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The mac57 2006 Light n Fast (LnF) Awards
No red carpets, no papparazzi, no-one groping Scarlett
Johannsen...nope, these awards are a little lower key, and a little
less of a public spectacle. So, what are the Light n Fast Awards? Well,
two years ago when I first got into Linux, I did so because I was
looking for a lighter, faster alternative to ever growing bloat of
Windows and its applications. As I learned about and the n embraced
Linux, I found a lot of things, but I never found the light and fast
alternative I was looking for. Even so, Linux was SO much better than
Windows that I adopted it as my new day-to-day computing environment
anyway. In the back of my mind however, the wish for lighter and faster
never went away. I read about Arch Linux recently, and suddenly
"lighter and faster" was back front and center. A 686 optimized
distribution with a stated philosophy ("the Arch way") of "light and
simple" would surely be the perfect platform for light and fast.
I installed Arch Linux 0.7.1 (Noodle) and decided from the outset to
build my environment around around a "light and fast" theme, solidly
grounded in the excellent performance of Arch itself. No KDE, no Gnome,
and to the extent possible, no KDE or Gnome applications that would
require their respective environment's hefty run time libraries to be
loaded. I have been successful in my quest, and now have a wickedly
responsive desktop which sports all the same capabilities I used to
have as a KDE user, but at a fraction of the CPU and memory cost.
The LnF Awards then, are my ENTIRELY SUBJECTIVE nominations for the
applications in each of the stated categories that provide 95% of the
needed functionality at a significantly lower CPU/memory cost than
their heftier KDE and/or Gnome cousins. Without further ado, the 2006
LnF Awards:
System
Best LnF Linux Distro: Arch Linux: obvious, n'est pas? :-)
Runner Up: Vector Linux 5.1. Similar approach, but not 686 optimized, needs better package management
Best LnF Desktop: XFCE4+Rox Desktop - everything you need, nothing you don't
Runner Up: IceWM+Rox Desktop
Best LnF GUI File Manager: Rox File Manager. All the file management you need, nice eye candy too
(note: Rox's default icon set is fairly plain - get yourself the Rox-noia set, very nice)
Runner Up 1: tuxcmd, a dual pane GTK-based file manager rather like a GUI version of mc.
Runner Up 2: XFileExplorer (xfe). Very nice, very fast Fox-based dual pane file manager.
Best LnF Console File Manager: Midnight Commander (mc). Hugely capable and a great FTP client too!
Runner Up: none - nothing in the same class!
Best LnF GUI Archive Manager: Xarchiver. Linux's WinZip. Excellent for peering inside those tarballs
Runner Up: none
Office
Best LnF Word Compatible Word Processor: AbiWord - Most of the features, none of the bloat
Runner Up: none - no obvious contenders
Best LnF Excel Compatible Spreadsheet: gnumeric. Excellent compatibility, very fast
Runner Up: none - no obvious contenders
Best LnF Powerpoint Compatible Chartware: OO Impress. Neither fast nor light, but no alternatives!
Runner Up: none! No other programs even in this space.
Best LnF PDF Viewer: acroread. Not so light, not so fast, but it is the golden standard
Runner Up: XPDF - amazingly useful after all this time, and very fast
Graphics
Best LnF Image Viewer - feh. Very capable, very flexible, very fast
Runner Up 1: qiv. Not as many functions as feh, but an excellent and fast viewer
Runner Up 2: xv. Venerable image editor/viewer/manager still runs rings around many competitors
Honorable Mention: gqview. Very fast thumbnail oriented image viewer
Best LnF Image Editor - GIMP. Not really very fast or very light, but absolutely alone in its class
Runner Up: xv. Not in the same league, but a surprising array of very useful editing functions
Simple Text Editors (not optimized for programmers)
Best LnF GUI Text Editor: Nedit. Old school, but very, very capable, and very fast
Runner Up: Beaver. Very fast, very functional and some language support too
Best LnF Console Text Editor: VE. Tons of functionality, excellent user manual, tiny 70K executable
Runner Up: nano. The granddaddy of small editors, always a good choice
Multimedia
Best LnF Audio Mixer: qamix. It does it all with style and speed
Runner Up: aumix. Both console and GUI versions available
Best LnF Music Player: xmms. Does it all, takes only minimal screen space. No play lists though
Runner Up 1: wxMusik. An iTunes look-a-like that provides a lot of functionality
Runner Up 2: gtkpod. Play music from (and manages) your iPod
Best LnF Video Player: MPlayer. The king of linux video players. 'nuff said.
Runner Up: gxine.
