\
1

Looking for a comprehensive list of all of the open source software available from any source.

flag

9 Answers

1

The most comprehensive list of free/open source software packages for Linux is the Debian package repository, which includes short descriptions of everything.

For the Mac, I'm not aware of a truly comprehensive listing; most of the freeware listed on VersionTracker is open source, but they don't do a good job tagging for software freedom status. I also note that the site Rich lists above has a package listing and search engine.

I'm afraid we've not had a Windows system since 2005 so I have no clue for that :-)

link|flag
I'm not sure I like the fact that when you edit an answer to make it better it moves to last place in the list of answers... – webmink Oct 30 at 19:56
That is a bit odd. If you can convince Sara to vote you up, though, you won't have to worry about it ;) – sogrady Oct 30 at 19:58
Looks like it bubbled back when she ticked it. Is there a "support" thread anywhere? The fact I can only comment every 30 seconds is really annoying when I come back here to continue conversations and there are multiple answers that deserve comment. – webmink Oct 31 at 14:00
2

With the question re-phrased as two parts:

"I know that there an open source operating system and a web server, what else is there?

Almost anything you've heard of there being software for. Probably any piece of commercial software you have and like, or have seen and want.

Where can I find it?"

The quickest and most reliable way is to use Google. Try queries like "open source X" where X is the thing you already know and like.

If you add a third question:

"I think there ought to be a program that does Y, but I've never seen it before. Where do I find something like that?"

Then the problem is a little harder. Google may help (as above), but it's also possible you've got an original idea. If you hang out with the right kind of programmers and buy them beer, good things might happen to you.

Come to think of it, that's a good way to get your first two questions answered without resorting to Google, as well. :)

link|flag
Re-phrasing a comment in a desperate attempt to garner a little karma, so I can operate. – Joe Hildebrand Oct 30 at 22:57
:-) +1ed to bring you into the game! – webmink Oct 31 at 0:38
Sara didn't have enough karma to +1 my answer, sadly... – webmink Oct 31 at 0:39
1

Freshmeat.net has a respectable list of open source projects, and obviously there is SourceForge. SF has major spam issues on their forums, and both have some painfully outdated and stale projects. Unfortunately there is no F/OSS App Store.

link|flag
1

The grand-daddy of free software registries, still going strong, is Freshmeat. They formulated and refined the “trove classifiers” system of multi-dimensional categories used on many other such registries.

link|flag
0

Huh. I have to admit that I don't know of one. With several hundred thousand projects available - libraries and so on included - I'm not even sure where one would start with that.

You might give Ohloh a look: it's an automated project indexer, that provides intelligence around project activity and so on.

But even Ohloh - or governance vendors like Black Duck, Open Logic, Palamida, etc - won't have truly comprehensive lists of all open source software. There's simply too much of it, spread across too many repositories and sites.

link|flag
0

For the Mac - http://www.macports.org/ - package installer with 6328 packages available at this instant in time. Command line driven, requires XCode, compiles from source, but generally works well. Have to be a little bit of a geek to make it work but nothing too strenuous (if I can do it, anyone can).

link|flag
0

Debian's among the most comprehensive, but will clearly exclude a.) very new, unpackaged software (it's missing Hadoop, for example), and b.) packages and software not designed for the Linux platform. Still a great resource though, and for those wishing to wade through it, the Debian Popularity Contest should help.

link|flag
0

I would almost always answer this question with the question "open source software that does what?" Or, is the question intended to prove to their management team that "everyone is doing it". I hope we're getting to the point were the latter is less important.

link|flag
It's more of a "I know that there an open source operating system and a web server, what else is there? Where can I find it?" – Sara Dornsife Oct 30 at 20:19
Oh! The answer to the first one is probably "anything you have commercial software for". The answer to the second is Google for "open source X", where X is the commercial version. – Joe Hildebrand Oct 30 at 22:50
0

By far not complete, but that's the trick: Some of the most famous packages around and listed by themes:

http://osliving.com/index.php

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.