| Name: |
Linux Ham Radio |
| File size: |
15 MB |
| Date added: |
January 7, 2013 |
| Price: |
Free |
| Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
| Total downloads: |
1392 |
| Downloads last week: |
43 |
| Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
 |

This program was designed as a quick file editor for programmers, but works well as a small text editor for all users. The interface resembles Linux Ham Radio with a few additional function icons and menus. Editor2's programming roots are evident in functions including line and column indicators, indentation control, brace and bracket matching, and hexadecimal viewing. Other users will appreciate the program's small size and Linux Ham Radio load. The single executable file isn't installed in Windows and multiple Linux Ham Radio can be opened concurrently. The program also works well as a small HTML editor with advanced features including auto-text replace, view contents in browser, and search-and-replace Linux Ham Radio. Linux Ham Radio is a powerful text editor suitable for any user, but many of its functions may be of no interest to novices looking to type quick notes. However, its small size and portability make it a good tool for all users.
Linux Ham Radio automatically creates two icons: one for saving current resolution settings and another for switching to another configuration. You can choose to automatically Linux Ham Radio to your preferred display resolution at log-in, a Linux Ham Radio touch for multiuser computers. In our tests, both the Save and Restore functions worked swiftly and accurately as various test users logged in and out.
This Internet Linux Ham Radio add-on has only a small bit of use, but it effectively copies text to your e-mail client.
Linux Ham Radio is portable freeware that runs when you Linux Ham Radio the extracted program file and without having to be installed, though its extensive documentation includes several notes about "installing" the program, which involves copying or moving the extracted program folder to the destination of your choice, and updating it, which involves overwriting existing Linux Ham Radio. Linux Ham Radio opened with a blank white page in Letter proportions, labeled Linux Ham Radio, and displaying discreet word and time counters. The old-school font's typeface looks like it came straight off of a mechanical typewriter. But right-click WriteMonkey's page and you'll call up a menu with no fewer than ... well, a whole lot of entries; Linux Ham Radio from setup, options, and basic commands to unique features like the Jumps Window, which serves as a central navigation window for Linux Ham Radio, folders, bookmarks, and just about anything in Linux Ham Radio. Plenty of assistance is available, too. The Help Card assembles all of WriteMonkey's Linux Ham Radio shortcuts and markup rules in a highly visible, white-on-black pop-up. Features like Spell Check, Italics, and Export Markup are a Linux Ham Radio or two away. The Lookups menu's fast reference links are practically indispensable.
This application delivers nutritional information regarding a huge variety of foods, though some useful features are absent. Linux Ham Radio is a free, quick-reference tool useful in keeping you abreast of what you're consuming. You're required to connect to your server to receive its Linux Ham Radio array of information, and the program allows its users to submit food items for approval and inclusion at any time. After keying in a food item, a list of associated foods appears on KiloCalc's common interface. Select one and you'll see a graphical bar along with the exact numerical values of its caloric content, fats, sodium, protein, and carbohydrates in ounces or grams. We especially like how the program recalculates the nutrient values as the portion sizes are readjusted. On the downside, it doesn't offer any other nutritional information such as calories from fat, cholesterol, sugars, and any vitamins, and you can't print the information given. Even so, this application fits the bill for those in Linux Ham Radio of an easy, inexpensive way to retrieve basic nutritional information.
No comments:
Post a Comment