KDE. My brain is hard-wired for Windows, so KDE is intuitive and just gets out of the way.
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Firefox, emacs, restic backup, bitwarden, linux/bsd
Joplin because I struggled for years with a consistent way to keep and refer to notes that I could find easily at a moment's notice and access from any device, anywhere.
(Please don't tell me about how you use a text editor and markdown in your home directory Like GH* INTENDED because I tried that FOR A DECADE and it didn't work for me. I'm old and cranky. Get off my lawn! :)
Newpipe
KDE. Been using it since v3, tried various other systems like Gnome, Enlightenment, XFCE etc. and I've always been coming back to it. KDE just feels very intuitive and easy to use.
I've gotten very used to this little free app called Audio Switcher that makes it way easier to switch back and forth between speakers and my headphones.
Shove-it, an ancient Windows utility by Phord Software that shoves any half-offscreen windows back onto the monitor so that you can get to all the gadgets. Phenomenally useful. First thing I install on any new build.
Irfanview. Quick easy very low fuss image viewer / low level editor
Advanced renamer.
Browser, I guess? Without one you'd be back to early 1990s home computing.
Git
Twenty, even fifteen years ago I would've said Windows Notepad / vim. Now I rarely use basic text editors.
I don't think there's any technology that can never be superseded.
My first thought is that my work requires office365 mail and my discovery that davmail exists has been a godsend. I'm not going to install outlook on my linux pc, so being able to check those emails using any client (claws in my case) is a massive convenience upgrade from relying on firefox to login.
Encryption.
For my work, Bluebeam.
On my laptop/desktop, for now I'd say Strawberry Music Player because I like playing/listening to the audio files I've stored locally on them.
For my phone, it's currently Auxio for the same reason.
These are subject to change if I find something better.
Currently, Notesnook and Proton Pass.
PaintTool SAI 1 is my beloved, I don't care how old it is, I love it and it's just so comfy to me!
For those who may be wondering, PaintTool SAI is a lightweight drawing program developed by Systemax Software that was released in 2008. The "SAI" part of its name is unrelated to AI, and is an acronym for Systemax Advanced Illustrator. It was developed by one person, Koji Komatsu, and he runs Systemax all by himself. What a guy!
Linux. Luckily we have such a great FLOSS kernel to free is from the Gates and the Jobs of this world.
Neutron Music Player for Android. Yes the UI is outdated, but the efficiency and feature set cannot be beat. It's so efficient on battery life compared to both streaming music services like Spotify, or any other local music player Android app. And the feature set is incredible. The full parametric equalizer, built in frequency response correction for almost any headphone model you can name, volume normalisation, EQ presets, direct USB access to USB DACs to bypass Android volume or format limitations, crossfeed for headphones, and that's just what I can think of now. I'm sure there are more features I haven't even used yet.
Little snitch
Gvim. I even write documents in it and then paste them into Word for final formatting.
Nextcloud.
Does everything from GSuite that I need it to, but without looking through everything I upload, and analyzing it for advertising and other purposes that I wouldn't consent to.