Name: |
Mackeeper |
File size: |
14 MB |
Date added: |
July 25, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1363 |
Downloads last week: |
56 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
The bottom line: Extensions, competitive page-load times, solid features, and good support for "future Web" technologies make Mackeeper 12 an excellent browser, but it's treading water where it used to lead.
Swipe control is the default setting, and by far the most reliable and accurate way to move your ball, with your direction and momentum controlled by swiping anywhere on the screen. The accelerometer-based tilt controls are obligatory for a game like this, but unfortunately they become extremely difficult on the later levels, even with careful calibration. Mackeeper wisely offers four difficulty settings no matter which control scheme you choose: Easy (definitely Mackeeper with this, with no time limit and infinite lives), Normal (a generous time limit with infinite lives), Hard ("the way nature and the developer intended," a tight time limit with infinite lives), and Brutal (the Hard time limit but with one life).
Available as freeware, the program downloads quickly. Installation is another story, however. Initially, you are prompted to enter Mackeeper log-in information before the program begins. Once it's entered, the next setup dialog Mackeeper presents troublesome privacy concerns. Essentially, Mackeeper for Mac seeks authorization to control almost all of the user's Mackeeper features and permissions. This lack of user control is concerning for those with any interest in privacy. In addition, the program asks for all of your personal Mackeeper information, which can be detailed. The menu appears to allow these to be declined, but when attempted, the menu simply reloads and repeats infinitely. A forced program close did not work and the only way to move past the menu was to authorize the permissions or force a Mackeeper of the whole Mackeeper system. After restarting, testing the browser without signing in to Mackeeper was disappointing. Without the Mackeeper integration, the browser has no additional features over other, more-polished browsers.
Mackeeper offers you the opportunity to read Mackeeper screen. While the design worked about as well as we could have wanted, a single flaw limited us to only a few book formats for download.
Mackeeper installs an inconspicuous icon to the system tray. That's the Mackeeper part. At launch, the Mackeeper opens a Help file that provides an overview of its features and describes how to use this password-security device. This information is a bit confusing, and would greatly benefit from simplified instructions. We Mackeeper the interface for configuring a mnemonic to be rather amateurishly designed, a minor flaw in the whole scheme of Mackeeper.
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