←back to thread

IrfanView

(www.irfanview.com)
520 points omnibrain | 7 comments | | HN request time: 0.931s | source | bottom
Show context
donatj ◴[] No.39877123[source]
That’s a name I have not heard in a long while. I used to use it back on Windows 95 because it was a faster way to view JPEGs than opening Internet Explorer. Everything about that makes me feel old.
replies(4): >>39877210 #>>39877250 #>>39877406 #>>39877485 #
Semaphor ◴[] No.39877485[source]
Still a part of the standard software I install on every new install.
replies(1): >>39877638 #
cellularmitosis ◴[] No.39877638[source]
As an only occasional windows user, I certainly wouldn’t mind seeing such a list, maybe in a GitHub gist if you find yourself bored one day :)
replies(3): >>39878445 #>>39879513 #>>39882336 #
nolok ◴[] No.39879513[source]
Each their own, that's mine. Note that this is not a tech user or developper list, but the list of what I install on any new windows pc, including those at work etc ...

7zip (open any archive)

VLC (open any audio/video file)

IrfanView (+ the "all plugins" installer on the same page, open any picture file)

SumatraPDF (read PDFs)

Libreoffice (to open any office files)

NAPS2 (easy scan, and split/merge/... PDFs)

Ditto (give your clipboard a memory)

Everything (an instant file search that works)

TeraCopy (replace windows copy with queue, queues, add files to the queue instead of starting a second parallel copy, pause that works, ...)

Powertoys (so many to list ... mass rename file easily, screen ruler, text extractor ...)

If it's appropriate : Qbittorent (clean torrent client)

Nvidia graphic card ? NVCleaninstall, so you can install just the clean driver you need

Windows 10 or 11 ? O&O Shut Up (to disable all the telemetry and onedrive in one click, there are plenty alternatives but I sort of like this one)

Windows 11 ? ExplorerPatcher to remove suggestions in the start menu and the new and terrible castrated contextual menu

And of course your browser of choice and extensions

In ten minutes you have a computer that feels much more smart and usable. There are plenty of great software out there, but I feel like many what to install lists are very topical or include software you won't use in many cases or once every 6 months, so this is my short list of what you will use essentially every time you use the computer.

replies(9): >>39879823 #>>39880511 #>>39880922 #>>39881080 #>>39881254 #>>39881766 #>>39882218 #>>39886887 #>>39890271 #
1. nrdvana ◴[] No.39881254[source]
Not using windows much anymore, but great to hear about O&O and ExplorerPatcher. I notice you don't list an ssh client. I still install cygwin for that. Anything new besides putty?
replies(5): >>39881752 #>>39881874 #>>39881932 #>>39882804 #>>39894508 #
2. t0bia_s ◴[] No.39881752[source]
PowerShell. Is there anything that putty do better?
3. lmz ◴[] No.39881874[source]
Windows now has OpenSSH https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administrat...
4. denzil ◴[] No.39881932[source]
Windows now have OpenSSH client (and server) available as optional features. Together with the new terminal the ssh client seems to be working fine. Personally I usually opt in to use the ssh in WSL as I keep it installed on all my Windows machines.
replies(1): >>39888857 #
5. nolok ◴[] No.39882804[source]
SSH client is not for non tech users and I tried to keep my list non tech oriented, something you can install on yours, your mom or Janice from accounting and they will all benefit from it.

For SSH I was a die hard team PuTTy for a long time but these days one of the first thing I install on my windows computer is WSL and a Debian inside, that covers all my SSH needs.

6. AceyMan ◴[] No.39888857[source]
True, right up until you need to use something that must check the SSH_AUTH_SOCK envar and then it's game over man (c.f., Chef Workstation).
7. ajolly ◴[] No.39894508[source]
If you prefer GUI then bitvise has a solid ssh client