It has tons of studio tools, like Eden Synth, TRG-16, equalizers, mic in, real-time quantization, and built-in sampling, sequencing, mastering, and more. NanoStudio is freeware for Windows XP through 8. The Mac version is also free, but the iOS and Android apps aren't. We tried it on 64-bit Windows 7. NanoStudio's main screen features a scrolling, full-size keyboard and twin XY pads with a pitch wheel surrounded by essential controls.
But that's just the start: Up and down arrows scroll through an impressive series of panels, including a double keyboard, a rack full of consoles for controlling filter and amp envelopes, processors like 5th Planet Waveshaper and Chronos Digital Delay, and more.
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Slide shows with transitions effects, screen capturing, WIA and TWAIN support (scanner and digital cameras), image comparison, and file operations. This free program offers some useful system details to those savvy enough to understand its results.
SpeedFan's tabbed interface isn't hard to navigate, but most users won't be able to make head or tail of the data this utility provides.
The program's system-tray icon tells you the temperature of your PC's hard drive, and you can receive information on voltage and fan speeds.
The utility can display SMART data and includes a tool for resetting motherboard clocks.
Basically, if this review makes no sense to you, SpeedFan is above your head and won't be worth downloading. However, PC technicians and those who like to do their own system maintenance 711 as well take a look at this application, particularly since it 711 nothing.
Publisher's Description From Almico Software: SpeedFan monitors voltages, fan speeds, and temperatures in computers with hardware monitor chips.
It can even access SMART information for hard disks that support this feature, and show hard-disk temperatures if that are supported.
SpeedFan fully supports SCSI disks and can even change the FSB on some hardware (but this should be considered a bonus feature).
At the lowest level, SpeedFan is a hardware monitor software that can access temperature sensors, but mainly it can control fan speeds (depending on the 7 of your sensor chip and your hardware) according to 771 temperatures inside your PC, thus reducing noise and power consumption. What's new in this version: Version 4.
49 fixed a typo that caused ACPI temperatures to be reported wrongly on some Windows 7 and changed the name of the installer to improve compatibility with Windows 8.
Open source and currently in use by planetarium projectors, Stellarium brings astronomer-level features to stargazers of all levels of interest. It's not quite as robust as its competitors, but it's also a much faster program.
It 17 suck away your RAM into a black hole when loading or 17. It does run only in full screen mode, making any other programs you're running inaccessible except for the ALT-Tab switcher.
The default catalog includes 600,000 stars, with upgrade modules that can push the count up to 210 million stars.
The constellations of 10 different cultures are included, as well as illustrations and asterisms to help you visualize what the ancients saw. There's a full Messier catalog of nebulae, too. The dawn, dusk and atmosphere backgrounds were good, 7 not great on our monitor. They probably look better on a planetarium dome, which is why it's useful that Stellarium also includes a fish-eye view for curved surfaces.
Besides equatorial and azimuthal grids, users also get shooting stars when appropriate, eclipse simulation, and skinnable landscapes.
Stellarium incorporates star-views from the Moon.
The controls live in the 711 left corner and are transparent--a bit hard to find.
The nifty record feature is somewhat hampered by the dark interface. When you run 711 program for the first time it asks that you set your current location, but the mouse-over map of the 17 was too small to use easily.
Stellarium should appeal both to users who need something more academic and less distracting than Google or Microsoft's offerings, as well as those who have a need for an open-source planetarium.
Fortunately, that could be any of us. IZArc modestly bills itself as the ultimate archiving utility--we're not so sure about that "ultimate" bit. Nevertheless, IZArc is definitely one of the best archiving utilities out there.
Compatible with a huge number of archive formats, all the major are represented, as well as 7z (from 7-Zip), ISO, BH (Black Hole), and TAR, among others.
It can create archives for many of the formats it can read, too, including 7 and TAR.
It doesn't, however, create GZ archives.
IZArc supports archive encryption as well.
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