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Author Topic: Must-Have Freeware Thread (General Freeware)  (Read 51011 times)
Beaz
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« on: May 04, 2005, 09:38 AM »

Anyone who fucks around in this thread will not be on my good side for the short while they wish to remain on this forum. -Adam

Let's compile a list (for future linking) for the best freeware that everyone should have. I don't mean games (unless it's REALLY worthy), but more utilities, browsers, whatever. Some of these are a given for most of us, but others may not know, plus you might discover something new.

All following programs are high quality and free of charge.  If you have a negative experience with one or more of these programs, please post about it here so that I may remove it from the list.  Additions to -- and removals from -- the list are discretionary.


Anti-Virus: For protecting against virii.

avast! AntiVirus - Home version is free when you register. Great protection, easy to use.

AVG - Or "Antivirus Gold".  It's a free antivirus that operates much in the same way that Norton does.  Provides email protection, system protection, and other little goodies like update and scan scheduling.  The new version occasionally makes you download a new one once your "trial" runs out, but even that is automated.

TrendMicro Housecall - Don't want to install anything? Just want to do a quick virus scan? TrendMicro provides this service to better protect the world. Works great, but of course, requires an internet connection.


Anti-Malware: For protecting against adware, spyware, and their brethren.

Ad-Aware - Anti-spyware program. Get rid of those malicious pop-ups.

Spy-bot - Another anti-spyware, use in tandem with Ad-Aware. Also can "immunize" your system to prevent future attacks by certain malware.

SpywareBlaster 3.3 - This anti-spyware utility prevents the installation of a lot of damaging ActiveX components in IE (and IE based browsers) and adds harmful sites to the Restricted Sites list in IE. It also features tracking cookie blocking in IE and Mozilla/Firefox. After installing this, Ad-Aware and Spybot don't have much to find and remove anymore.

Hijack This - A registry scanner that lets you easily remove offending registry entries (usually caused by spyware or the programs that funnel them into your system).  You really have to know your shit on this one, though.  Don't just go in there and delete everything the program finds, or you'll fuck up your system.


Image and Document Creation: For the development and manipulation of text and images.

OpenOffice.org - Office suite for word processing, slideshow presentations, spreadsheets, and basic illustrations (drawing). Works with MS Office and Corel WordPerfect documents.

PDFCreator - Does the same kind of thing Acrobat Distiller does but it's free.  It creates a printer in Windows that allows you to print your documents to PDF files.  Seems to work pretty well from what I've seen.

Inkscape - Vector graphics program like Illustrator.  Works well with the Gimp for doing graphics on the cheap.

Programers Notepad - Free notepad replacement that I'm fond of.

GIMP - Image editor akin to Adobe Photoshop and Jasc Paint Shop Pro.

GIMPShop for Windows - GIMPShop for Windows changes the skin of GIMP to look more like Photoshop, easing the use of the program while still being free.  Versions available for Mac and Linux floating around as well at the official site.

Expression 3 - A good, free vector illustration program from Microsoft? Oh yes. (Mac and Windows)

FRAPS - Good for making gif's, and taking in-game movies. Also useful for benchmarking your computer.

602 Office - Another office suite.

Paint.Net - Pretty decent and free. Requires .Net Runtime libraries.


Internet Utilities: Browsers, plug-ins, and other bits for one-to-many communications.

FireFox Browser - Web browser with built-in pop-up blocking and other great add-ons. Very clutter-free and easy to use. Seems to be much more stable than MS Internet Explorer (where random freezes and other issues are the norm).

Opera Web Browser - An alternative browser to the aforementioned Firefox. I prefer Opera mainly because of it's simple organization. If you tend to have various different applications on while browsing the web, this browser keeps a tab of all active pages within the web browser, which will keep your taskbar clutter free. As far as plug-ins and such, you may have to read up on those. Opera is a simple, tidy browser that I would recommend to anyone.

Maxthon - One of the better IE based browsers out there. It has a lot of great plugins and skins, and also uses tabs for browsing. The two downsides are that since it's based on IE you're screwed if your security settings aren't high enough, and that it has so many options that it may be a little confusing for some people. You may prefer this to Firefox, although either one is better than regular IE.

