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Microsoft .NET Framework Trillian - IM, Astra, Windows Live, Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, MySpace, AIM, Email, and more! How to get informative file tooltips with InfoTag Magic A typical shell extension is meant to help a user work with a category of files. Let's suppose you're mainly interested in audio files (MP3, WMA, Monkey's Audio, Ogg Vorbis and so on), but there is no system-provided way to know about the title of a song, artist or album it belongs to. If you manipulate audio files extensively, then this shell extension can be really helpful for you. The first solution that comes to mind is to add a new property page for these files. Actually, this isn't a very elegant approach since the user have to right-click, select the Properties menu item, and choose the correct tab to read the information. An infotip is a short bit of text that a tooltip control displays when the mouse hovers over a file of a certain type. InfoTag Magic tells you the title, artist, album, duration, year and other information stored in the ID3 (MP3), Windows Media Audio, Monkey's Audio or Ogg Vorbis tags. Click Here To Download Your Free Copy of InfoTag Magic (137 KB) Note.

Learn WordPress.com How to browse your files with FreeCommander WordPress.com — Your Blogging Home Hazel @TomFrost, I agree with your frustration at derogatory comments directed at the Mac community, but it's worth noting that Ninja himself offered none. The group of non-Mac users is quite large. Now, for the rest of you who do see fit to mock Apple all the time, remember that the MS community tends to be large and slow-moving. So, if you like the features in IE7, thank a Firefox user or developer. 首页 How to run Windows on your Mac with Virtual Box Virtualization seems to be one of the great buzzwords these days. Everyone wants to be running an operating system other than their own. My first experience with this sort of thing was trying to run Linux alongside Windows XP using VMware. My second was with Parallels, running XP on my Mac. The big problem with those two programs is the cost. First off, what is virtualization? Installing the guest OS The industry term for the operating system you’ll be running on a virtual computer is ‘Guest OS’. The name you’d like to give it. The OS type. The amount of your system memory you’d like to allocate to the virtual machine when it’s running. For XP, I find 512M works great, for Vista you’ll need 1G. What type/size hard drive you’d like. Your choices are Dynamically Expanding Image (default and the one I chose) or Fixed-Size Image. As for size, I chose the OS default which is 10G for XP and 20G for Vista. A word about the guest OS. Running your virtual computer As a window of your host OS

Seems like the universal meta chat tool, cross plateform too by ocpourvoir Aug 10

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