Notepad->kate
Free and Open Source Software
If it's free and open source and it's also software, it can be discussed here. Subcommunity of Technology.
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
I recommend https://alternativeto.net/ since you just type in the software name and it will show alternatives rated by popularity. You can filter by many things including "open source".
I think Microsoft tried creating something like it on Windows, so I guess it can technically count as a replacement; KDE Connect
I've replaced Windows totally with NixOS(Using the ZFS filesystem as well so I can take /home snapshots and backup easier!). Been a long time Linux user, starting with OpenSuSE.
Anyways, when I did use Windows, my most often used software was LibreOffice for school, VLC for movies, QBittorrent for, well, torrenting, Thunderbird for email and Firefox for browsing(With lots of extensions). I also used Emacs a lot, and still do, here and there.
Overall, I don't really need to use much proprietary software, except for games, of course.
I am using Obsidian for quite a while now. I really enjoy the possibility to modify anything to my needs. What are your use-cases for Logseq (and Obsidian before)? And how are you liking the switch?
I guess...
Telegram -> Telegram FOSS
:|
At work we use Creo Parametric. I have a cracked copy of it at home, but I still prefer modeling in FreeCAD.
I use Claws Mail for my mail stuff. It works really well with my self-hosted email server and I really like the UI and such. On Windows I used to use the mail client that was pre-installed.
For text editing I've switched to vim and emacs (doom). I usually use vim for quick little edits to things that aren't worth opening up emacs and finding it in there and I use emacs for anything that'll take some time. On Windows I used VS Code.
For a web browser I use Firefox, hardened with arkenfox/userjs. Never had any problems with it and have been using it since before switching to Linux.
Any suggestions for Autohotkey. Currently few critical work flows are dependent on it due to which I am unable to shift.
It's not only key mapping as it could manipulate windows in combination with that.
Kdenlive works, and is the best foss video editor imo, but I still haven't found anything as good as DaVinci Resolve (sadly not foss). DaVinci doesn't support common video codecs on Linux though (so you gotta get used to ffmpeg), and for basic video editing Kdenlive works fine, but for making cinematic things like short films or whatever there's sadly nothing nicer than DaVinci. I'd like to be proven wrong though.
One of my favorite is fsearch, basically a one-to-one copy of Everything that is written in GTK