Software for Linux

AntiX AntiX

antiX Linux is a fast, lightweight and easy to install systemd-free linux distribution based on Debian Stable for Intel-AMD x86 compatible systems. antiX offers users the "antiX Magic" in an environment suitable for old and new computers. antiX Linux is released as a free and open-source operating system and can be used to revive old computers, or spark life into new ones.

TV-Browser TV-Browser

TV-Browser is an TV listings application that gets the daily TV program from the internet and shows it nativley in a neat user interface. The software runs on every system and platform with the Java runtime environment installed. With TV-Browser you can manage your TV listings your way, thanks to TV-Browser built in theming and plugin support.

Wasmer Wasmer

With Wasmer you can run any code on any client using WebAssembly. It allows you to use tools you know and the languages you love.  By leveraging Wasm for software containerization, Wasmer create universal binaries that work anywhere without modification, including operating systems like Linux, macOS, Windows, and also web browsers. Compile everything to WebAssembly and run it on any OS or embed it into other languages.
 

IPython IPython

IPython is a powerful, free and open-source interactive shell used for interactive computing. It's an alternative to the Python interpreter that provides improvements over its default counterpart. These improvements include syntax highlight, proper indentation, documentation, and much more. With iPython, you can use Jupyter notebooks to create reports that contain live code, charts, and more interesting things for data science and data visualisation.

HandBrake HandBrake

HandBrake is a free and open-source video transcoder. With HandBrake you can convert video from nearly any format to a selection of modern, widely supported codecs. The software makes it easier to rip videos from a DVD to any data storage device. Allowing you to digitalize your movie collection and bring them with you into a new age.

Linux Linux

Linux is a family of free and open-source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel. Linux powers many things in the world today, from smartphones to cars, supercomputers and home appliances, home desktops to enterprise servers. Linux was first released in 1991 by Linus Torvalds as a free and open-source project. Today, Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution and released under different names. Some of the familiar being Android for mobile devices, or Debian, Fedora, or Ubuntu for desktop computers and servers.

Apploye Apploye

Apploye is an intelligent time tracking and management app that provides remote teams, big companies, and freelancers an easy platform to optimize productivity by tracking time and work progress.

Clonezilla Clonezilla

Clonezilla is a partition and disk imaging and cloning software. With Clonezilla you can save and restore used block on hard-drives allowing you to do system deployments, bare metal backups and system recovery. Clonezille is available as three separate products, Clonezilla Live, Clonezilla Lite Server, and Clonezilla SE (Server Edition).

FreeNAS FreeNAS

FreeNAS is an operating system that can be installed on virtually any hardware platform to share data over a network. With FreeNAS it is simple to create a centralized, easily accessible place for your data. You can use FreeNAS with ZFS to protect, store, and back up all of your data.

LLVM LLVM

LLVM is a compiler infrastructure project that contains a collection of modular and reusable compiler and toolchain technologies. LLVM stands for low level virtual machine yet the project has little to do with traditional virtual machines. LLVM is used to construct, optimize and produce intermediate and/or binary machine code. For example, programming languages like Crystal, Swift and Rust depend on the LLVM for compilation of code.