Thunderbird - E-mail client. Very easy to use if you are familiar with MS Outlook or Qualcomm's Eudora.

Limewire - Today's best P2P program where you can find anything.

Web Developer Extension - If you do any web design this is a very handy tool.  Allows you to edit CSS on live pages without changing the files.  It can also outline table cells or block elements.  And it allows you to easily validate your pages.

Tabbrowser Extension - Lots of cool features.  You can drag tabs around, if you have more tabs open then can fit on the screen it allows you to scroll back and forth, shows a status bar next to tabs when loading, allows you to open bookmarks in background tabs, allows you to save your current tab session for reopening later and lots of other stuff.  It can be slightly buggy but  it's gotten to the point where not having it installed annoys me.

Filezilla - Great FTP program.

Putty - Very nice ssh/telnet program for Windows.


Communications: Voice over internet protocol (VoIP) in its varied flavors, one-to-one communications, and the like.

Teamspeak - A good voice communication system for gamers or people to cheap to pay for phone bills.

Skype - VoIP agent to replace telephones.

XFIRE - Excellent for in-game text communication and game joining at the click of a button.

Trillian - Regardless if you chat on AIM, ICQ, MSN, or ancient IRC... this program acts as a client for all of them and does a damn fine job.

gaim - Excellent instant messenger program, available for Linux and Windows. Supports all the most popular protocols.


Miscellaneous Utilities: The assorted odds and ends, generally increasing functionality if not productivity.

Konfabulator - Does what the new MAC OS X is doing with widgets. A utility that can do 'just about anything', from local train time listings, cancellations and delays to 'to do' lists, to the current world population, all intergrated seamlessly with your desktop. Eats away at memory though. It claims to be evaluation period only but the message has started coming up for me recently and it seems to be an empty threat as with WinZip and Rar.

FilZip - Which is genuine freeware.  Also supports more archive formats than WinZip and behaves almost exectly like it.

Registry Mechanic - Used to fix random blue screen errors and lag problems, likely via the Windows registry. As easy to use as Ad Aware.

IsoBuster - Very useful data recovery tool. Can recover lost files from damaged CD's and DVD's. Also a must have for compiling and extracting .iso files. Many downloads are compressed in this form, and this is the only program I know of that's able to do it.

Iso-recorder - A windowsXP powertool. Used when I had Windows; worked well.

DVD Decrypter - No fuss DVD ripping for backup purposes. Converts file into a pure ISO image.

PC PitStop - This online utility is perfect for tuning up your PC. After a brief system test, various tips and solutions will be listed to optimize each subsystem. It will pick up anything from low internet ping to a needed defragment. Great online application.

7-zip - Another free compression program.  Can create 7z files which seem to run smaller then zips and can create self extracting executable (SFX) files.

Ethereal - Protocol analyzer/Packet Sniffer.  Great for troubleshooting network problems.  Allows you to capture all network traffic for however long you want.  Run this on your network to see just how insecure email is.

Microsoft PowerToys for Windows XP - Additional programs that developers work on after a product has been released to manufacturing. They add fun and functionality to the Windows experience.

Strokeit - A universal mouse gesture program with a 176k footprint, and is the greatest laziness enhancer in existence.  A simple flick of the mouse in whatever movement you set will open new broswer windows, change tracks on your playlist, navigate backwards and forwards, and anything else under the sun you want it to do.  There is no reason to not have this program.

ObjectDock - A very cool little program that puts a Mac-style magnifying toolbar on your desktop. You can set it to auto-hide, and have a whole row of icons in the toolbar when you mouse-over. It's great for un-cluttering your desktop (it's kind of hard to describe... give it a try). The regular version is one simple dock, and it's freeware.

Truecrypt - Free open source windows file encryption.  Can encrypt an entire partition or create a virtual encrypted disk within a file.  A virtual encrypted disk lives in a file on your hard disk which you mount through the program.  When mounted it acts like any other partition in Windows.  After you finish filling it with top secret files / porno you dismount it.

Winpatrol - Free version lets you retain Hitler-like control of all startup program, system, and other similar changes that any programs you run may make. Gives you simple "approve or deny" choice for any suspect activities of anything you run.

