What open source programs do you recommend for Windows? (Windows exclusive or not)

https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/3638469

What open source programs do you recommend for Windows? (Windows exclusive or not) - Divisions by zero

I am and all my life have been a Linux user, I have nothing against Windows or MacOS, I just like Linux, and lately I have been experimenting with Windows in a virtual machine and I don’t really know much open source software there apart from the one that is cross-platform. like Firefox or Joplin. At the moment I know: Flow Launcher [https://www.flowlauncher.com/]: It’s a typical rofi style launcher, although I’m not a TWM user I like to just press super and type the first letters of the program I’m looking for to open it. Lively Wallpaper [https://www.rocksdanister.com/lively/]: A program to have animated wallpapers, in the style of Wallpaper Engine.

Qclip

Bulk crap uninstaller

Vlc

Irfanview (is it proprietary?)

Gimp, Krita, Inkscape, KDEnLive, Blender, OBS

Nonfree: XNViewMP, Startisback++,

Irfanview is proprietary yes
Damn, it blew my mind that both Irfanview and XNView are proprietary, so there seems to be no actually maintained FOSS image viewer and light editor especially for Linux. Gwenview is a mediocre alternative but really smooth, maybe it should get all the features and replace these programs.
@Pantherina @db0 i was going to say https://www.darktable.org/about/ but i think this thread is about Windoze programs. Upppsss, sorry.
about

darktable is an open source photography workflow application and raw developer

darktable
Darktable doesnt run on Winbloats? Also its a raw editing tool right?
features

Here is a short list of highlights where darktable can improve your digital photography processing workflow and help you to make better images with less effort. You can find a more detailed description of every single item in our online user manual. General Features Non-destructive editing throughout the complete workflow, your original images are never modified. Take advantage of the real power of raw: All darktable core functions operate on 4x32-bit floating point pixel buffers, enabling SSE instructions for speedups. GPU accelerated image processing: many image opertions are lightning fast thanks to OpenCL support (runtime detection and enabling). Professional color management: darktable is fully color managed, supporting automatic display profile detection on most systems, including built-in ICC profile support for sRGB, Adobe RGB, XYZ and linear RGB color spaces. Cross platform: darktable runs on Linux, Mac OS X / macports, BSD, Windows and Solaris 11 / GNOME. Filtering and sorting: search your image collections by tags, image rating (stars), color labels and many more, use flexible database queries on all metadata of your images. Image formats: darktable can import a variety of standard, raw and high dynamic range image formats (e.g. JPEG, CR2, NEF, HDR, PFM, RAF … ). Zero-latency, zoomable user interface: through multi-level software caches darktable provides a fluid experience. Tethered shooting: support for instrumentation of your camera with live view for some camera brands. Speaks your language: darktable is also translated into more than a dozen different languages. As the list of supported translations changes with each release, you are advised to check the news page for more details. Powerful export system supports Piwigo webalbums, disk storage, 1:1 copy, email attachments and can generate a simple html-based web gallery. darktable allows you to export to low dynamic range (JPEG, PNG, TIFF), 16-bit (PPM, TIFF), or linear high dynamic range (PFM, EXR) images. Never lose your image development settings darktable uses both XMP sidecar files as well as its fast database for saving metadata and processing settings. All Exif data is read and written using libexiv2. Automate repetitive tasks: Many aspects of darktable can be scripted in Lua.

darktable

Nice links, thanks! But Darktable is for raw. Maybe thats some crazy lossless rabbithole I have to go in, but I was talking about plain old JPEG editing, conversion, color adaption, quick cutting etc.

Tried Darktable and that other one and both were very unintuitive.

Plus, XNView also works as an Image viewer. XNConvert is also great for batch processing.