Alternatives to Windows Programs
There are many alternatives to using Microsoft Windows and the applications that are made for it. One of the more popular alternatives is the Linux operating system. Just about everything you can do in Windows, you can do in Linux, sometimes even better and with more control. Linux has been around for quiet a long time, so its no surprise that there are a ton of applications out there that offer the same type of functionality that many of our favorite Windows applications have. This article takes a look at some of the most popular software applications used in Microsoft Windows and compares them with some alternatives that get the same job done.
Accounting:
- Windows: Quick Books
- Linux: GNUCash
- GNUCash is a great accounting alternative to Quick Books. Though not as powerful and wide-scale as Quick Books, GNUCash is a perfect open source tool for small business and personal finance purposes.
- Windows: Windows Media Player
- Linux: MPlayer / VLC
- MPlayer has the ability to play pretty much every video format in existence. MPlayer also comes with mencoder which allows you to convert video from one format to another.
- VLC is another great alternative that is available for both Windows and Linux. It can also play just about any of the popular video formats.
- Windows: Winamp
- Linux: XMMS
- XMMS is practically a clone of Winamp made for Linux. If you are a die hard Winamp user then you’ll feel right at home using XMMS. Heck, it even allows you to use Winamp skins. What more could you ask for?
- Windows: ITunes
- Linux: amaroK
- amaroK has many of the same features ITunes provides. It’s defenitely worth checking out.
CD Burning:
- Windows: Nero / Built In
- Linux: K3b
- K3b is an extremely easy to configure and use burning application. Just about anything you can do in Windows in regards to burning a CD or DVD, you can do with K3b.
E Mail:
- Windows: Microsoft Outlook
- Linux: Evolution / Mozilla Thunderbird
- Evolution is a great mail client that provides integrated mail, address book, and calendar functionality.
- Mozilla Thunderbird is another great mail client that is fast, easy to use and very reliable. I use Thunderbird on a daily basis. When I converted my office over to Thunderbird nearly two years ago, our internal technical support dropped nearly 25%. We later realized that a lot of our internal support was going to fixing issues that Microsoft Outlook was causing.
Graphics:
- Windows: Adobe Photoshop
- Linux: The Gimp / Photogenics
- The Gimp offers many of the same features and functionality of Adobe Photoshop, and is available for both Windows and Linux.
- Photogenics is a commercialized graphics tool that may cost you some money. I recommend the former, though I still wanted to mention this one.
Instant Messanging:
- Windows: AOL Instant Messenger / MSN
- Linux: Gaim
- Gaim is a very robust instant messaging application built both for Linux and Windows. It is compatible with AIM and ICQ (Oscar protocol), MSN Messenger, Yahoo!, IRC, Jabber, Gadu-Gadu, SILC, Novell GroupWise Messenger, Lotus Sametime, and Zephyr networks.
Office:
- Windows: Microsoft Office
- Linux: OpenOffice / Google Docs & Spreadsheets
- OpenOffice offers the ability to read and create word documents, power point files, spreadsheets and more. There are very few functionality differences between Microsoft Office and Open Office.
- Google Docs & Spreadsheets is a great online tool that allows you to also read and create word documents and excel spreadsheets. You can also save documents as other file types.
Web Browsing:
- Windows: Internet Explorer
- Linux: Mozilla Firefox / Konqueror
- Mozilla Firefox is a fast and powerful web browser designed to run on both Linux and Windows. There are far fewer issues with spyware, adware, and pop ups making it far more secure than Internet Explorer. This is my browser of choice.
- Konqueror is another great web browser for Linux. Designed by the KDE team, this browser has many similarities to Firefox.
I’ve covered just about all the mainstream applications and categories that I can think of. When it comes down to it, there will always be alternatives to windows programs, some will be better, some won’t. Furthermore, if your too stuck on a particular Windows application, but want to run Linux on your desktop, there are even alternative ways to run some popular Windows applications on Linux. Check out VMWare and Wine to learn more about that.
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on linux we have nero to.
Dont forget Opera, a great web browser both for Windows, Mac and Linux.
Google calander is also a great alternative!
-Keep up the good work!
Linux Rocks!
