Remote browsing from Android via Fotobounce Viewer product. What's new in this version: 1. Enhanced drag and drop capability. On Mac and Windows you can drag photos or faces out of Fotobounce into the OS File Manager and in many cases directly into other applications. You can also drag photos from outside of Fotobounce directly into an album in the left-side navigation panel.
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So you might, for instance, change the FirstColor parameter of the Centre Panel element to a new shade of blue. This allows you to customize everything from background to letterings to buttons, but beginners will find the process quite confusing.
The sketchy online help isn't much assistance, either. LogonStudio is best for users familiar with programming languages such as Visual Basic, whose development tools use a similar interface. Publisher's Description From Stardock: What's new in this version: Version 1.
7 adds support for Windows 7. This free utility tries its best to impersonate the dock that has become so familiar to Mac users, down to the magnification when you hover your mouse over an icon. But we found its taskbar feature pointless and the dock itself slow to launch programs.
The user interface that comes with docKtor looks very similar to the Mac dock, with icons lined up next to each other in a row. The skinnable dock can be positioned in different areas of your desktop, and you can opt to hide it from view until you hover your mouse over its location.
But even then, we found that it got in the way of our browsing.
Unlike the Mac dock, you can't customize the dock by adding new icons. We also found that it took considerably longer to launch programs, such as IE and Firefox, from the dock, rather than from the desktop or Start menu.
The taskbar feature doesn't offer any benefit, other than the ability to adjust its opacity. It merely changes the appearance and navigation of your default taskbar. Luckily, you can disable the taskbar feature through the Settings menu.
Other than a link to the publisher's Web site, docKtor doesn't offer any user guidance whatsoever. We wouldn't recommend the taskbar feature, although the dock itself does provide an alternative, albeit a slow one, for launching programs.
Publisher's Description From Docktordock: Thanks to this free utility's well-designed user interface, managing our Vista settings was as simple as checking and unchecking our selections.
VistaTweaker uses tabs to organize all of Vista's settings. They are broken down into System, Windows UI, Internet Explorer, Software, Network, Performance, and Miscellaneous.
The contents of each tab are broken down further into subcategories. Despite all of the settings options, we were never overwhelmed. From the interface, there are also options for checking or unchecking all of the options in one fell swoop.
During our tests, we randomly made selections, from disabling notifications for new programs to disabling our UAC.
Clicking the Apply button put all of our selections into play and we noticed the changes immediately without having to restart our PC, which was nice. The only feature in question was the Force Registry Reload command. Even after clicking on it, we weren't sure of its purpose, 289 brought us to our one complaint: the lack of any 289 Help feature.
The program includes a link to the publisher's Web site, which was light on actual how-to guidance. Novices should proceed with caution, since assistance is not provided, but for all other users, VistaTweaker is a very capable Vista management tool.
Publisher's Description From ajua Software: Designed with functionality and ease of use in mind, it has many tweaks to choose and information about everyone of them. The interface is 2998 in tab categories so the user can find the tweaks easily.
All tweaks have been tested and new ones are added almost daily.
You might not have noticed, but the built-in viewer for your browser cache is a tad annoying--it's basically just a glorified Explorer window, and lists cookies alongside the cached files.
IECacheView goes beyond the built-in with extra features you didn't know you wanted but will appreciate having, all while also managing to keep it simple. On the surface, your basic list window and toolbar interface plays it cool. Dig in, however, and you'll find context and application menus that let you do a lot.
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