Best System Utilities for Ubuntu

Find and compare the best System Utilities for Ubuntu in 2025

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top System Utilities for Ubuntu on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    Kasm Workspaces Reviews
    Top Pick

    Kasm Technologies

    $0 Free Community Edition
    122 Ratings
    See Software
    Learn More
    Kasm Workspaces streams your workplace environment directly to your web browser…on any device and from any location. Kasm is revolutionizing the way businesses deliver digital workspaces. We use our open-source web native container streaming technology to create a modern devops delivery of Desktop as a Service, application streaming, and browser isolation. Kasm is more than a service. It is a platform that is highly configurable and has a robust API that can be customized to your needs at any scale. Workspaces can be deployed wherever the work is. It can be deployed on-premise (including Air-Gapped Networks), in the cloud (Public and Private), or in a hybrid.
  • 2
    Pi-hole Reviews
    Pi-hole can be installed in a container or directly to an operating system supported by our automated installer. The intelligent, automated installer will ask you some questions and then set everything up for you. Step 3. Once you are done, continue to step 3. To force clients to use Pihole as their DNS servers, configure your router's DHCP settings. Or manually configure each device so that it uses Pi-hole. You can enable ad blocking on your cellular devices by pairing your Pihole with a VPN. This will help with data plans with limited bandwidth. Instead of installing browser plugins on every computer, you can install Pi-hole one-to-all and protect your entire network. Network-level blocking allows for you to block ads in nontraditional places like mobile apps and smart TVs. This is regardless of OS or hardware. Network performance will be faster since advertisements are blocked before they can be downloaded.
  • 3
    Snapcraft Reviews
    This is the code repository of snapd, which is the background service that manages snaps and maintains them. Snaps are app packages that automatically update for desktop, cloud, IoT, and IoT. Snaps are easy to install, secure, cross platform, and dependency-free. They are being used every day on millions of Linux systems. Snapd, in addition to its many management and service functions, provides snapd, the snap command. It is used to install and delete snaps, interact with the wider snap ecosystem and implement the confinement policies that isolate snaps, and governs the interfaces that allow snaps access to specific system resources outside their confinement. The Snap Store has a wide range of products that you can download, such as Spotify and Visual Studio Code. You can also create your own snaps by following our snap documentation creation process.
  • 4
    Synaptic Reviews
    Synaptic is a graphical package manager program for apt. It offers the same features as apt-get's command-line utility, but with a GUI front-end built on Gtk+. You can install, remove, upgrade, and downgrade single or multiple packages. Upgrade your entire system. Manage package repositories (sources.list). You can search for packages by name, description, or other attributes. You can filter packages by section, name, status, or custom filter. Sort packages by name and version. You can search all online documentation about a package. Download the most recent changelog for a package. Lock packages to the latest version. Forcing the installation of a particular package version. Undo/Redo selections. Built-in terminal emulator to the package manager. Only for Debian/Ubuntu, configure packages using the debconf system. Only for Debian/Ubuntu, Xapain-based fast searches (thanks to Enrico Zini).
  • 5
    Zero Install Reviews

    Zero Install

    Zero Install

    Free
    A decentralized cross-platform software installation system. It works on Linux, Windows, and macOS. Fully open-source. You can run apps in one click. You can run applications without installing them first. You can control everything using a graphical interface or command line. You can control your computer. You don't have any control over what happens during installation. You can mix and match stable and experimental applications on one system. Software can be distributed by anyone. One package can be used on multiple platforms. You can publish on any static web host. There is no central point of management. Automatic updates and dependency handling. Security is paramount. The installation of an app does not grant it administrator access. Before any new software can be run, digital signatures must be verified. Apps can share libraries with each other without needing to trust each others. Automatic self-updating, staged rollsouts, and other improvements to desktop integration.
  • 6
    fpm Reviews
    fpm allows you to create packages for Debian and Ubuntu, Fedora. Fedora, Fedora. CentOS. RHEL. Arch Linux. FreeBSD. fpm is not a new packaging system. It's a tool that makes it easier to create packages for existing systems. It accomplishes this by providing a command-line interface that allows you to quickly create packages. FPM is written in ruby, and can be installed with gem. To build certain package formats, such as snap and rpm, you will need to have certain packages installed. You may need to install additional tools on your machine in order to build certain package formats, especially if you are creating a package for another distribution or operating system. FPM takes your program, and creates packages that are compatible with different operating systems. FPM can take any nodejs, ruby gem or python package, and convert it into a deb/rpm,/pacman, etc. package.
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    Glipper Reviews
    Glipper is a GNOME clipboard manager. It keeps a history of text copied onto the clipboard, which you can access from any device. Glipper makes use of plugins to provide additional functionality. Glipper used to be a GNOME applet in its previous versions. However, it now uses an app indicator to support Ubuntu Unity, and Ubuntu's Gnome Classic. It allows Unix-like operating system users to access a history X Selections. Any item can be reselected and pasted. Glipper is often referred to as the GNOME equivalent of KDE's Klipper. Glipper 1.0, which is the latest version of Glipper, can be run outside GNOME. However, older versions of Glipper can still be used outside of GNOME. This is due to its extensive integration with different GNOME techniques. It can be used inside Xfce4's panel by using the XfApplet wrapper and into any custom session that uses xfce4–panel such as Openbox sessions.
  • 8
    Budgie Clipboard Manager Reviews
    Clipboard manager applet that allows you to store and manage your clipboard content. Clipboard history management, save up 100 clips, private mode and remove any clip you wish. Clear all options, searchable history, autosave history and notification support. You can customize the applet and also restore defaults. Automatically paste the selected clip to your active window. Debian/Ubuntu-based distro. Ubuntu Budgie users can install the applet directly from the welcome screen. Xdotool is an optional tool that allows you to paste text into the active window. The zip file can be downloaded and then run from the extracted folder.
  • 9
    Visual LVM Reviews

    Visual LVM

    WeLees

    $14.99 per year
    Visual LVM makes it easier to work with. It is a GUI-based LVM manager for the Linux platform. It displays the layout of the storage systems directly and clearly, so you can manage more hard disks quickly and easily. It allows you to avoid complex commands. You don't have to type them anymore or remember them. Just by clicking and dragging, you can easily work it out. Visual LVM is an innovative approach to LVM management. It helps you save time and energy by helping you focus on the task at hand and making your work easier and more efficient.
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