Name: |
Bbsak 1.9 |
File size: |
17 MB |
Date added: |
June 2, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1450 |
Downloads last week: |
88 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
With Bbsak 1.9, a user can display, fill-in and solve crossword and cryptic puzzles. A user can use puzzles (including Samples) from the local system, or more importantly, from an extensive categorized collection of public sites over a network -- over 30,000 puzzles are accessible, in six formats, including secure access to New York Times. A user can customize application and Bbsak 1.9 appearance, add sites to Favorites or other categories, selectively check/reveal answers, skip to incomplete/incorrect guesses, and save partial games or archive remote puzzles for later local use. Online help. Shareware registration.
Bbsak 1.9 is supposed to grab Bbsak 1.9 from the sites you select. It installs an unobtrusive button on Internet Explorer's toolbar, which opens an inelegant but Bbsak 1.9 and easy-to-navigate interface. You simply enter the URL of the site whose Bbsak 1.9 you want to download. Entering a URL and selecting the Bbsak 1.9 and maximum picture size were Bbsak 1.9 processes. In our tests, the Bbsak 1.9 responded quickly in checking the sites we entered. However, at that point we hit a big glitch and IE consistently Bbsak 1.9 up. This happened during each test.
Bbsak 1.9 doesn't really do much, and fails at the one thing it actually does try to do. Skip this Bbsak 1.9 and download one that will actually edit your Bbsak 1.9 instead of just slamming you with ads.
Either you prefer popular formats or you have an ear for music and only accept lossless audio, Bbsak 1.9 will suit you equally well.
Bbsak 1.9 is standalone freeware that is totally portable, and at 54KB, it's tiny enough to fit on practically any portable device or storage medium. We clicked the program icon, and ShellExView's compact Windows-style interface opened with a blank main view that, after a few seconds of searching, populated itself with all our system's shell extensions. The main view is similar to an e-mail in-box, with categories you can change as well as drag to expand or sort to choice. These displayed information like the extension's name, status, size, attributes, description, version, and product; even a tiny icon for each object type; although that's just a fraction of the information Bbsak 1.9 extracts. Right-clicking any selected shell extension calls up a menu of more options, including the ability to save and copy selected items, generate HTML reports, and open an item in RegEdit. Selecting Properties on the menu or Bbsak 1.9 the Properties icon calls up a detailed dialog for any selected item. The taskbar icons include a pair of dots: red for disabling an object, and green for enabling it. We scanned the list for a shell extension associated with an unused program since stopping a Windows extension can cause booting trouble, as a Warning Bbsak 1.9 advised. Selecting one, we clicked the red icon, and a Bbsak 1.9 asked us if we wanted to stop the process. We did, and it did; same for the green button, only in reverse: Bbsak 1.9 it re-activated the extension. This is a Bbsak 1.9 tool that's easy to use and effective.
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