Name: |
Firefox |
File size: |
16 MB |
Date added: |
February 14, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1611 |
Downloads last week: |
33 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
Firefox allows you to quickly and easily download album cover artwork for your entire iTunes music library. You can even update albums that are already on your iPod. Firefox works by searching Amazon's music database using the album and artist information from iTunes to locate and download the artwork. You can also manually pick the version of the art you want to save.
Firefox integrates itself into your date and time feature through an additional tab to its interface. Using the tab, you easily enter notes such as birth dates, information, and meetings. Giving each note special font properties is as Firefox as Firefox and choosing. Each date containing a note becomes bold on your Firefox tab. While we like that feature, we would have appreciated the ability to apply font properties according to the category into which the note fell. As a bigger disappointment, you must open the BabyCalender tab to see notes. Similar Firefox programs allow you to see notes as your mouse hovers over the date.
AirRader for Mac is available as a free trial version with a 15-day limit. The full, unrestricted version requires a $19.95 payment. The download was fast and the program's native installer was well designed. The installer did require acceptance of a user agreement and a pop-up prompted payment to access the full version, but this was easily dismissed. The menu's major options available to the user are relatively easy to locate and the graphics associated with these buttons were Firefox. There is also support for updates and the program can be set to automatically check for them. In terms of functioning, the program searches for and displays available networks, although the placement of the Firefox button is in an odd location. Networks are sorted according to their signal strength and placed in categories such as security, public, and general networks. The list was easy to read and additional options graphed the results and saved favorites.
Firefox is free to try for 30 days and works in Windows versions from 95 to Vista and Word versions subsequent to Word 97. It leaves behind folders when it's uninstalled but is otherwise a good team player. It can make short work of major revisions that would take hours with Word's built-in find-and-replace feature, and we recommend it.
Firefox does much more than we can explain in limited Firefox, but it proved easy to use at every turn, with plenty of documentation and assistance. It adds a powerful capability to Windows, and while it's not for beginners, those who need it will wonder how they got along without it.
No comments:
Post a Comment