- Spices.Net Suite: All about .Net Visual Studio Can't Do Spices.Net Suite is a collection of utilities, which brings all the strength the .Net platform *potentially* has right in a developers hands. Unfortunately, the functionality of the tools created by Microsoft for their own platform is always much poorer than what it could be, and Spices.Net is addressed to fix this drawback. Once installed, Spaces.Net Suite will provide you with pretty and usable environment, completely
- ChemEng Economics Calculator. Calculate Your Profits. ChemEng Economics Calculator is a tool used for doing the basic method of estimating the Net Present Value of a process plant. ChemEng Economics Calculator has a variety of quite useful features. It goes through a series of calculations to find the estimate. First of all, with ChemEng Economics Calculator you can choose from «Purchased Cost» of plant items or «Installed Costs» of plant items
- Math Mechanixs Computers were initially created for solving mathematical problems. However, these days we rarely use our PCs for this purpose. If your activities involve complex calculations that cannot be performed using a calculator or standard applications found in your operating system, you need specialized mathematical software, which, unfortunately, is expensive and requires a lot of time to learn. Fortunately, there are alternatives that
- Easy Net Switch – a dream come true for real net-hoppers If all networks were absolutely the same, they wouldve called it network utopia. No network-specific IP addresses, passwords, DNS servers, drive mappings, proxy and gateway addresses all these things that may take hours to configure, especially when there is not system administrator around. Unfortunately, networks are all different and active users that commute between offices, building, departments, home and corporate networks know very well
- Abacus Calculated Fields for ACT! by Sage - a useful power-up for your favorite CRM solution Being one of the leaders on the CMR market, ACT! by Sage offers an impressive set of integrated features and an ability to extend the default functionality by third-party add-ons. As fields and field data are the most important elements of any application intended for aggregation of various types of information, most customizations and add-ons focus on improving the process of data entry and processing. If you need
- Judy's TenKey: New Life to Good Old Calculator The «great» news about having a free calculator built-in our Windows system doesnt make us excited. No wonder — what it can do, the majority of us can calculate in our head. And making any real-life calculations is totally beyond its capacities; for making those calculations, we need to buy more sophisticated software. But arent we too speedy about burying the good old calculator? Coders
- keyCulator: Shall We Calculate? What calculator can be simpler than the one built in the Windows operating system? Or which one could be more powerful than the systems default one? Suppose you were typing a paper in a text editor and needed to quickly calculate a certain arithmetic expression. Normally, youd need to run a calculator program, make the calculations, copy the result to clipboard, close the calculator, and then paste the result
- CRC .NET Control - a native .NET component for fast CRC calculation Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) calculations are used by the majority of developers to validate the integrity of files and binary streams, which makes them an important part of applications working with multiple input and output files. Despite the great number of available CRC algorithms utilizing various initial polynomials, CRC32 is by far the most popular one. If you are a .NET programmer and want to use a CRC library
- TeX Expressions Put in Human-Readable Format. BaKoMa TeX. Just as hard as to learn a new foreign language — is for a newbie to code a mathematical formula with TeX. It requires remembering a handful of tricky expressions and totally wears out on debugging the code: TeX provides no way to see whether or not the formula you have typed is syntactically correct, and the expression youve just “programmed” looks the way you wanted. Does
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