People who use Git also use:
-
WordPress
in 198 toolboxes
add to my toolboxFlexible open-source content management and blogging software with an active user and developer community and a wide variety of plug-ins or extensions available.
-
Drupal
in 159 toolboxes
add to my toolboxVery extensible CMS platform based on PHP and used by many NGOs - "Community Plumbing"
-
Firefox
in 345 toolboxes
add to my toolboxFirefox is the popular open source web browser from Mozilla
-
Skype
in 228 toolboxes
add to my toolboxFree/cheap Internet telephony and handy IM tool.
-
OpenOffice
in 203 toolboxes
add to my toolboxFull-featured open source office productivity suite, featuring word processor, spreadsheet, presentation, drawing and database packages; free MS Office replacement.
-
Ubuntu
in 136 toolboxes
add to my toolboxUser-friendly Linux distribution.
The Ubuntu promise:
* Ubuntu will always be free of charge, along with its regular enterprise releases and security updates
* Ubuntu comes with full commercial support from Canonical and hundreds of companies from across the world
* Ubuntu provides the best translations and accessibility features that the free software community has to offer
* Ubuntu core applications are all free and open source. We want you to use free and open source software, improve it and pass it on.
-
Thunderbird
in 137 toolboxes
add to my toolboxMozilla's Open Source email client
-
Enigmail
in 28 toolboxes
add to my toolboxEnigmail is an extension to the mail client of Mozilla / Netscape and Mozilla Thunderbird which allows users to access the authentication and encryption features provided by GnuPG
-
Debian
in 38 toolboxes
add to my toolboxLinux distribution with a very strong community
-
GIMP
in 116 toolboxes
add to my toolboxA freely distributed piece of software for such tasks as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring.
-
Inkscape
in 39 toolboxes
add to my toolboxInkscape is an Open Source vector graphics editor, with capabilities similar to Illustrator, Freehand, CorelDraw, or Xara X using the W3C standard Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) file format.
-
Wikipedia
in 131 toolboxes
add to my toolboxWikipedia is a global and multilingual Web-based cooperative free-content encyclopedia.
-
LinkedIn
in 144 toolboxes
add to my toolboxSocial networking for non-social purposes with a focus on professional development, networking for jobs and problem solving through the expertise of those in your extended network.
-
kate
in 9 toolboxes
add to my toolboxKDE Default Test Editor with syntax highlighting and other cool stuff
-
apache
in 62 toolboxes
add to my toolboxindustry standard open source web server
-
Gmail
in 159 toolboxes
add to my toolboxGmail is a web-based email with very user-friendly interface and huge storage capacity
-
phpMyAdmin
in 60 toolboxes
add to my toolboxweb-based interface for managing MySQL
-
VLC Media Player
in 79 toolboxes
add to my toolboxVLC media player is a highly portable multimedia player for various audio and video formats (MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, mp3, ogg, ...) as well as DVDs, VCDs, and various streaming protocols.
-
Social Source Commons
in 144 toolboxes
add to my toolboxThe Social Source Commons is a “knowledge commons” that provides users with: a directory of software applications; links to relevant documentation, localization tools, services, user reviews; and a place to request tools/features.
-
Vim
in 16 toolboxes
add to my toolboxAn improved version of the vi editor
-
VirtualBox
in 9 toolboxes
add to my toolboxVirtual Box offers a complete solution for running a virtual PC within their host operating system.
-
Creative Commons
in 23 toolboxes
add to my toolbox"Some rights reserved" standard licenses and tools to apply them to your work, including interactive tools for generating appropriate licenses for your content.
-
FLOSS Manuals
in 23 toolboxes
add to my toolboxFLOSS Manuals is a wiki-like platform for generating user manuals for free, libre, and open source software (FLOSS). The goal of the project is to make free software more accessible by providing clear documentation that accurately explains their purpose and use. The manuals on FLOSS Manuals are written by a community of people, who do a variety of things to keep the manuals as up to date and accurate as possible. The way in which FLOSS Manuals are written mirrors the way in which FLOSS (Free, libre open source) software itself is written: by a community who contribute to and maintain the content.