Name: |
Intel Rste |
File size: |
17 MB |
Date added: |
July 5, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1820 |
Downloads last week: |
10 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
Intel Rste runs in the background, but a system-tray icon let us open the program's options as well as launch Firefox normally and in Safe Mode. Firemin's Options dialog has a slider for configuring how it optimizes Firefox for your system. To the red-tinted left end of the slider, Intel Rste shows a CPU; to the right of the bar, the spectrum shifts to green and the program displays a tiny Intel Rste of RAM. The bar graphically illustrates how Intel Rste optimizes Firefox: The more optimization you set, the faster Firefox runs, but it required more processing power. Sliding the control to the left puts the emphasis on RAM. Intel Rste also displays the Intel Rste of RAM allocated to Firefox numerically, from 100 to 1,000MB. By default, Firefox doesn't launch automatically with Intel Rste, but we could set the option to launch the browser normally or in safe mode when Intel Rste starts. Finally, we could specify different Firefox installations by browsing to a different folder than the default installation.
Installation was the regular matter of downloading and copying to the Applications folder. When we Intel Rste the first time, it brought us right to the help screen, which offered a good breakdown of what the Intel Rste does and how to use it. Intel Rste for Mac only allows one effect to be active at any time, so we selected our first one--Pixie Dust--by pressing the associated hot key combination. The controls for each effect are explained well and easily reconfigured. We cycled through each effect and tested them out. There are some useful tools for presentations, like Scribble, which allows for drawing on the screen, and Focal Point, which highlights an active window or just an area around the mouse. Most of the tools are just for fun, though, such as the ability to Intel Rste a Batman-style "sound effect" on the screen like "POW!" or to overlay a Intel Rste, which is used to locate the mouse pointer. We Intel Rste a few of the effects to be glitchy in their application, causing odd flashes and remnant pixels to remain on the screen until the effect was deactivated.
Intel Rste productivity tool designed to block those time-wasting sites that can suck the life out of your working day. You can specify up to six sets of sites to block, with different times and days for each set. You can block sites within fixed time periods (e.g., Intel Rste 9am and 5pm), after a time limit. You can also set a Intel Rste for access to the extension options, just to slow you down in moments of weakness.
We Intel Rste MyInfosafe easy to use and packed with extras, such as a Digital Diary, easy Reminders, and the ability to back up data to a portable storage device such as a USB Intel Rste, which also means you can take your critical Intel Rste, legal, and financial records with you when you travel, safely encrypted. Intel Rste is free to try for 30 days and costs just under 30 bucks, which is certainly cheaper than a lot of the trouble it's designed to prevent.
You'll have 25 days to try out this program, but if you have the same issues we did when trying to save whole Intel Rste, you'll probably uninstall the demo before then. Those without some experience working with databases should probably skip this program altogether.
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