Best LnF CD Burner: xcdroast - quirky interface but it does the trick. Who needs K3B anyway? :-)
Runner Up: none obvious
Best LnF CD Ripper: grip. An excellent, excellent package. You're probably using it now
Runner Up: ripperX
Web, Email, IM
Best LnF Web Browser: Firefox. Not really LnF, but today's web demands complex browsers
Honorable Mention: dillo - very, very fast, but still quite lacking. Keep your eyes on it!
Best LnF GUI Email Agent: Thunderbird. Not LnF, but today's email demands complex agents
Runner Up: Sylpheed. Streamlined, very fast and quite capable
Best LnF Console Email Agent: pine. An amazing email agent that still packs a punch
Runner Up: mutt.
Best LnF IM Client: gaim - wonderful multi-protocol IM agent.
Runner Up: no obvious LnF contenders (Kopete is very good for KDE users tho...)
Voice Over IP Telephony - With Video (VoIP)
Best LnF VoIP Client: gnomemeeting. OK, its gnome, but like GIMP, its alone in its class
Runner Up: none. Let me know if you find one
That's it folks, the 2006 LnF Awards. Hope you enjoyed them. The
following are a few notes on the availability of some of the less
widely distributed applications mentioned above.
xv (image editor/viewer) is available from Arch's community repository,
and from www.trilon.com/xv.
ve (console text editor) is available from www.campbellware.com. The
tarball you pick up there contains a 686 compiled binary that runs
beautifully on Arch.
qamix (audio mixer) is avaible from AUR and from
http://alsamodular.sourceforge.net. If you have any other distro
installed elsewhere that includes qamix you can probably just copy the
executable to Arch and have it work. I got my copy of qamix from a
SuSE-9.3 distro that I had originally installed on my machine. Beats
building from source, and the AUR version doesn't build - gets errors
and stops.
tuxcmd (dual pane file manager) is available from Arch's community
repository and from tuxcmd.sourceforge.net. It is distributed as a
binary, so just get, unpack and run. Very fast, very simple!
Xarchiver (archive manager) is a very recent new application. It is
available from xarchiver.sourceforge.net. The tarball you get from
there builds cleanly under Arch 0.7.1 - no muss, no fuss.
Cast off the Microsoft shackles Jan 2005
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I enjoyed this very much. Switched to Xarchiver, aumix and Nedit because of you. I'm very happy
btw, xarchiver is in AUR...
Ciao
forgot to add Lyx for document writing and skype for voip
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my best small editor (if you dont let me count vim ) would be.... vi!
iphitus
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nice list. i agree with some of your picks
mpd (music player daemon) is the number one audio player in my book
And then it happened... a door opened to a world... rushing through the phone line like heroin through an addict's veins, an electronic pulse is sent out, a refuge from the day-to-day incompetencies is sought... a board is found.
"This is it... this is where I belong..."
Arch Linux x86_64 | LiCo #213644 | blog / configs
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Nice post. One comment (slightly OT).
qamix (audio mixer) is available from AUR <snip> Beats
building from source, and the AUR version doesn't build - gets errors
and stops.
qamix builds and runs just fine here. If you're having problems with it, why not leave a comment for the maintainer, or post your errors in the forum for a second opinion.
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Nice read. One remark: kpdf and evince (probably also gpdf) are MUCH lighter than acroread. Startup time is <1sec, compared to 5 for acroread
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Very interesting. In reading through your list, I've come to the conclusion: I love bloatware!
Guess I can't live without the comfy luxuries of: KDE, OOo, Firefox, Thunderbird, XMMS, Gaim, JPilot and *especially* Kconsole.
Have been a Unix user for 20+ years; It's nice to have the features you could never get out of a stack of punch cards.
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IIRC XFE was icon-based, not dual-pane?
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Best Light Webserver: Lighttpd
"Be conservative in what you send; be liberal in what you accept." -- Postel's Law
"tacos" -- Cactus' Law
"t̥͍͎̪̪͗a̴̻̩͈͚ͨc̠o̩̙͈ͫͅs͙͎̙͊ ͔͇̫̜t͎̳̀a̜̞̗ͩc̗͍͚o̲̯̿s̖̣̤̙͌ ̖̜̈ț̰̫͓ạ̪͖̳c̲͎͕̰̯̃̈o͉ͅs̪ͪ ̜̻̖̜͕" -- -̖͚̫̙̓-̺̠͇ͤ̃ ̜̪̜ͯZ͔̗̭̞ͪA̝͈̙͖̩L͉̠̺͓G̙̞̦͖O̳̗͍
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IIRC XFE was icon-based, not dual-pane?
Actually, xfe has four "views", as they are called - single panel, tree & panel, dual panel, and tree & dual panel. All except single panel are shown here.
