I first saw this on reddit, but I figured it would be good to make sure that this also stays accessible on another platform

  • @Moskus@lemmy.world
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    742 years ago

    This list feel a little dated. On the top of my head I’d add “Visual Studio Code” for programming, Cakewalk for music composition, and Davinci Resolve for video editing.

  • The Velour Fog
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    172 years ago

    Yo where’s Krita under digital image tools? This list is missing some basic stuff :P

    • @kurosawaa@lemmy.world
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      52 years ago

      I was looking for it on here. GIMP is way too difficult for most people. Krita feels like it can do just about everything an amateur would want to do with Photoshop and makes it painless.

  • @I_like_cats@lemmy.one
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    162 years ago

    This list is mostly not software. It’s free as in free beer but free software mostly describes free as in freedom. That means open source and free to copy, redistribute and modify. Which a lot of these are not

    • celerate
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      82 years ago

      It really bugs me after all these years that we haven’t simply started calling Open Source software just OSS or Open Software to get rid of the ambiguity.

      The whole, that’s “free” software, not “FREE” software thing is older than sin and I think it might be Richard Stallman’s fault we even have this discussion.

      • @I_like_cats@lemmy.one
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        52 years ago

        But Open Source Software isnt neccesarily free software. For example Chromium is Open Source but not Free Software. That’s why the distinction is needed

      • @SubmarineDoor@lemmy.world
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        32 years ago

        I’m sympathetic to your idea of calling it OSS or Open Software. But Richard Stallman and people who agree with his arguments really stress the “freedom” of what they call free software. They lost that battle ages ago, but they aren’t going to give it up since it’s more than just pedantry, it’s a value statement.

  • @static09@lemmy.world
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    82 years ago

    Note taking software has changed a lot over the years since this image was made. Obsidian, Logseq, and Trillium Notes being some of the more preferred note taking apps around.

    There are a few others but I can’t remember them off the top of my head.

  • Lux
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    82 years ago

    A bit dated as Moskus also said. Skip on OpenOffice in favor of LibreOffice for example.

  • celerate
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    72 years ago

    If love to see Python under “Data and Statistics”.

    The whole list seems old though, are all of those programs still available? I suspect there are other great new programs that could go on a list like this.

  • Nicholas Karl
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    72 years ago

    @Angry_Maple As someone who uses Keepass, I highly recommend KeepassXC over the regular release. There is an open security vulnerability that the original devs aren’t really addressing: www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/… the XC release team has mitigated this and has generally been better about improving the UX.

  • @Zangoose@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Most students have probably used Google drive by now, but it’s still worth adding. Additionally, I personally find Overleaf to be great for LaTeX documents.

    Edit: Also worth mentioning Notion for note-taking/studying/planning, and if slack is on the list for study groups, discord might as well be also. This might be because I’m a CS major, but nearly every class I’ve taken has had students make a discord server for studying/working on homework

  • @Shady_Shiroe@lemmy.world
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    42 years ago

    Unless my definition for media player is wrong, I wouldn’t call OBS a media player, it better fits into screen recording than anything else, heck even video editing works better than media player.