GetDataBack Data Recovery for NTFS - GetDataBack is highly advanced data-recovery software that will help you to get your data back when your drive's partition table, boot record, Master File Table, or root directory is corrupted or lost, when a virus hits the drive, when files have been deleted, when the drive has been formatted, or when the drive has been struck by a power failure.

BCwipe - Data wiping software; because deletion should be forever.


Websites/Online Utilities: Products found on, or tied closely to, specific websites.

ImageShack - Currently a popular choice for image hosting.

OurMedia - Online media hosting for most manner of media.

Photobucket - Similar to Imageshack.  I started using Photobucket when Imageshack wasn't working.  As long as you aren't hosting anything above 250K it's fine.

RealVNC - Ever used PCAnywhere? Ever needed to log on to someone elses computer and help them with something, regardless of OS? Use this. It's awesome. I can't seem to find the Mac version on there anymore (a friend demonstrated it by controlling his Mac with my PC), but most other OSes are covered in the free version.

LogMeIn - If you have multiple computers or just an always on connection.  This program allows you to use pcanywhere type control for free.  Using nothing but an internet connection.

Google Desktop Search - Indexes your entire hard drive when you're not using your computer, and lets you instantly do a Google search on your own files through your browser or a deskbar. Apparently next-gen operating systems will have something similar, but this beats Windows' built-in Find feature by a mile.

Google Deskbar - Puts a little Google search window directly in your windows taskbar. When you type in a search, it opens Google in a little, resizable mini-browser. It's nothing revolutionary, but it's incredibly handy if you use Google as your calculator or dictionary, and is also useful if you want to do a quick GIS image search

TightVNC and UltraVNC - Totally free VNC programs with slightly cooler feature sets then RealVNC.  Both have available video drivers to improve performance.  Great if you have multiple computers you need to control.

The Code Project - Website for coding resources. This has been my saviour many, many times. There is a very large and constantly updated C# programming section. They have hundreds of controls and techniques. Definately worth a visit for any programmer.

Major Geeks - A great freeware site.


Photo Utilities: Keeping track of your pictures and images.

IrfanView - A simple, easy to use picture viewer. Has the ability to cut, crop, and resize while keeping a sharp picture. Many accessible effects, such as sharpen and blur. Easily capture a specific frame from a .gif file. Also, if you like to convert pictures to greyscale, it's done with a simple click. Same thing with colour depth editing. Simple and easy to use. Also supports Photoshop Filters.

Graphic Converter - Like IrfanView only for Macs

Picasa - Made by Google for photo organizing and simple editing. It's a slick, beautiful little program with the easiest red-eye reduction around. Also it automatically saves backups of any photo you edit, so you can come back years later and undo your changes.


Video Stuff: For dabbling in those fancy moving picture shows.

Virtual Dub - Good for editing and encoding videos.

AviSynth - Powerful frame server for futzing around with videos.  You create text files that use a scripting language to launch and modify videos.   Then you open these text files much like you'd open any other video file.

DScaler - A badass little tool for capturing live video from any, and I mean any, video input devices you have. I use it to hook my XBox up to my computer through a Radeon 9600, and it works like a charm.

VLC - For viewing video files.  I have only ever had a few files that don't work in this.

K-Lite Codec Pack - An excellent codec pack I have been using for about a year now. My codec issues have simply disappeared since installing this. It includes (or used to, when I last downloaded it) the excellent Media Player Classic, which is an open source extension of the original Windows Media Player.

AVI Codec - It's not a codec pack, but any file that you're having trouble opening, you can run the media through this program and it will specify a location to download that specific codec.

Avi-Chop - A simple way of splitting .avis by file size.

Gspot - A utility for getting details on the video file you're trying to get to run or edit, including codec and frame rate information.

DIKO - "DIKO is a one click DVD/DivX to KDVD/KSVCD conversion tool. It works with many other softwares to achieve the best quality and efficiency possible. "   Avisynth, mentioned already, is one of the "many other softwares" included in the installation.  Includes a free DIVX-->MPG encoder, FreeEnc.  I use this package when I need to  convert frame rates as part of the DVD encoding. 

