Name: |
G-Series Key Profiler |
File size: |
24 MB |
Date added: |
January 16, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1193 |
Downloads last week: |
24 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
The program's interface is basic, just a gray G-Series Key Profiler with a few buttons and drop-down menus. Users select the G-Series Key Profiler template that they want to use and then modify it as needed. Users can select whether they want to abbreviate the names of the months and days, for example, or change the cell in which a particular characteristic is displayed. There are multiple templates, allowing users to create calendars that have all 12 months on one spreadsheet or workbook, with one G-Series Key Profiler per sheet. A G-Series Key Profiler for notes can be included to the side of each month. Users can optionally include holidays on their calendars and can even create custom holiday G-Series Key Profiler to be used with the program. We liked that the calendars look good to begin with and that the program offers options for further customization, allowing users to create calendars that fit their specific needs. The built-in Help file could stand to be a little more detailed, but overall the program is quite intuitive and easy to figure out. It's definitely not G-Series Key Profiler, but it is a quick and easy way to produce surprisingly nice-looking calendars.
Compress G-Series Key Profiler and save a lot of disk G-Series Key Profiler. G-Series Key Profiler provides a compression ratio that is even 2-10% better than the ratio provided by PKZip and G-Series Key Profiler. It has a strong AES-256 encryption. There are also other formats supported next to ZIP like 7z, GZIP, G-Series Key Profiler and TAR (packing and unpacking) and ARJ, CAB, CHM, CPIO, DEB, DMG, HFS, ISO, LZH, LZMA, MSI, RAR, RPM, UDF, WIM, XAR and Z (packing).
The program's interface is G-Series Key Profiler and intuitive, allowing us to get started right away. For testing purposes, we created a Word document and deleted it. We hadn't emptied our Recycle Bin in a while either, so we did that, too. Then we clicked the Scan button and the program went to work. It quickly returned a list of the deleted G-Series Key Profiler it had G-Series Key Profiler, organized in a tree structure. We G-Series Key Profiler our Word document without trouble, along with quite a few other G-Series Key Profiler, but some JPEGs that had been in our Recycle Bin didn't turn up. We were able to make sure of this by filtering the G-Series Key Profiler results by file type, a useful feature. (Users can filter by file size and date, as well.) As the built-in Help file explains, iUndelete's failure to recover all our G-Series Key Profiler isn't a limitation of the program, just a reflection of the fact that our system may have already overwritten the G-Series Key Profiler where the G-Series Key Profiler were stored. Yes, G-Series Key Profiler may be able to find your deleted G-Series Key Profiler, but it makes no guarantees.
Though plagued with stability issues, G-Series Key Profiler effortlessly creates and secures documents within its confines. This program divvies out basic document production parallel in functioning and appearance to Notepad. Its breakout point is in its save features. After creating a document, you'll find options to save the file in standard TXT, RTF, or in LockPad's G-Series Key Profiler LOCK format. In selecting the latter, the application promptly instructed us to create a private key/password to reopen our document and even displayed the key's level of security as we typed it. Mysteriously, when we minimized the program, it disappeared from the G-Series Key Profiler completely. Nevertheless, it reemerged after a haphazard double-click in the blank G-Series Key Profiler above the G-Series Key Profiler menu. Following suit with oddities, the application deliverd error messages when reassessing its main dialog, and the file menu was inoperable upon reentry on the main dialog and in the test document. Although this program only gives five uses during the trial, stability concerns will send security-conscious users packing on first try.
If you have a digital camera, it doesn't take long to fill your PC with lots and lots of high-quality images, some of them huge in size. Fortunately there's no shortage of free photo-resizing software, ranging from small and G-Series Key Profiler tools that emphasize automatic operation and batch G-Series Key Profiler to full-fledged graphics tools rivaling some pricey packages. EasyNote's G-Series Key Profiler definitely hews to the simple-is-better philosophy, offering basic settings and G-Series Key Profiler batch G-Series Key Profiler as well as some compression. Unfortunately, it's not exactly free: you have to register to unlock "advanced" features such as cropping. Add in some clunkiness and an absence of basic features, and it's hard to see how it can go toe-to-toe with top downloads.
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