Nice text
Great article! People should definitely also check out http://www.codeweavers.com – although it’s commercial, it enables you to run eg. m$ office, itunes, quicktime just to mention a few.
I would add Abiword to the Word processor section also evolution can be configured to interact with existing M$ exchange setups
E Mail: kontact
Instant Messanging: amsn
audio video: avidemux2 and lives for video editing, xine for playback
graphics: cinepaint (formerly film gimp) – does cmyk, inkscape (for vector graphics)
Office: gnumeric/abiword or koffice
desktop publishing: scribus
3d modellling: blender
outlook calendar=korganizer(korganizer is much better)
browser=opera
visual studio=kdevelop
wordpad=kedit
desktop search=beagle
and many others
Might want to include Beep Media Player along with XMMS.
I usually consider GnuCash to be an alternative to Quicken rather than QuickBooks. MyBooks Professional is a commercial QuickBooks replacement that can even import QuickBooks data. TurboCASH, Lazy8 Ledger, and Quasar Accounting are other business accounting programs.
Chad
http://linuxappfinder.com
Accounting:
kMyMoney2 works like a charm.
Audio/Video:
Xine is the basis of lot’s of diferent multimedia programs, such as Kaffeine or totem.
E Mail:
Incredible how you forgot about kmail, voted the best email application in several places (such as Linux World Expo)
Graphics:
Gimp is great, but there are alternatives. krita, part of koffice is becoming a very good graphics application.
Instant Messanging:
kopete, also part of the kde desktop, is just a wonderful IM, gathering most of the protocols in one application, with voice and video capabilities.
Office:
The already mention koffice is a light (really light) office package. It’s great to write those short, and for the fast spreadsheet work. Openoffice is a resource hog. It’s slow and heavy. And doesn’t handle big documents very well (neither does MSOffice for that matter).
Great links! Would like to use Linux but still need to use a CAD package. WINE is an option but can’t find a package that runs natively on a Linux system.
Any ideas?
I do have to apologise for what you’ll probably call a troll. BUT, there’s no way in hell you can compare the GIMP with Photoshop! Having now had experience with both, el GIMPo makes life so bloody hard to do things that are so simple to do with PS.
A lot of Linux developers need to go back to UI design school and learn how to create usable apps that work correctly. Granted there are some tools that work extremely well, but the vast majority don’t even come close to commercial Windows offerings, which is what they’re trying to compete with.
XMMS is more or less unmaintained these days. For a media player, bleep or audacious (a bleep fork) are better choices these days.
Call me when Linux gets Macromedia (Adobe) Flash.
Okay, by no means am I an MS fanboy, but seriously.
Can amarok connect to Ipods? If it can’t, it’s no comparison.
Can Thunderbird connect to MS Exchange (which the majority of corporate environments use, and many many small offices even)? Yes, but only with IMAP. Evolution should be the only recommendation here.
Until openoffice.org can hire some decent graphic designers to improve the UI, it’s practically useless. Sure there’s no cost, and that’s the only reason OOo fanboi’s are so in love with it. Look at MacOSX, and Windows Vista, and AIGLX/XLG on Linux – it’s all about nice user interfaces.
And finally, Adobe Photoshop not running on Linux is the reason why Linux is not be accepted. What successful design shop running Photoshop on Windows will switch over to Linux using The Gimp?
Seriously, the only comparison I would agree with on this page is k3b as a nero replacement.
Cross Over Office should be noted as well.
And what about AutoCAD, Orcad, Catia and other professional programs that are only available for windows?
what about KDE Kontact as Outlook alternative
For graphics applications, please also note that ‘Pixel’ is a great option. It’s a commercial application that endeavors to offer the same functionality as Photoshop, and it works on many different platforms. They’re in their final stages of development right now and are offering the product at a reduced cost ($32).
http://www.kanzelsberger.com/pixel/?page_id=12
email there’s also pine lol
Nice site but you are not fully validating xhtml
http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http://www.foogazi.com/
nice …
will have to check ‘em out …
Kmail is good … especially for those quick mails u wanna send …
@Bravemonkey:
Yes, amaroK can connect to iPods.
