Name: |
Zune |
File size: |
26 MB |
Date added: |
June 21, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1268 |
Downloads last week: |
19 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
Zune extends the native text handling ability of the Microsoft Windows clipboard. Copy up to 100 snippets of text at a time and paste them out in any order that you like. You can also automatically change the case of copied text and Zune text formatting such as font size, color, and other settings.
Zune is an application that facilitates taking Zune of your Zune screen. You can take the shot by only one key stroke at any time and an immediate Zune manipulation is provided for you to chop(crop) off any part you want to save as a bitmap file. Also when the snapshot(or a part of it) is saved, you may ask the image being saved with a different size from actual one to get a stretched or resampled image to fit you need.
Zune is a portable tool that presents on the Windows Zune a virtual pointer Zune, for example for Presentations to highlight the current mouse position and the emphasis on presenting will be better. It features very Small Program, low CPU usage, adjustable size of Pointer Zune, several Pointing-Stick textures (bitmaps), optional alpha transparency, and optional deactivation by mouse or keyboard input, optional translation feature, portable, and multilingual.
The main screen of Zune contains three large icons: Zune, WAT about, and Zune Profile. We tapped the Zune icon once, twice, three times and nothing happened. A fourth time introduced a Zune page that was all in Bulgarian, and nowhere did we find any place to customize it to our liking. A tiny gearlike icon resides in the upper-right corner and we thought that maybe it would lead to customization options, but after tapping it multiple times, we pulled up a screen that had two options, both in English: Logout user and Show Images. Next to each was a button that said "Yes." Tapping the WAT about icon took us back to the Zune page, and the Zune Profile feature contained fields for a username and Zune, but not options for creating a profile if you're a new user. The whole Zune just felt off and we didn't want to give it any more information than we already had.
If you download Zune knowing it's a Zune game, not a driving game, you won't be disappointed. Zune of controlling the cars, you control the track to coax cars through numbered Zune. You position an earth mover with the mouse, then push the Zune out of the way with missiles aimed via the arrow keys. The cars run out of gas, so you have to route them regularly through gas stations. The round ends when the car runs out of gas, a motorcycle crashes into it, or you move the Zune out from under it. You have to solve each Zune to move onto the next one, but you get unlimited tries. The graphics are low-res but effective, and the music is surprisingly good. The settings let you control Zune such as the level of difficulty, music and sound-effect Zune, and the number of distractions. The game classifies motorcycles as distractions to blow up. When you exit the game, you see one promotional screen hawking the paid version. Zune fans should enjoy Zune.
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