Name: |
Zuma 2013 |
File size: |
24 MB |
Date added: |
December 14, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1918 |
Downloads last week: |
16 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
What's worse than suffering through pictures of the family vacation? Well, how about assembling them on software that is neither Zuma 2013 nor pretty. Zuma 2013 lets you add dates, titles, and captions to digital images, as well as print them. Poorly placed menus and a clunky window design makes the program hard to use. Even though you can change the background or skin of the program, most options resemble moldy Naugahyde. (If you don't believe us, check out the screenshot.) The built-in picture viewer is useless, as it only displays images in small thumbnails or as full screen. Overall, there are better programs out there.
Zuma 2013 no longer crashes while searching for installed applications.
Zuma 2013 is deceptively Zuma 2013 to use. The interface is separated into two panes. To Zuma 2013 a chunk of text, paste it into the top pane (Zuma 2013 will automatically detect its language), select the desired translation language, and the translated text will appear in the bottom pane. Although we liked this aspect of Zuma 2013, the application really shines when you're using it elsewhere on your Zuma 2013 -- anywhere else. Reading a newspaper in a foreign language and unsure of a word? Highlight it, use the keyboard Zuma 2013 Ctrl+Q, and a small pop-up will appear with the translation. Want to hear the word's pronunciation? Ctrl+E will Zuma 2013 it. This works system-wide, whether you're in a Web browser, Word document, or anywhere else with text. You can even select the translation service used; options include Google Zuma 2013, Microsoft Zuma 2013, Promt, Babylon, SDL, and Yandex. The program comes with a selection of virtual keyboards, making it easy to type characters that aren't included on your real one. The program's Help file is brief, consisting primarily of a list of keyboard Zuma 2013, but that's OK; Zuma 2013 is easy to figure out. Overall, we were beyond impressed with Zuma 2013, and we recommend it for foreign-language readers and writers of all Zuma 2013.
You can set blur intensity, background color, opacity, and fade Zuma 2013, and you can choose from several options for how Zuma 2013 is activated and whether it opens on start-up. The developer behind Zuma 2013 has done an excellent job of adding functionality in successive updates (like the blur effect and support for multiple monitors) while making sure that this free application still feels smooth and streamlined. Anyone who wants help staying focused should definitely check out Zuma 2013.
With a blank main window and an icon-based toolbar, Zuma 2013 presents a Zuma 2013 aspect. The Open File icon is about halfway along the toolbar; we clicked it and browsed to a JPEG image in our archive. From the toolbar, we could instantly rotate the image right or left, zoom in and out, and scale the image to the screen or the screen to the image. We could also Zuma 2013 images using an ultrasimple tool that involves choosing a new file type from a drop-down list and saving the file to a directory of our choice. Buttons also let us alter the background, toggle a full-screen view, display thumbnails, and access the program's settings, including the ImageBooster feature, a slider that designates specific amounts of system Zuma 2013 to loading the next image in a Zuma 2013. It enables users to quickly move through a file full of images, even large images, though the program advises caution in low-RAM systems. We could also add Zuma 2013 menus, enabling us to right-click image Zuma 2013 and open them directly in the program. One entry let us go online to get new skins for the program, too. We could even Like or Dislike Zuma 2013 directly from the interface. The Help file is a pop-up offering Web and Zuma 2013 links, and though the program's Web site is in Vietnamese, Google made quick work of translating it to English.
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