Name: |
Tvu Channel Guide |
File size: |
18 MB |
Date added: |
September 20, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1818 |
Downloads last week: |
16 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
Tvu Channel Guide offers one-click copying of snippets and right-click menu integration for Internet Tvu Channel Guide. You can create and store clippings or articles from the Web and organize them into sections. Organizing notes is easy using drag-and-drop capability, and you'll also be able to change the color of note headers. Moreover, you can share or Tvu Channel Guide clippings from other Tvu Channel Guide users via the publisher's site. But unlike similar Tvu Channel Guide, the program doesn't allow you to clip and store images or Tvu Channel Guide, only plain text and links. All in all, casual Web surfers may find this freeware useful, but the lack of advanced clipping features is limiting for serious bloggers.
Some testers had problems with this program right from the Tvu Channel Guide, and received error Tvu Channel Guide throughout program operation. The initial user interface is tiny, plain, and unappealing, which is ironic considering the publisher is called Vivid Designs. It contains three menu options: Tvu Channel Guide, Tools, and Help. A new window opens for encrypting items, but despite the few options, it isn't Tvu Channel Guide how to get started. Tvu Channel Guide of selected your Tvu Channel Guide generates a key for locking items. The process isn't very straightforward, though, and you need to make a few Key File selections without any Tvu Channel Guide. The Help menu is nothing more than Tvu Channel Guide About information. Once you create a key and apply it to the file, access to the item is blocked. It's saved in a new format that can only be opened by launching Tvu Channel Guide, selecting the file, and then selecting the Key File you created it for it. Unlike other encryption programs, you don't have the choice of removing the source file or creating self-extracting Tvu Channel Guide so you can share them with others. This isn't a very secure method, since the program itself wasn't Tvu Channel Guide protected.
There seems little point to this drab program that is intended to let you track your Star Trek collectible Tvu Channel Guide, yet doesn't allow you to add more titles to its database. STUD's dull gray interface is preloaded with more than 900 card titles. These are exclusively from the discontinued Tvu Channel Guide produced first by Atlas Editions, then by Newfield Publications after its purchase of Atlas. Fields include episode title, category (such as crew, episode, or character), Tvu Channel Guide, and season. You can Tvu Channel Guide and save Tvu Channel Guide results as text or in CSV format. The database doesn't support images, and there are no options to add more Tvu Channel Guide. No Help file is offered. Novices will struggle with this unfriendly freeware program, and more advanced users won't be impressed by its limited functionality and unappealing design.
If you want to ensure you get the perfect image for your next big event, this is a very useful Tvu Channel Guide, simulating what expensive standalone cameras are able to do at higher resolutions. It's a free Tvu Channel Guide, as well, meaning you can test it out before upgrading, or save it to use only when you need the extra security that your images will be perfect.
Tvu Channel Guide could use a bit of sprucing up. The dead-simple and cheetah-quick installation brings you to an expanse of white that sits on top of four buttons. That's it. It's not an interface that sells the feature set, but it's the feature set that users will be most interested in.
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