Collecting and installing all your favorite apps is usually the most tedious part of a fresh OS installation. FreeApps makes bulk installation of popular free and open-source applications a snap. More »
Blog Archives
FreeApps Bundles Popular Free Applications for Easy Downloading [Downloads]
ZeuApp Downloads 82 Awesome Open Source Apps [Downloads]
Windows: If you’re setting up a new system or helping a friend to see how much great free and open source software exists, ZeuAPP is a portable installation tool for nearly a hundred applications. More »
Make an Installation DVD from Windows 7 Student Upgrade [Backup Utilities]
If you grabbed a Windows 7 upgrade for $30 with a college email address, you might have discovered a file download instead of a DVD. The Download Squad blog details the transformation of that download into a bootable upgrade disc.
Not that your upgrade files wouldn’t work, per se, but making an upgrade based on a batch of files you download doesn’t leave you with much of a safety net if things go wrong. Download Squad’s method involves one command-line trick, one program download, and one file copy. It’s not too hard, especially for the price of having a fallback if you need to wipe your system or otherwise re-install it at some point.
Ninite Bulk-Installs Great Free Windows Apps [Installation]
Windows: If you’re upgrading to Windows 7 from XP, you’ll spend a lot of time grabbing installers and Next-Next-Next-clicking through setup wizards. Unless you use Ninite to check off the best free software and install it all at once.
This post can be fairly short because Ninite works exactly as advertised. Head to Ninite's web site, check off the free downloads you want from each category, grab the custom installer download that it serves up, and run it. Ninite runs through each installation with an absolute minimum of pop-up questions—none of them, in face, with most installs—and then it's done.
The selection is pretty great, too, with many of the must-have apps we’ve fawned over in the past like VLC, Audacity, IrfanView, Paint.Net, uTorrent, and many more. In fact, Ninite offers the majority of our 2009 Lifehacker Pack, give or take a few recommendations.
Ninite’s installers are free downloads for Windows systems only. Thanks Josh!
Install-It Creates Auto-Starting Installer CDs for Any Applications [Featured Windows Download]
Windows only: Free app Install-It puts a small auto-starting application on any removable drive that makes installing applications a double-click affair.
After downloading the Install-It package, you’ll want to extract its files to somewhere you can reach, like your desktop, and open up the Install.ini file in your favorite text editor. This file is simply a list of program descriptions and the locations of their installer files. If you’re creating a disc full of useful installers, just replace the default examples with your chosen verbiage for each app and the location/names of the setup files. You separate those two items with a comma, using slashes where necessary, and end each line with a semi-colon.
Here’s an example Install.ini I made for a supposed Windows XP re-installation:

Copy all your installer files and Install-It’s files into a CD-burning app, such as CDBurnerXP, and fire away.
Now you’ve got a CD that, on most computers, will pop up with a list of programs that can be installed without anyone having to guess which icon or cryptic filename means. If a computer isn’t set to auto-start when it detects an autorun.inf file, though, you’ll have to point the computer to install.exe—not a problem, though, if you've put each application in its own directory.
Install-It is a free download for Windows systems only.



Windows 7′s Start menu is a powerful thing, offering program and file launching as you type and allowing for smart pinning of whatever you frequently access. If you’re really attached to the Windows 2000/XP-style Start system, though,
You can customize a lot of your system’s look in Windows 7, but the login/password screen remains fairly opaque and unchangeable.
If you moved up to Windows 7 by way of a new computer purchase, you may have found that getting a full Windows 7 disc, or even a system recovery disc, was an “option” that cost a good bit of extra cash. If you’d like to ensure you can save your system from common boot-up and system errors in the future, NeoSmart offers its own
Support for Windows 7′s helpful jump lists won’t show up in Firefox until version 3.7. In the meantime, those who want to access their current tabs and most frequently visited sites can do so with
Windows 7′s Media Center was impressive enough for
Windows 7's taskbar is getting a lot of notice, and some say it's more useful than Mac OS X's Dock—except it's missing the very neat "Stacks" feature. Missing, that is, until you grab
It’s always a good idea to see what kind of settings you can change from your new OS’ Control Panel, but Microsoft only lets you play with so many check boxes and sliders. Apps like
The familiar Alt+Tab keyboard shortcut gained a little visual overhaul in Windows 7, but it still offers just basic window switching.
The first few times you re-installed an operating system, it probably felt like an adventure, something fun, a test of your tech prowess. At this point, though, you might just want to skip the part where you spend an hour grabbing Firefox, Picasa, an anti-virus app, WinAmp, uTorrent, and other must-have apps from the net.