VSO DIVXtoDVD - Another one click DIVX to DVD package, I use this software when a frame rates don't need to be converted.  For some reason the frame rate conversion method used by DIVXtoDVD would cause burned DVDs to pause in my particular player, although I could find no evidence of other people having issues.  It also has its own built-in DIVX-->MPG encoder

DVDShrink - An awesome utility for removing unwanted portions of a DVD you are backing up in order to fit it on a DVD-R.  Also will compress video to get it onto a DVDR.  Also will allow you to reauthor an already created DVD.  Highly recommended.

Real Alternative - Lets you watch RealMedia files without having to install any bloated software from Real Networks.  Also includes Media Player Classic, a nice simple video player.


Development: Tools for coding and testing.

Visual Studio Whidbey - Express packs are free for the beta and expected to remain that way for release.  Good way to aquaint oneself with the awesomely amazing Visual C#.  Or if you want o make web apps, there's a Visual Web Developer beta available.

Notepad++ - Another great source code editor, with highlighting for different languages and whatnot.

Bloodshed Dev-C++ - A nice free C/C++ IDE for Windows.

Cygwin - Appears to be a recommended utility allowing Unix functionality in a Windows environment.

#develop - A fully featured C# and VB.Net (not ASP.Net) development environment. #develop includes a gui form editor, autocomplete (intellisense) documentation tools, and uses either the MS.Net compiler or MONO. Note: the VB.Net development side of this is a little leaky. You will find it will bomb out every now and again with memory issues. I recommend you use this for C# development only (which hasn't stopped me developing a VB.Net app using it, I just won't ever be doing it again - or writing any form of VB code for that matter)

.Net Framework SDK - The Microsoft .Net 1.1 Framework Software Developers Kit. The download is a little over 100MB, but it contains everything you need to build .Net apps and also contains the full set of MSDN .Net 1.1 help files which you cannot live without.

Lutz Roeder's Resourcer - A free tool that allows you to build .Net resx or resources files to contain your icons, images and other resources. Also check out Reflector and Commandbar.Net.

MySql - An open source database engine. MySql provides a solid database with excellent performance, and most of the features that larger proprietary vendors provide. Be sure to download the MyODBC connector and the MySql Administrator and MySql Query Browser tools.

InnoSetup - A setup builder. Along with ISTool (follow the links on the same site) is one of the slickest setup program builders I have seen.

LiquidIcon - A free icon and cursor editor. Not brilliant, but free. It handles icons of the normal sizes (16x16, 32x32 and 48x48) and can handle from 8bit to true color icons (without alpha channel). I've been using this for a long time, and I'm sure there is a better icon editor out there by now. I just couldn't be arsed to find it.


Audio Utilities: For keeping your audio ripped, digital, sorted, and available in multiple formats.

Winamp - In my opinion, the best free audio-media player out there.  It will also play movies, but I just use mine to play mp3's.  Good equalizer, good playback, great ability to make playlists.

Winamp 2.x - Earlier version than the one above.  Not as pretty, but incredibly efficient at what it does.  Runs better on older computers.

iTunes - For music playing. 

Foobar2000 - I've tried lots of music players and this is the best one I've found.  Great for large playlists.  You can select Kernel Streaming for output so the Windows mixer doesn't muck up your audio.  Not the prettiest but it just works really well.

CDex - Truly free (not share/crippleware) CD ripping software that offers more options than some pay rippers out there. Very robust, recognizes CD tracks amongst data, haven't found a disc it can't rip.

EAC - Very nice CD ripping program

CDBurnerXP Pro - A great CD/DVD burning program. A full list of features is located here. I also feel it's worth noting that it is the most downloaded and one of the highest ranked CD/DVD burning programs on the file download site MajorGeeks.com

Burnatonce - Another pretty good CD burning software.  Kind of plain-Jane but it works well.

Audacity - An open-source audio editing tool, including the ability to work with mp3s.

MP3 directcut - A super-handy utility for quickly splitting and joining mp3s.


Games: Duh.

Orbiter - An amazingly accurate, free spaceflight simulator. It's full of all sorts of nerdy goodness.

GunBound - Free WORMS-style game. I've not messed with it in a couple of months but last I checked, despite the language oddities and the strange main site, it's pretty solid and playable.

Cave Story - An excellent 2-D platform game.

