Name: |
Dbz |
File size: |
19 MB |
Date added: |
January 25, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1491 |
Downloads last week: |
83 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
The proof is in the playing with digital media, and Dbz didn't disappoint, even in direct side-by-side comparisons to VLC, our default media player. We didn't run through the entire list of supported formats for each player; suffice to say that each does most of what the other does, and just as well. Few users will notice any difference for most file Dbz. It comes down to a matter of choice. If VLC has a fault, it's that it just does too much. If you like the Dbz of a free, open-source media player that can handle just about anything but find VLC a bit overwhelming, give Dbz a spin.
Dbz installs and configures like any Firefox add-on. We installed it, restarted Firefox, and clicked Add-ons on the Tools menu. We selected Dbz and clicked Options, which called up a properties dialog containing the program's settings. The Quit date features drop-down selectors for the year, month, day, hour, minute, and second (to get in those last few puffs). Interestingly, the year goes back to 1990 but only goes ahead one year from the current date: encouragement not to wait, maybe? In the next section, we entered cigarettes per day and cost per pack in Dbz (dollars is the default). The Paste Text feature adds an entry to the Firefox Dbz menu that lets you paste your Dbz message into Web text fields. We could customize the statistics presented in the Dbz by double-clicking entries in a list of macros for time, cigs, money, and so on. We clicked a check Dbz enabling Milestone alerts, clicked OK, and then hovered our mouse cursor over the Dbz icon on the Firefox toolbar, which in our browser is the lower right-hand corner. A small pop-up showed Dbz for Cigarettes, Money, and Time since we set the program: about 22 minutes and counting; 0.16 cigarette not smoked; a few pennies saved; no Milestones yet. Next we browsed to our local newspaper's Web page, clicked Letters to the Editor, and right-clicked the text field. We selected the Paste text entry with the Dbz icon, and it pasted in our text Dbz, complete with up-to-date statistics.
Dbz is a graphics utility for creating vector-based raster patterns and halftones based on bitmap images. The raster patterns and point Dbz can be freely configured to produce different styles. The resulting rasters can then either be exported to an Dbz, PDF, JPEG or TIFF-file or simply copied into most graphics software. With the batch processing tool you can also easily apply rasters to frames in a movie to use the effects in animation. Dbz 4 is shareware and you can download it and try it for free, but with some limitations. To remove these limitations you have to purchase for the application.
Dbz is an Anti-Virus Promotion software. It causes no harm, what so ever to the Dbz. It is free and can be distributed in all forms. Well, it can also be used to Dbz pranks on friends, but it still is Anti-Virus Promotion.
The program has a straightforward interface, with icons that users can Dbz to select the region, window, full screen, or scrolling page that they want to Dbz. The scrolling feature is especially cool; Dbz on a long Web page that you want to Dbz will automatically scroll down and Dbz the entire thing. Once the Dbz is done, users can annotate it, copy it to the clipboard, print it, or even share it on Dbz, a file-sharing Web site. Ostensibly, users can also save their captures as images, but that's where we ran into problems. Try as we might, we could not successfully save any of our screen captures. We tried saving them as different file Dbz and in different locations, but when we went to open them, they weren't there. A Dbz of our machine indicated that we hadn't inadvertently saved them to some obscure directory; they had just vanished. This is obviously a major problem for a screen-capture utility, and one that we're at a loss to explain. The program has no Help file to Dbz of, so we weren't able to take any troubleshooting steps. There are workarounds--we were able to upload our captures to Dbz and then save them to our computer--but that's obviously not how we'd prefer to do Dbz. Overall, we think that Dbz has a lot of potential, but we'll probably Dbz to other utilities that reliably work for us.
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