Linux Software
ePSXe v2022
DVDFab v13.0.6.1
Ubuntu v2022
Binance App v2022
Albion Online v31.010.1
TeraBox v2024
Firefox (Quantum) v67.0 Developer Edition Beta 1 (Quantum)
GIMP v3.2.4
CentOS v2023
Dropbox v252.4.3485
LMMS v1.2.2
Incredibox v2024
JRiver Media Center v35.0.78
Helium Browser v0.12.4.1
DVD Audio Extractor v8.8.0
Thunderbird v151.0
Pencil2D v0.7.2
BurnInTest v7.0
1.1.1.1 w/ WARP VPN v2025
MuseScore v2024
SeaMonkey v2.53.23
Tribler v8.4.2
ChromeDriver v2024
UPX v5.1.1
About Linux
Linux is not one operating system but a family of them. A shared core — the Linux kernel — sits under many distributions, each with its own choices about desktop, package management, and release pace. Software that runs cleanly on one distribution does not always install the same way on another, and that is the first thing to understand about Linux software.
Packaging is where the difference shows. Some distributions use one package format, others use a second, and the same program may be offered in several forms. Newer formats — AppImage, Flatpak, Snap — try to sidestep the problem by bundling a program with what it needs, so a single download runs across distributions. Each approach trades convenience against size.
Dependencies are the classic Linux snag. A program often relies on shared libraries, and a version mismatch can block an install. The cleanest route is usually a distribution's own software repository, where packages are built and tested for that system; a loose package works but puts the dependency check on you.
Much Linux software is free and open source, which means it is freely available and its source can be inspected. That suits people who value transparency and control. The listings here cover Linux programs with their details; where possible, prefer a format your distribution supports directly, and confirm a package matches both your distribution and its version.






















