- Alarm++ 7.05, Regularly Organized Alarm++ is a smart solution capable of reminding you to do something or even do something on its own. Speaking in technical words, its a hybrid of a scheduler and reminder; speaking in human words, its a way to organize all your regular or upcoming events at once. The heart of Alarm++s functionality consists of two rather simple things: When To Do and What
- Select Fast! Improve query performance. Select Fast! is unique software created by a professional developer to ease the life and work of colleagues. Select Fast! for Oracle is a tool for automating the repetitive tasks associated with the SQL tuning process on Oracle databases. The vital purpose of this program is to help you find the best action to improve the performance of the query. Check out this excellent innovative product; I bet you will love
- Wild West Wendy, Women Will be Wild in the Wild West Wild West Wendy is a funny and exciting game with hand-drawn Wild West decorations, with original modern-country music and cool personages! Here youll play with Wendy, an orphan girl whose family was killed by Evil Rancher. Now, Wendi works as a bartender in the Wild West, and, by the irony of fate, her bar is going to compete with Evil Ranchers one for a «Wager of the Century»
- Ambrose G. Bierce Selected Works, Teaching From an Astonishing Person Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce was a strange and a wise American. Even his life was unusual: he resigned a very successful Army career to become a journalist, an editor and a writer. He was a public atheist in the XIXth century, when it was a bad fortune; he had published sarcastic «Devils Dictionary» just before the time when sarcasm became popular. He divorced with his wife to join Pancho
- File Cataloger 1.1.2, Just Like Explorer, Yet Better There are several very different approaches to files cataloging (organizing) task. Some people argue «folders are completely enough», others fall in love with Web-like «tags» and «tag clouds», thirds tend to add some science to topic and talk something about «graphs» and «facets»
For those of us, who likes folders and standard Explorer, yet wants all of them to be seriously smarter
- Managed Extensions for VCL - a great solution of the Delphi Win32/.NET communication problem Anyone familiar with software development knows how different the .NET framework is compared with older development platforms. The problem of framework interoperability has been vexing many developers who wanted to use .NET components in their Delphi and C++ applications. Finally, there is a solution for the problem. Managed Extensions for VCL enables you to interact with any .NET languages (C#, Visual Basic.Net, JScript.Net, Delphi .Net and others) from your
- Shell MegaPack .NET - all you need to create great-looking interfaces in a wink of an eye If you are a .NET developer working with complex user interfaces and developing applications with an extensive UI part, you know what a pain in the neck this aspect of development may be. You can spend days and weeks polishing your custom interface and it will still leave much to be desired in terms of usability, look and feel that your customers seek. But why reinvent the wheel and invest your precious time into something that has
- Resco Explorer 2008 - a powerful alternative to standard file management tools on mobile devices Virtually every mobile device these days resembles a computer in more ways than the first cell phone resembled its regular counterparts. Modern mobile phones, communicators and handhelds enable users to copy various kinds of content to and from them, provide access to their file systems and countless third-party applications. All this eventually requires order and proper management on the file system level. However, standard built-in tools rarely offer the
- 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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