What very old/unmaintained software do you still use today, and why?
I still use Font Renamer to manage my font collection. It works great but hasn't received an update since 2008. Even the website looks straight out of the Windows XP era.
I still use Font Renamer to manage my font collection. It works great but hasn't received an update since 2008. Even the website looks straight out of the Windows XP era.
I was gonna say something like ping
, but there's still a surprising amount of development going on for such a simple tool (40th anniversary, yay!): https://github.com/iputils/iputils/blob/master/ping/ping.c
So... retro games it is. Currently playing through Broken Sword (1996).
I used Winamp all the way up until last year at which point I finally sold my gaming PC and switched over to Mac + PlayStation. Out of everything on my PC I probably miss Winamp the most!
Picasa from Google is still the best photo library management tool I've ever come across.
I still use DVD Decrypter, mostly to rip old TV Series I have where I want the files split up by episode when ripping.
MP3Gain, the latest stable version was released in 2005 and I've been using it since then. It adjusts the volume level of MP3s using ReplayGain so that you don't have to change the volume between tracks. There may be newer software out there that does the same thing, but MP3Gain is free/open source and it works fine for my needs. I still maintain a library of MP3s, partly because my car is too old to do Carplay/Android Auto, but it can play MP3s from a USB drive.
I like to post to my WordPress blog from my desktop, so I use Open Live Writer. It's allow me the option to write without being connected to the Internet. I doubt it still in development.
RPG Maker XP was released in 2004, nearly 20 years ago, and yet the entire Pokemon fan game community uses it exclusively. Pokemon Essentials, by far the best framework for creating fan games, is written for it, and is still maintained to this day. It's such a large complicated project, with a huge ecosystem of plugins and resources, that it's impractical to migrate to the newer RPG Maker software that has been released since.
PokΓ©mon Reborn has been one of the best PokΓ©mon fangames I've enjoyed. Never thought I'd see the day it was completed, but it was last year. It supports wondertrade, online battles, trading and more, and has custom terrain effects.
Buckets is a good alternative for anyone who can't find a key for YNAB classic: https://www.budgetwithbuckets.com/
I know someone who uses the new YNAB and loves it. They talk about their budget all the time :D
I got lucky and was able to buy YNAB on Steam nearly 10 years ago for as much as they're charging now for a single month of their subscription. Manually exporting/importing transactions can be a little tedious sometimes but in comparison there's no way I could justify that high of a subscription cost
I don't use a text browser but I do use elinks to make sure my website works properly in it.
Scanner 2 http://www.steffengerlach.de/freeware/
Easy way to visualize and clean up disk space
"This tool uses a sunburst chart to display the usage of your hard disk or other media. The chart shows all major files and folders from all directory levels at once."
Iβll have to check that out. Iβve been using Space Sniffer. I like how it updates in realtime.
Nikon Capture NX2 for editing raw nikon files. Can't beat it. I've never really understood light room and importing photos. But the colour control points in NX2 were and are fantastic. There are a number of really good plugins I've bought for it too.
My dad insisted on using CARDFILE.EXE from Windows 3.1 up until he switched to a MacBook in 2010 or so. I still have the data file somewhere.
Gotta admit tho, it was one of the most useful applications that came with a PC back in the late 80s/early 90s. My folks put everything into that thing. They probably had about 350 cards!
I have an old cardfile file I created during University for all my contacts. I've lost touch with almost everyone I hung around then but it's nice to keep it for the memories.
Well, here's a thing I didn't know about before that might be useful to you β a tool to extract the dated from the *.crd files.
In a previous life I did the occasional custom home theater remote control program job. Like Harmony, but better (I think). Anyway, my personal remote is a 20 year old remote with programming software from the same era.
The connection to the pc to upload the program is a serial Jack. My small form factor pc doesnβt have room for a permanent serial card, so I use a serial to usb adapter thatβs 15 or so years old.
Iβve got the drivers for all of this stuff tucked away in multiple backups, alongside .txt files with notes on how to get it all going again, when, like this week, I add new gear and need to tweak the remote.
I know it's far from what you asked, but the closest answer to the question is this Minecraft resource pack made for a few versions back.
What can I say, I keep my software up-to-date.
It remains on my computer since 1998 so I don't need to learn any new tools.
Mostly kidding...but to be honest, I have just never had any need to try any other tool...it works perfectly for what I need to do (multi-tracking, sequencing, mixing). There's almost nothing I would want it to do that it doesn't...so I just stick with it.
Hey, I remember when CoolEdit came... It was awesome.
But for me Audacity does all CoolEdit did.