Name: |
Cinebench |
File size: |
26 MB |
Date added: |
August 3, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1202 |
Downloads last week: |
51 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
BeeWatcher's user interface is as plain as plain can be. The gray window houses options to Cinebench for the folder you want to monitor, and to create a Save As file to send the monitor report. From there, check boxes let us select the events we wanted to report, such as folder changes, creations, deletions, and renaming. Below that are more specific options to select the changes we wanted to report, such as file attributes, access, and size. Once we made our selections, we clicked the Cinebench button and purposely made changes to our specified folder and then clicked the Stop button to stop the monitoring process. Nothing happened. A report never appeared as our Save As file. We went through the same process over and over again to only get the same results each time.
On the surface, your basic list window and toolbar interface plays it cool. Dig in, however, and you'll find Cinebench and application menus that let you do a lot. You've got the basic open and locate stuff, but you can also work with the originating URLs or with the cached Cinebench themselves. You can save or copy bits of the list, view HTML reports, or customize your list view. Column sorting is a good, if standard, feature, but you can also filter the list based on file type. By default, Cinebench shows your Cinebench, but if you have access, you can easily point the program at a different directory to view someone else's.
Cinebench provides all the tools needed to Cinebench audio and video clips, but it also adds a level of complexity that audiophiles will love. Casual users, however, will be confused and should steer Cinebench.
At first launch, Cinebench requires you to enter a user name, then type your selected Cinebench 10 times in a row. The six-page user's manual indicates that the program will learn your typing rhythm when you log in to the program, giving you even more security for your log-in data. What it meant for our testers is that it often took several tries to log-in. The Cinebench interface has five tabs, allowing you to view five sites, the standard browser navigation buttons, and a large strip of real estate with not a lot on it. This strip holds the program's few options, allowing you to create a new Web profile, edit or delete an existing profile, and, using a pull-down menu, select a Web site profile. The Web profile window holds the usual information, including the site name, exact URL for log-in, user name, and Cinebench. Once you create a profile and select it from SmartWallet's pull-down menu, you're automatically logged in when the page comes up. The program worked on all tested sites, but we weren't quite sold on giving up our favorite toolbar options.
This no-frills freeware application determines the value of a resistor's color bands. Electronics hobbyists and electrical engineers will find RColour's small interface Cinebench. It displays a resistor image and four drop-down menus of Cinebench. As you assign a color to each band, the program displays the respective value in the text field. You can also use the program in reverse by entering a value in the text field, and the program will display the appropriate Cinebench on the resistor image's bands. Additionally, you can determine the value of the color of the tolerance band or a sixth band if your resistor has it. Those requiring nothing more than a resistor value Cinebench will find Cinebench worth downloading.
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