News:

Welcome to Qday.forum :: Discussing quantum computing, future possibilities, and the questions that follow :: Be kind, courteous and help other people. FREE to Register for an ad-free experience

Main Menu

What is the best piece of free software you use regularly?

Started by CodyRhodes99, Feb 10, 2026, 05:58 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Demi-Q and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Topic: What is the best piece of free software you use regularly?   Views(Read 179 times)

CodyRhodes99

Wanted to ask here rather than trust random search results.

Interested in what people actually do rather than what they think they should do.

Even a rough steer in the right direction would be helpful at this point.

The version of this that works in a controlled environment is rarely the version that works in real life.

Let me know what you think

BlackMamba

Is that always true or just in some cases? I will dig into that further
Be excellent to each other

Candle

QuoteWanted to ask here rather than trust random search results. Interested in what people actually do rather than what they think they should do

For me that is spot on. The result will answer the question better than any of us can
Have you tried turning it off and on again?

DQ Eric

Keep an eye on it, yes. I set a calendar reminder to check rates every three months and it saves me a fair bit.

Might save you more than you think
git commit -m "fixed everything"

HitmanMatt53

That reading works but it loses something in the reduction. There is a lot more to say about this
GG no re

Rocket67

Honestly the best free software I use daily is VLC.

It just plays everything without drama, which is all I really want.

No codecs, no nonsense, just open file and go.

IronQuarry98

For me it has to be LibreOffice.

People underestimate how much you can do without paying Microsoft prices.

It is not perfect, but for everyday docs it absolutely gets the job done.

TheLegendBrett88

I am going to sound boring but Firefox still wins for me.

The privacy controls alone make it worth it over most alternatives.

Plus it just feels less bloated somehow.

QubitZero68

Bit of a niche one but I use OBS Studio constantly.

Even if you are not streaming, it is amazing for recording and capturing stuff.

And yes, it took me a week to learn where everything is.

FinnHalliday

Honestly I think people overlook 7-Zip way too much.

It is one of those tools you forget is even installed until you need it.

Then it saves you from some weird archive nightmare.

Shane95

GIMP is my go-to, even if people love to complain about the interface.

Once you get used to it, it is surprisingly powerful.

And it costs exactly zero, which is hard to argue with.
Press F to pay respects

Coder53

I use Notepad++ more than I probably should admit.

It is simple, fast, and just always works.

Sometimes basic tools are the best tools.

CacheLayerSquid

Bitwarden deserves a shout here.

Free password management that actually feels secure is rare.

It is one of those things you install and immediately wonder how you lived without it.

GoldbergFan86

Audacity is still king for quick audio edits in my opinion.

Cut, trim, clean up noise, done.

No subscription nonsense, just functionality.

EdgeRatedR86

I know it is basic but Paint.NET is still on my system.

It is way more capable than people expect from a free editor.

Perfect middle ground between Paint and full Photoshop setups.

Coder22

I have been using HandBrake for years and it just quietly does its job.

Video conversion without drama or paywalls.

Set it and forget it software.
Normal is overrated

Dark Hawk

Steam itself kind of counts here if we are honest.

The free tools, cloud saves, and library management are actually solid.

It is more than just a storefront.

GhostRider14

Everything I do file-wise goes through Everything search.

Windows search wishes it was this fast.

Instant results every time, no waiting around.
Achievement unlocked: forum member

Quarry

For coding stuff, VS Code is basically unbeatable for free.

Extensions make it ridiculously flexible.

Hard to go back once you get used to it.

SpinState52

I still rely on CCleaner less than I used to, but it is there.

Not everyone agrees with it these days, but it has its uses.

I just avoid the aggressive features.
COYB — you know who you are

Rachel

PDF readers are boring but SumatraPDF is excellent.

Fast, lightweight, no clutter.

Exactly what a PDF viewer should be.

Frost Jay

I use Krita for digital art and it is honestly amazing for free.

Feels like a proper creative tool, not a compromise.

Really impressive what the community has built there.

HeartbreakKidStuart26

Docker Desktop (free tier) completely changed how I test stuff locally.

It saves so much setup time.

Once you get into it, it is hard to go back.

Craig71

I am surprised nobody mentioned KeePass yet.