Madness Redeemer - I've already made a thread for this, but this is one awsome game. Go check the other thread for details n' such. And for you Mac'rs out thar

Wazzal - Can't live without if you like the Solar System or pirates. Almost professional looking, but very short if you only play to beat it.

Arena - You know Morrowind? The Elder Scrolls III? Well this is The Elder Scrolls I, the game Bethesda made in 1994 which was the same thing, only not as flashy. You'll need DosBox to run it though. They started letting people download it for free as part of their 10th anniversary thing, and if you really like old school games they you simply must have this.

Maple Story - It's a free MMORPG that is also a 2-D side-scroller.  Has a feel that harkens back to the 16-bit days.  Incredible production despite being a free online game with no server fees.

Celestia - It's an opensource astronomy program where you can travel around the universe and look at different things, ranging from planets to galaxies to MIR. It can highlight the constellations for you, and can even search for an eclipse for you to watch anytime in the past or future.

Celestia Motherlode - A few gigs of addons for Celestia, from better looking models to galaxies and nebulas.

Dosbox - Finally a chance to play something ugly and repetitive.

Dosbox Plug-In - An easier to use plug in for the above.

ScummVM - If you've got any of those old LucasArts games, it works a lot better for them than DosBox does.

Up to date as of 1211 board time, 10/16/05. -Adam
« Last Edit: May 06, 2006, 02:58 PM by Adam Ruining » Logged
tim the enchanter
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« Reply #1 on: May 07, 2005, 05:57 AM »

Does anyone know any good free drum beat synth software?  Its for a music project and every time i try a new one it springs some hidden cost and asks for my credit card.
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« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2005, 10:15 AM »

How strict are we being with this list?  Not all the above are freeware.  WinZip, WinRar and Konfabulator are shareware and Opera is adware.

WinZip and WinRar retain functionality even after their grace periods, though I've been considering removing them. Opera is ad-supported within the browser, which is what, in turn, makes it free, like broadcast television. I've not used Konfabulator so I've no opinion on it yet. -Adam
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« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2005, 10:22 AM »

Does anyone know of a simple to use Money Managing program?  Something like Microsoft Money, but free (obviously).  Preferably a program that allows you to work in Sterling.
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« Reply #4 on: May 26, 2005, 10:58 AM »

I'm looking for a basic (and preferably free) blue print/ house plan design program.

Anyone know of any?
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« Reply #5 on: June 05, 2005, 01:57 PM »

So, in the realm of video editing - Are there any free (or maybe even cheap, if not free) video editors with lots of effects? I'd love to have one of those programs that let's you add nifty things like lightsabers and other gay stuff. I'm sure all the nerds that make all their Star Wars cosplay videos aren't using $27,000 programs.
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« Reply #6 on: August 26, 2005, 11:25 PM »

I know that a lot of people aren't fans of Macintosh, but are there some apps for the Mac out there?
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« Reply #7 on: September 06, 2005, 05:03 PM »

I'm looking for a program that works kinda like a PDA for my computer. A calendar and some kind of note/alert system would be good.
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« Reply #8 on: October 21, 2005, 09:00 AM »

Websites/Online Utilities: Products found on, or tied closely to, specific websites.

www.dyndns.com - A very reliable free dynamic dns service for personal use. You can use it to create a fixed domain name for your dynamic IP address at home. They provide clients you can install on your server at home to automagically update their DNS server when your dynamic IP changes. Although there are other similar web services out there. This one has not given me any problems for the last 3 years.

Development: Tools for coding and testing.

There's too many things that can go under dev tools, I don't want to clutter up this thread here with the likes of postgresql and Eclipse, for example. However, this one is my #1 editor everywhere I go (on all OS):

emacs or xemacs (The Programmer's Editor) - Once you learn it you'll be able to edit text files (code in any language) much much faster. Note that you can choose to install emacs/xemacs as a part of your cygwin install.
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« Reply #9 on: October 26, 2005, 03:26 PM »

MAC OS X LIST

I have experience with these, but by no means is this a fully comprehensive list.  If you're looking for something specific please look for it at http://www.macupdate.com or http://www.versiontracker.com:

Image Browsing: For viewing images, since Preview.app sucks.

JView - very simple image viewer that allows you to just open an image and then scoot through the rest of the images in that folder


Interface modification and System Utilities: Change the look of OSX and keep it running with these apps.

