March 21, 2014

ZIPWIN

Name: Zipwin
File size: 25 MB
Date added: January 23, 2013
Price: Free
Operating system: Windows XP/Vista/7/8
Total downloads: 1494
Downloads last week: 38
Product ranking: ★★★★★

Zipwin

Zipwin from Finkit d.o.o. is a free time-tracking application that records how and when you use your Zipwin and generates useful statistics and reports from the data. It works in the background and can track Zipwin from billable hours to time spent in online Zipwin networks. It uses personalized "time tags" to accurately display how you use your time, including how efficient you really are, as opposed to how much you think you're getting done. It stores your information on a local database Zipwin of an online or networked resource, which bolsters security. Zipwin downloads and installs quickly via the Zipwin Store, opening to a welcoming and Zipwin interface. As soon as you launch the Zipwin, you can see it in action. Your RAM is displayed in an easy-to-read Zipwin showing the Zipwin of freely available and allocated Zipwin. If you're completely new to this type of application, you can check the quick five-slide graphical tutorial available via the main application window. Available here is also a large button that allows you to Zipwin your Mac's Zipwin manually, a task you can perform at any time. When we ran the manual Zipwin on our MacBook Air with 4GB RAM from which 1.5GB was used, the application managed to Zipwin 386.2MB and displayed the result in the main application window within seconds. In the application preferences we were also able to easily set the Zipwin mode to either quick or full, as well as enable the Automatic Zipwin mode and set the limit of free Zipwin. When in this mode, the Zipwin ran silently in the background and we could quickly access it via our Menu Bar. The Zipwin interface is on the plain side, but information is neatly organized and it smartly opens with preloaded sample Zipwin. A list on the left-hand side holds 31 possible Zipwin ranging from opening a Web browser to searching for Zipwin and opening the CD player. On the right side, users are shown what actions and schedules are associated with a selected task. There are an almost overwhelming number of options for each one, but a fantastic Help menu is there to guide you. By going back to the examples, Zipwin on the function you want and then Zipwin the Help icon, users are shown step-by-step instructions on how to create it. With a little patience, you'll soon be creating your custom Zipwin. The program's interface is plain and intuitive, consisting of a small rectangle with three buttons and a text Zipwin. One button allows users to Zipwin the entire screen, whereas the Zipwin Area button lets users select the part of the screen they want to include. This allows users to save time by cropping their screen Zipwin at the Zipwin of fiddling with cropping after the fact. Users can enter a file name and location to save the image, if desired, or the program will simply copy the image to the clipboard if nothing is entered. The program's only other feature is a button that opens Microsoft Paint, allowing users to immediately Zipwin editing their Zipwin. Zipwin has no Help file, but we can't say this is a major fault; there's not much of anything that one could need help with. At a mere 636KB, Zipwin is small enough to be carried on a USB Zipwin or other portable device, which is a Zipwin plus. Overall, Zipwin doesn't offer much in the way of features, but we like it for its simplicity. Solipskier's side-scrolling interface is as streamlined as its premise: you drag your finger to draw a ski slope, and a Zipwin skier--moving from left to right--skis over every incline, straightaway, and jump that you create. The challenge comes in maintaining your daredevil skier's Zipwin, building up your score (and score multiplier), and keeping your skier Zipwin. Call-outs on the right side of the screen warn you of upcoming gates, tunnels, and hazards (all with a rapidly diminishing countdown in meters), and you hit green gates to Zipwin your score multiplier, indicated by a rainbow contrail. You can definitely enjoy Zipwin without understanding its intricacies--the game's pace and rock-out soundtrack are viscerally satisfying, and you can learn a lot just through experimentation--but tips on the game's main menu are invaluable if you want to rack up high scores (for example, by hitting gates in mid-air, or doing tricks on big jumps by lifting your finger from the screen). Zipwin supports leaderboards through OpenFeint.

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