AudioEditing: Audacity
3D Modeling (like AutoCAD): K-3D
SpreadSheet: Gnumeric
Browser: Opera
There’s a better list here:
http://www.linuxrsp.ru/win-lin-soft/table-eng.html
i wanted to know if there is an alternative to Microsoft Netmeeting
i know only 1 but thats for gnome (GnomeMeeting)
i do not want to install gnome just for 1 application i use KDE
There are some things which can’t be substituted. For instance, several games cannot be played in Linux, particularly those relating to the latest multi-player games.
Another example is Macromedia Shockwave.
In Soviet Russion, Nero has you.
Open Office == MS Office? I don’t think so, at least as far as opening MS docs go.
Simple formatting, like borders, has an unfortunate tendency to get mangled. Open Office might be great to write docs from scratch, but its MS compatibility is nothing to write home about.
I have tried to use Open Office, but I ultimately gave in and reinstalled an old Office 2000 CD I have laying around. Not because Open Office is bad, just the compatibility is nowhere near 100%.
“…Call me when Linux gets Macromedia (Adobe) Flash.”
Ring ring… Ubuntu / Wine calling
Ubuntu – Edgy 6.10 / Wine 0.9.24 / Macromedia Suite 8 / Dreamweaver, Fireworks, and Flash ALL work on my Core 2 Duo. (as well as SwishMax)
Also: IE6, Windows Firefox, Photoshop 7, Alienskin plugins all work fine under Wine. (no rhyme intended)
Native Unreal Tournament 2004, GOTY, and extremely fast.
Wine and Quake3 Arena and mods work perfectly.
EA Games Battlefield ’42 / Vietnam won’t work though.
Sorry, but this is kinda a crappy list. Everyone already knows about these tools, and some of the ones you mention, like Konquer and OpenOffice are still steaming piles of crud compared to the Windows versions.
Sorry, but I use Open Offce every day as my primary tool for my work, and it never fails to infuriate me.
Also, the Gimp and Gnucash, while stable and great tools, do not even hold a candle to Photoshop and Quickbooks respectively.
photoshop-gimpshop Converted GIMP to have the photoshop GUI and functionality. Looks/acts about 80% like PS.
comments on this page look funky on my IE 7. Please fix the tags.
For many more open source alternatives you should check out title=”Open Source Alternative”>Open Source Alternative. Here you can search for 100s of commercial software packages – and their open source alternatives.
I’ve been using OSS for 4years exclusivly.OpenOffice covers all business needs,kde kontact works for email/calendar/contacts.
There’s a GNOME Evolution for email/calendar/contacts that can connect to exchange if needed
I see Gimp as better option than PhotoShop, but thats a personal opinion.
Some of you would like to know there’s Blender for movie editing.Check http://orange.blender.org/download
I’m working on a listing of OSS.Soon here:http://www.opensource4business.info
I am a windows user, and I do not use a single program suggested above. I suggest that you are selecting the *worst* and most bloated examples for comparison.
mmills at lks dot net
Bob said:Konquer and OpenOffice are still steaming piles of crud compared to the Windows versions
Good grief, Bob, you should open your mind as wide as your wallet!
Then there are the hardware drivers … I’ve tried 5 flavors of Linux, and not one supports all of my hardware. Unfortunately, Linux will not threaten MSFT or Apple on the desktop until at least one distro is supported in the main by leading hardware vendors (and I don’t mean PC OEMs; I mean mfrs of PC Cards, expansion boards, USB devices, etc.)
7Zip is a Nice open source alternative to WinZIP.
Thanks for the list. I’m willing to try outlook replacements, but the functions I use Word and Excel for are not really supported on any Linux ready programs I’ve seen. I hate that these two programs are keeping this OS back. (I’ve converted from PC games, so that doesn’t bother me).
Forms, Tables, XML functions, and pictures all format very poorly in open office. The office I was in in 2005 converted to Open Office for cost reasons and I didn’t see that much difference. Today those programs are worlds apart. MS has really picked up thier game, but still has a lot of security issues and thier software is still a ram hog. I’m no fanboy, but I need functionality.
Open Office is big crab when compared with windows office. I had to do a M.Tech report, so initially I tried with open office, It felt like very bad, then I did my report in windows office and one day opened the same report in open office again all allignment that I did were gone. There is no guarantee that open office correctly opens doc/docx created in windows office.