BrockingtonHoey626

Have you been a techie? Love gadgets? Computer expert? Like hacking and tweaking software and hardware? You are a geek. Believe it or not, you're that just about me. Okay now, let's not fight in the concept of a geek.

Here are some software (all free) for geeks, as outlined by me. You can download programas gratis each by clicking its name:

Firefox/Chrome: Our prime dogs in the web browser world are not only found recommended for everyone, but additionally they may be a geek's playground. If you use Web browser so you consider yourself tech-savvy, you better think again, then you better think again, and think until you have one of these brilliant browsers installed.

Notepad++: It's another must have tool to get a geek. The Notepad a part of Windows is fine. It is very simple, full-featured for website design and contains everything a standard person needs. But you are a geek. You ought to have Notepad++. It has color coding assistance when you find yourself web designing, they have more features and anything you can think about. Oh yes, and it's open-source.

Dropbox: Wow, the perfect file synchronizing tool. Oahu is the ultimate choice (specifically geeks, again) for sync and backup. It is not free, but there are not many limitations. The free account gets to be a decent 2 GB of online storage, which you'll expand using a fee, but I never felt a need for it. It's also possible to get an extra 250 MB for completing the tutorial, and much more free space with the instructions here. Dropbox is magical. It is possible to upload any type of file, no matter what size (unless it exceeds the dimensions in your account), and greatest of most, it behaves like all other folder in your computers, with all the added functionality on constantly synchronizing.

7-Zip: WinZip is indeed outdated. It even isn't free. 7-Zip is little, light, and open-source, rendering it completely free. Windows features a fine file extractor. Nevertheless it cannot extract the newer, better compressed file types. 7-Zip expands the proportions by integrating using your OS also it can extract virtually all sorts of compressed files. It is the ultimate compression utility.

Torrent: Hey, occur, torrents aren't illegal. Everything is dependent upon that which you are downloading. Torrents can be quite helpful for downloading large software libre, so if you're a geek, you should know torrents. Torrent is the better torrent app on the market. You need to have it. You may need it when downloading large open-source stuff, like OpenOffice, or large versions of Linux (see, I discuss only free software application here).

TeamViewer: How do a geek live without this? TeamViewer, issues never heard of it, can be a remote access and remote support software. Countless uses for flash to thrill friends, and/or enable them to if they're having problems and want a number of your geeky expertise. It's free for commercial use, where there are no limitations. If you have TeamViewer, you can easily tell anyone conversely to download a lesser version (or the full featured one) and will also be able to use their automatically generated user ID and password to log in to their computer and discover the challenge. I, personally, haven't tried on the extender for remote access to my computer.

GIMP: The free open-source GNU Image Manipulating Program. This can be arguably the very best free photo editing tool and is (a lot more) arguably a fantastic Photoshop alternative. Okay, Photoshop fans descargar programas gratis, don't clobber me for that. The only real catch is (no, it's free, and full-featured) it features a slight learning curve. You will probably find Paint.NET better if you're not a lot into photo editing (which I use most almost daily).

CCleaner: The geek's choice in computer clean-up utilities. It might cleanup all the gunk Disk Cleanup cleans, plus most of the stuff other apps bid farewell to. It can also clean the registry and work from the flash drive with no problems, to be used on others' computers.

So, these were ab muscles basic freeware a geek will need to have in his/her arsenal for everyday computing. Did I miss something important? Throw it in to the comments, i could add it to the list.