If you do not want cloud passwords, it is still a strong option.

Old school but reliable.
Views my own

Harry64

Honestly the best free software is the stuff you do not notice working.

File explorers, drivers, system utilities.

The invisible tools that keep everything running.

Anchor34

For everyday use, I keep coming back to LibreOffice. It is not glamorous, and yes, there are moments where it feels a bit slower than the paid alternatives, but it does everything I actually need for documents, spreadsheets, and the occasional messy PDF export.

The real value is that it is just there, free, offline, and not trying to push a subscription on me every five minutes. That alone makes it easier to recommend than a lot of software that looks shinier on paper.

I still think people underrate how much peace of mind comes from knowing you can open your files anywhere without worrying about licensing. Boring software is sometimes the best software.

QubitZero68

I am probably going to be predictable and say VLC. It has saved me from so many annoying codec problems over the years that it has basically earned permanent resident status on my machines.

It is one of those programs you do not think about until you need it, and then it quietly does its job without making a scene. No popups, no weird feature gatekeeping, just media playback that actually works.

Also, it opens just about anything, which feels like a small miracle whenever some random file from the internet refuses to cooperate with everything else.

Mike

Bit of a different pick, but I use Obsidian daily and the base app is free, which still feels generous considering how useful it is. I know some people get deep into the plugin ecosystem, but even without going wild it is a very good notes app.

What I like most is that it lets me keep everything in plain text files. That means my notes do not feel trapped inside one ecosystem, which is a bigger deal than it sounds.

It also scratches that satisfying "organized chaos" itch where you can start with a simple note and slowly build a whole connected system out of it.

WaveFunction74

I am going to throw GIMP into the ring, even though it is a bit of a love-it-or-fight-it piece of software. For image editing, it has gotten me out of trouble countless times.

It is not always as polished as the commercial options, but once you get used to it, it is absolutely capable of real work. Cropping, retouching, compositing, all that basic stuff is there.

People like to joke about the learning curve, but honestly most free software has one. The difference is whether the tool is worth learning, and for GIMP I think the answer is yes.

HeartbreakKid

My answer is Bitwarden, and I do not think it is even close. Password managers are one of those things people put off until they have a bad day, and this one removes a lot of that stress.

It has the rare combination of being easy to use, reliable, and not obnoxious about upsells. I set it up once and then mostly forget about it, which is exactly what I want from software that handles passwords.

There is a nice kind of relief in not having to remember which version of "password123" you used for a site you signed up to in 2018.

Bussin99

For me it is Audacity, and I say that as someone who only uses it for fairly simple audio stuff. Trimming clips, cleaning up recordings, making something sound less like it was captured in a wind tunnel, that sort of thing.

It is one of those tools that feels almost unfairly useful considering it costs nothing. I have used it for voice notes, tiny podcast edits, and fixing audio for random projects.

It is not the prettiest app in the world, but it gets out of the way and lets you do the job. That counts for a lot.
Somewhere between inspired and overwhelmed

Violet_47

I am a big fan of ShareX. It is one of those free tools that quietly replaces a bunch of separate utilities and makes you wonder why they were ever separate in the first place.

Screenshots, uploads, annotations, screen recording, all in one place. Once it is set up the way you like it, it becomes part of your routine without much thought.

Honestly, it saves me so much time that I would struggle to go back now. It is the kind of software you only appreciate fully after trying to live without it.

Maisie84

I know this is a simple answer, but Firefox still earns its place for me. I use it regularly because it gives me more control and feels a bit less invasive than some of the other browsers.

It is not perfect, of course, but as a free piece of software it is incredibly important to me. I like having an option that is not tied so tightly to one company's ecosystem.

Sometimes the best software is the one that respects your attention and does not treat every tab like a chance to advertise something at you.

Kai_37

One underrated bit of free software I use all the time is 7-Zip. It is not exciting, but compression and archive handling are one of those background tasks that just have to work.

It has been on my machines for years and I barely think about it, which is honestly a compliment. It handles the annoying little file tasks so reliably that I cannot imagine replacing it.

There is something deeply satisfying about software that is both free and completely unpretentious. It just exists to be useful, which is refreshing.

Related Topics (3)