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IIRC XFE was icon-based, not dual-pane?
actually it does both. i don't know what its behavior is like in dual-pane mode but the option is there.
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I would say that BMP is better than XMMS because of the improved look 'n feel of BMP over XMMS. I'd also pick Graveman over xcdroast. And abcde over Grip. Best LnF GUI text editor should be leafpad, imho.
Best vector graphics editor: Inkscape, nothing compares.
Just my $0.02.
BTW, you never mentioned Thunar...
·¬»· i am shadowhand, powered by webfaction
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Everybody - thanks for all the comments! Excellent discussion, and I hope it gets people thinking a little about how much they can do without using "heavyweight" applications. Computers can be AMAZINGLY fast if you don't burden them with unecessary code.
Shadowhand, I have to agree with you about leafpad. It was actually on my list until I found and started using Beaver. It was a tough pick. Leafpad, despite being extremely simple, is very, very good for what it is intended for. Its just that Beaver, for about the same launch time "weight" just does so much more. It *was* a tough pick though - I really like Leafpad. It really resonates with the whole concept of doing one job, and doing just that one job. It is a perfectly focused application.
Re Thunar, it is not "official" yet is it? I thought about it, but given that I think it is not due out officially until XFCE4.4, it seemed best not to include it in the list. Meantime, in this area, tuxcmd is *such* a find that I felt omission of Thunar was acceptable. When it is officially out, I will play around with it and decide.
Thanks again everyone for the lively discussion.
Cast off the Microsoft shackles Jan 2005
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now that we have a list of lightweight, responsive and ressource saving apps, how about doing it the other way around?
my suggestions as runner up for mc would be coreutils+gftp(-text) obviously.
I recognize that while theory and practice are, in theory, the same, they are, in practice, different. -Mark Mitchell
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Checking the Arch repos, I see that Thunar doesn't seem to be there. Nor do I find it in AUR. I am guessing that several people have it running on Arch from the comments I have read. Is there an easy way to pick it up and try it out, or do I have to build from source? Thanks.
Cast off the Microsoft shackles Jan 2005
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Checking the Arch repos, I see that Thunar doesn't seem to be there. Nor do I find it in AUR. I am guessing that several people have it running on Arch from the comments I have read. Is there an easy way to pick it up and try it out, or do I have to build from source? Thanks.
·¬»· i am shadowhand, powered by webfaction
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Thunar? I've tried it three different times now and so far have found it to be rather unimpressive, but that's not to say that I still won't like it by the time it goes official.
It's just that so far, I fail to see what all the fuss is about.
oz
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My patchs:
Thunar. Fast & Simple.
Xarchive. runner up.
acroread is evil
Text editor: gvim and vim, sure
CD Burner: graveman
opera. faster than firefox but his UI sux. (and is evil)
Sylpheed do all I need... Runner up, hum, gmail ! (but is evil)
Seamonkey. Better choice than Fx+thunderbird IMO
IM Client: no doubt; it's psi.
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File browser: cat
Man pages: cat
Web Browser: cat
wget -O - | cat
Text editor: cat
cat > file.txt <<EOF
Archives: cat
zcat
Music: cat
cat playlist | mpc add
System Monitor: cat
while true; do cat /proc/loadavg; sleep 2; done
Mail reader: cat
System scuttling: cat
cat /dev/urandom | sudo perl
jajajajaja
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Music: cat
cat playlist | mpc add
cheap! it should be:
Music: cat
cat /dev/urandom >> /dev/dsp
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cheap! it should be:
Music: catcat /dev/urandom >> /dev/dsp
I think you'd hear the voice of God
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Hi there,
Simple Text Editors (optimized for programmers)
SciTE - very light, and quite powerfull text editor. Use GTK.
FTP downloading client
aria - not too eye-candy but small and quick.
BTW : How about light web browser ? Dillo - quite nice, but it doesn't use css, java... only html? :?
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now that we have a list of lightweight, responsive and ressource saving apps, how about doing it the other way around?
Ah ha! At last, I get to plug Jacman
Time for a bit of blues:
"... I was built for comfort. I wasn't built for speed..."
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Ahhhh.... you are right, I *completely* failed to mention FTP clients (or servers for that matter). And thanks for the suggestion of sciTE. I have not heard of it before, but I will check it out.
For FTP clients, I have to admit that at present, my picks would be:
- command line ftp command - VERY lightweight at fast!
- mc's ftp capability (this is what I use mc for the most!
- similar to mc, both XNC and tuxcmd have an ftp capbility
gFTP is of course always an option, but the integrated file manager approach taken by mc and others is very powerful.
Cast off the Microsoft shackles Jan 2005
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