler* software to use instead. Most if not all of my configuration files
(dotfiles) are on my [github](https://github.com/lonkaars/dotfiles). You can
clone these and edit them to fit your needs, or you can use them as a reference
for when you can't figure out how to configure something.
### Regular software
- **Email client**: [neomutt](https://neomutt.org/). It's fast and simple,
though configuring it was a pain in the ass. I'm currently using it in
combination with mbsync and imapnotify to get notifications for new emails,
and sync my mailbox for fast email viewing.
- **Music player**: [mpd](https://www.musicpd.org/) with
[ncmpcpp](https://github.com/ncmpcpp/ncmpcpp). This is the best music setup
I've ever used. I download all my music in .flac format and mpd *just works*.
Since mpd has a server-client structure, I could also use this to set up
multiple devices that can add music to a central queue at a party or
something, but I just use it to launch [an fzf mpc
wrapper](https://github.com/DanielFGray/fzf-scripts/blob/master/fzmp) to
quickly add music while I'm doing something else.
- **Text editor**: [nvim](https://neovim.io/). It's vim. If you don't like vim,
you should try using it longer. If you still don't like vim, you can use
[code oss](https://appimage.github.io/Code_OSS/) which is visual studio code
but without Microsoft's creepy telemetry features.
- **PDF viewer**: [zathura](https://pwmt.org/projects/zathura/). It's a pdf
viewer with vim bindings, and it works with my TeX editing setup's live
reload thingy.
- **Image viewer**: [sxiv](https://github.com/muennich/sxiv). It's like zathura
but for images, but it also does a bunch of other stuff that I don't use very
often.
- **Browser**: [brave](https://brave.com/). It's a normie-friendly chromium
fork with extra privacy features! I of course use brave (or any
chromium-based browser) with [tampermonkey](https://www.tampermonkey.net/),
[ublock origin](https://ublockorigin.com/),
[stylus](https://github.com/openstyles/stylus) and [dark
reader](https://darkreader.org/).
- **Terminal**: [st](https://st.suckless.org/). It's fast and simple, nothing
to complain about. I have my [own st fork](https://github.com/lonkaars/st),
with a bunch of patches that make me happy.
- **Password manager**: [bitwarden](https://bitwarden.com/). Open source
password manager that you can host yourself. It also has public servers which
are mostly free, but some features like time-based one-time passwords are
paid. All the clients are also open source.
- **Document typesetting**: [LaTeX](https://www.latex-project.org/) (using
[latexmk](https://personal.psu.edu/~jcc8/software/latexmk/) with the
[XeTeX](http://xetex.sourceforge.net/) compiler).
- **File browser**: [ranger](https://github.com/ranger/ranger). It's kind of
slow, but I use the bulkrename feature very often, and I haven't gotten used
to the perl `rename` script yet.
- [unar](https://github.com/MacPaw/XADMaster). I like running `unar [archive]`
instead of using `7z`, `tar`, `unzip`, etc. It creates a new folder to unpack
to automatically so it does exactly what I need.
### OS stuff
- **Window manager**: [i3-gaps](https://github.com/Airblader/i3). I tried it
once and didn't switch back so this is a winner I guess. I've also heard good
things about [dwm](https://dwm.suckless.org/), though I haven't used it
myself. Most people complain about i3's limited configurability, but I
haven't ran into something that it doesn't do for me.
- **Application launcher**: [rofi](https://github.com/davatorium/rofi). I've
been using rofi since I started using linux, and haven't switched to anything
else because it's *very* configurable, and has a dmenu mode for using it
instead of dmenu with other scripts. I use it primarily as my application
launcher, but I also have a hotkey setup to launch `bwmenu` which is a script
that fills in bitwarden passwords using rofi.
- **Shell**: [zsh](https://www.zsh.org/) with [oh-my-zsh](https://ohmyz.sh/).
It's zsh, all the cool kids use it already. I do have `/usr/bin/sh` `ln -s`'d
to `/usr/bin/bash`, but I'd like to change that to `/usr/bin/dash`. Eh, I'll
get around to it someday.
- **Status Bar**: [polybar](https://github.com/polybar/polybar). Simple bar,
gets the job done, the configuration files make me go insane though. It took
me a good half year of ricing to understand the polybar configuration files,
and I'm still not sure if I do.
- **Notification daemon**: [dunst](https://dunst-project.org/). I used to use
deadd-notification-center, but that has waaaay too many haskell dependencies
on arch, so I don't use that anymore.
- **Global keybinds**:
[xbindkeys](https://www.nongnu.org/xbindkeys/xbindkeys.html). Simple
configuration, works flawlessly, 10/10.
- **Compositor**: [picom](https://github.com/yshui/picom). It's a simple
compositor. I use it to enable vsync for desktop windows, and I have it set
up to only show a drop shadow on floating i3 windows.
### Closed source
- [discord](https://discord.com/). Gamer. The only reason this is listed here
is because I use discord with
[betterdiscord](https://github.com/rauenzi/BetterDiscordApp) (which *is*
open-source). Betterdiscord allows you to use custom css themes, custom
plugins and a whole bunch of other cool stuff that regular discord doesn't
do. It's technically against TOS, but I don't really care as I only use
quality of life improvement plugins.
- [figma](https://figma.com). It's the designing software that I use to create
user interface or website mockups. It's easily accessible though a browser,
and it uses webassembly so it's also decently fast. It's free for personal
use.
## Server software
### Email
### Etesync
### Bitwarden
### Git
### Samba
### SFTP
### Minecraft
## Phone apps
### Open source
### Closed source