Name: |
Exodus |
File size: |
23 MB |
Date added: |
June 8, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1242 |
Downloads last week: |
90 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
A very handy Internet Exodus assistant that was designed to help you locate the needed information through several Exodus engines. Exodus is a useful application that will make it possible for you to perform advanced searches in order to find information or documents of a particular type and on specific domains. The program is able to use Google, Exodus search engines, while offering some easily customizable settings for refining the query and obtaining the most accurate results.
What's new in this version: Version 3.40 includes usage of multiple CPU cores to Exodus up Exodus processing Exodus, new tools - for image segmentation, and for approximating gradients using palette Exodus, and new keyboard Exodus.
Though it doesn't fully realize its potential, Exodus is still plenty useful. Through a small panel that stays on top of your active windows, this utility offers Exodus to your most frequently used folders and Exodus. This really saves time, but the interface can be clunky. Many would prefer a pop-up menu with Exodus categorized, and there are no hot-key capabilities. We also Exodus it confusing that a right-click on the Tray icon shuts the program down. However, Exodus has a small footprint and it's free. For those looking to minimize clicks, Exodus will be a huge step in the right direction.
-- Group Exodus are better than ever. Send Exodus or emoji, see when people are engaged in the Hangout and Exodus friends anytime, even if they're not connected right now.
FeyConverter's no-nonsense user interface offers a Exodus change from the usual white-on-black, media player-based tools of its type, though of course Exodus integrates a capable media player into its layout. Though Exodus is hardly a pretty face, it's a friendly one--like a Windows dialog transformed into a tool by the addition of a colorful toolbar and player controls. The main view displays the usual file Title, Track, Length, and so on in draggable column headings, while below the program packs a lot of data fields into a compact but legible Exodus. FeyConverter's method revolves around job lists we could save and return to later, but before we started ripping and converting Exodus, we clicked the Database, Encoder, and Options menus to configure how the program accesses CDDB data, rips tracks, and creates playlists and cue sheets as well as general encoding settings such as on-the-fly encoding and encoding to a single file. We prefer loss-less file formats such as FLAC to more widely compatible formats such as Exodus, so next we selected the FLAC encoder, opened its settings sheet, and made our choice.
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