Path Finder - alternative to the Finder for file browsing and organization.

FruitMenu - customize contextual menus.

Konfabulator - Free widget utility.  I like this better than Apple's Dashboard.

Cleardock - customize the dock's transparency and color.

Candybar - icon customization app.

Desktop Manager - custom desktops for whatever specific purposes you want.  Add as many as you need, and scroll through them.  For example, I have an e-mail, a music, and a web desktop.  At the push of a button my current desktop (say, web) is replaced by the next (e-mail is next).

Tinkertool - vital for customizing the settings of various OS-level settings that can be otherwise cumbersome.

Web Browsers and misc. Internet utilities: Internet is fun.

Safari - Apple's submission.  My preference.

Opera - Very customizable browser.

Firefox - Very reliable and fast.

Acquisition - P2P App a la Limewire.  Preferred.

Poisoned - P2P App as well.

iChat - Apple's chat program.  Simple and effective.

Adium - Customizable chat program that allows interfacing between MSN, AIM, Jabber, and Yahoo networks.

Microsoft Messenger - Duh.  MSN messaging client.



Stuffing and Unstuffing:  If you don't already have or want to buy Stuffit...

UnRarX - opens .rar and .nfo files.

UnAceX - opens .ace files.
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« Reply #10 on: November 03, 2005, 12:09 PM »

What's the best download manager, and why use one at all?
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« Reply #11 on: November 03, 2005, 12:11 PM »

I'm looking for a program that works kinda like a PDA for my computer. A calendar and some kind of note/alert system would be good.

Palm Desktop is free and it works pretty well. And you can sync it with a real PDA if you ever want to.
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« Reply #12 on: November 03, 2005, 02:14 PM »

What's the best download manager, and why use one at all?

I use Free Download Manager -- Allows scheduled downloads with automatic resumption when interrupted.  Also has the ability to build galleries.  Integrates nicely with the FlashGot extension for Firefox.
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« Reply #13 on: November 16, 2005, 01:57 PM »

Maths Geeks may like to know that OpenOffice now comes with a mathmatica type application. I've not tested it for ease of use or compatibility with mathmatica files but it "looks" good onscreen.

(mathmatica is a very powerful and bloody expensive piece of software capable of doing everything your scientific calculator can do and remember what it's done)
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« Reply #14 on: November 28, 2005, 07:37 PM »

Hammerhead Drum Synth is a simple, but decent, drum kit.  Also Fruity loops has a demo version - you can't save anything, but it's fully featured so you can make beats and record them on sound forge or whatever.
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« Reply #15 on: December 01, 2005, 09:35 AM »

Does anyone know of a simple to use Money Managing program?  Something like Microsoft Money, but free (obviously).  Preferably a program that allows you to work in Sterling.

Ace Money Lite is free. Whether it does exactly what you want though....
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« Reply #16 on: December 04, 2005, 10:49 AM »

Does anyone know where I can find a really simple, bare-bones, (free), computer chess game?  I don't care if it looks like crap, I just want something to help me improve my chess skillz that isn't going to bog down my computer.  I only have 32 megs of ram, so this is a big problem for me.
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« Reply #17 on: December 15, 2005, 11:38 AM »

Is there a good program to seperate the audio from a .Mov file?  I've got a couple music videos that I like the sound of better then the actual MP3. 
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« Reply #18 on: December 16, 2005, 02:29 AM »

Is there a good program to seperate the audio from a .Mov file?  I've got a couple music videos that I like the sound of better then the actual MP3. 

Everything I've found you have to pay for. Alternatively (and what I've done before) you can just record the song using the windows recorder. It only allows you to record 60sec tracks, but that's easily fixed. All you do is record 60 seconds worth of nothing, save the track and go to Insert->Track. Insert the saved track into itself several times until you have a blank recording long enough to fit your song. Start up the music video, start recording. Once the song's done, cut everyhing that's left over. It'll be .wav but at least you won't lose any quality and you can still convert it to .mp3.

It's only a slight hassle, but it works.
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« Reply #19 on: December 27, 2005, 05:58 PM »

Just wondering, is Microsoft Anti-Spyware any better/worse than Ad-Aware?
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