Dropbox

Dropbox is a service that replicates files between different machines anywhere on the internet.  Have you ever wanted to have a shared folder between your laptop and your desktop?  This is it!  It works incredibly well.  And best of all, it’s free up to 2gig.  You can get an extra 256meg for each person you sign up with them though.  And if you want a substantial amount of space, you can pay them.

My only gripe about Dropbox is their pricing I think is a bit on the expensive side.  $9.99/month for 50gig and $19.99/month for 100gig.  Frankly, if I try to back up all my photos and music, I’m using nearly a terabyte and I’m not about to pay $200/month for that.  If I was a business and lots of people were consuming the bandwidth getting files in and out, I can maybe see that price, but for a home user who sticks stuff up there and leaves it there, this service is a little pricey for that.  Seeing the cost of disk space these days, I’d think they should be able to do a terebyte for $20/month.

I have long been looking for something open source that I could run on windows, linux, and even mac, that would do the same thing as Dropbox but using my own equipment.  There’s no technical reason something couldn’t exist, I just have yet to find anything like Dropbox.

 

Reaper

Reaper is a full featured audio mixing station for windows.  It’s not technically free, its not expensive either, for personal use it’s only $40, for a real commercial license, it’s only $150.  This is very cheap for this sort of software.  If you don’t feel like paying, they let you download a fully functional demo and don’t bug you-ever.

Reaper

OpenOffice / LibreOffice

Frankly, I end up using Microsoft Word a lot just because I know I’m going to send the document to someone who has Word.  However, when I can, I use OpenOffice.  OpenOffice was owned by Sun Microsystems, but since Sun was bought by Oracle, it’s now part of Oracle.  Oracle seems like they are not interested in continuing this project, so another group has taken it on and renamed it LibreOffice.

As of this writing, I do not know if OpenOffice and LibreOffice will become two separate forks or if OpenOffice will stagnate while LibreOffice takes over.

 

Google Chrome

As of this writing, Google Chrome is by car the cleanest, fastest, most minimal browser out there, but being minimal doesn’t mean it’s not full featured.  And it supports zillions of extensions like Firefox.

+ Minimal appearance, does not waste screen real-estate
+ Fast
+ Forgiving (most of the time), does not crash (often) when one tab crashes
+ Extension support
+ It upgrades itself without you even noticing!

– Some pages, albeit very few, do not work in Chrome and I have to go back to IE or Firefox.
– I have had some crashes and sometimes have lost ALL my open tabs which is annoying

Extensions

I use the following extensions:

  • AdBlock and AdBlockPlus.  Frankly, I’m not sure what the difference is between them, some of my computers have AdBlockPlus, others AdBlock and I can’t tell the difference.
  • Xmarks for propagating my bookmarks and passwords between browsers.  Though Chrome itself seems to propagate bookmarks.  I do not seem to have passwords on all computers correctly propagated for some reason.  When I visit a page on one computer that I know I entered the password in on the other, it’s not there.  I need to debug this at some point.
  • AutoPager Chrome.  This is an excellent little plugin that takes those sites with pages and makes it into a long virtual page.  For example, if the article you are reading is spread across 4 pages, AutoPager will pre-fetch the 4 pages and display them as one long page.