Four free tools I (nearly) always install on a new machine and use everyday
Note: This blog post is from 2014. Some content may be outdated--though not necessarily. Same with links and subsequent comments from myself or others. Corrections are welcome, in the comments. And I may revise the content as necessary.I'd like to recommend four free tools that I think everyone (running Windows) should consider installing on their machines, as they can help with day to day tasks that many (certainly I) hit every day.
They don't run in the background, only doing their job when you ask them to, so I find them safe to install and use on production servers, though of course any tool can be abused. I've never seen these to cause a problem in many thousands of uses.
I was reminded to share this list today as I was helping a customer, as I got on their server with them to help them solve a problem. I recommended we install these as I do on nearly all my engagements (and indeed on all my own machines). I think they really are fundamental tools, as I'll explain below.
"If you may consider these four above, do let me know what you think. (But really, no need to tell me about an alternative you favor, unless you don't find it in a search of the cf411 page.) "
:-) I foresaw this, and tried to forestall it. I really don't want this to turn into a forum of people voting on their favorites. That was not the intent. (And I'll just say that I've taken a look at winmerge and still favor beyondcompare, but again, I don't want to turn this into even a debate over that.)
Like I said in reply to Cutter, as long as folks are using at least some tool in these categories, that's what matters most. My goal was more to promote the idea of these sort of tools (and what were my favorites after years of experience with many), as I find that so many people have no such tools at all (or don't have any on their servers, which is vital for troubleshooting).
Well, the UV free version does use an unfortunate crapware installer, called installIQ. And I do always warn people, when I am working with them and might have reason to recommend they install it, that they chose "decline" for the first several screens that are trying to offer to install crapware.
Of course, being a free tool, the vendor is trying to make money by including that, because the vendor of the crapware hopes at least some people will install one of the apps. (Hey, Adobe uses crapware installers too, right? Doesn't the installer for something try to install also Chrome or something like that?)
Anyway, I have seen cases where, even though I have done the "decline" thing on multiple times upon the installation of UV, if I ran a virus scan of some sort later it might flag that the installer had still installed installiq, and the scan flags it as being a risky thing.
I don't think it should technically be called a virus, but I know many people hate crapware, so perhaps they have reported it. Was it your browser that flagged the link? Or was it on downloading it? What tool flagged it, and did it really say it was a "virus" or just something to be suspicious of. I'd agree with the latter assessment, yes. But it would be too bad if it led someone to be either unable or unwilling to install it.
It's a great tool. If that warning bothers you, you could get the free trial of UV Pro (the paid version of the tool). Of course, it will expire eventually, but that may be enough time to decide if you like it enough to pay for it.
As for me, I just do the decline dance on the InstallIQ prompts and enjoy the benefits of the UV free version. :-) To each his own, of course. (I didn't think to mention this issue when I wrote the blog entry, as I was just offering quick hits on each tool, but thanks for bringing it up, Donnie.)
Hope that's helpful.
I don't remember specifically what the warning said or what program launched. I tried to reproduce it and I just get the webpage is not available message using the original browser. I can download it using another browser. I do know the warning came up on the download of the UV exe, not the install. I also go the "webpage is not available" message the first try as well. I'm guessing it was Chrome that threw the warning.
Hope this helps.
I just got the warning again. I went to the Universal Viewer link in your blog post. I clicked on download and then clicked on the Installer link under the Universal Viewer Free section. An AVG window popped saying the exe file was malicious and gave me no other option but to close it. Might picking up on the InstallQ.
Hope this helps
And here's great news: you can just get the "portable version" of the app, offered on the UV download page, http://www.uvviewsof... That does NOT use the installiq installer.
Note that there is a portable version for both the paid and free edition. The free edition portable version is offered at the bottom of the download page.
It's simply a zip that you extract and then can run. While that doesn't hook it into the Windows Explorer context menu the way the real installer does, of course once you have told a given file extension to use it then you will see that in the context menu.
Finally, while the page there says that the portable version requires MS Office to be installed, I do not have it installed and just ran it fine.
Hope that helps.
I had above recommended it for fastest searching of files by NAME, while File Locator Lite (or pro) was my preference for search by CONTENT. I will start exploring use of US more, and may update this content or post a new blog entry, but in the meantime I wanted to share this news to those following this post.