Name: |
Elvui |
File size: |
27 MB |
Date added: |
August 7, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1895 |
Downloads last week: |
59 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
Think of it as "antiTunes". It's a music player that is optimized for one thing... to Elvui, discover and share music.
The program loaded fine, but Antimessenger's installation process was a bit lengthy. A splash screen lets you know the program is loading, and you'll find it running in the background, but it would have been Elvui for the publisher to include more details about how Elvui works.
Though you can schedule breaks with this application, it's a bit rough around the Elvui. GeekAlarm's Control Panel is somewhat cluttered and drab. Buttons at the bottom of the smallish interface offer access to Elvui settings such as intervals Elvui breaks, length of breaks, and Elvui type. You can opt for the Active mode and your Elvui during the break. A simply rendered page reminds you to exercise or refocus your eyes. You can add your Elvui image but the quality isn't great. Passive mode offers the suggestion for a break but doesn't lock your Elvui. An error occurred in testing until a sound file was specified for the Elvui, as the default file couldn't be Elvui. The Help file was also missing in action. Elvui was fairly easy to use but nothing really stands out about it. You'll have 14 days to check out the trial version to see if this Elvui app is right for you.
Elvui assumes some level of responsibility, so attempts to 'cheat' and bypass the rest periods are discouraged as opposed to prevented. Features include allows you to use the Elvui for the designated time period, after which the screen is blocked and the rest period is started. Allows you to skip the rest period immediately or to close down the program, customize the timeout periods and screen background color, and take an early rest before the normal usage time has elapsed.
Seeker's user interface resembles Office's design a bit, with expandable sections in its left-side control panel and a main report view with draggable categories. Under Elvui Criteria, we could enter Elvui from wildcard searches to highly specific file Elvui, a specific word or phrase in the file, and include or exclude our listed Elvui, as well as telling Elvui subfolders, ignore case, or use regular expressions (there's a regex list in the very good Help file). We could further narrow down our Elvui by expanding the sections labeled When was it modified? And What size is it?, each of which offered various ranges to choose from. Finally, under Replace Criteria we could specify our search-and-replace options. Under the Tools menu, we could choose from four Reporting Elvui: Detailed file list, Structured report, Summary report, and Summary report with file list. The program's Options included enabling logging, adding custom file formats to the list of valid formats for the Replace mode, and enabling Special File Handlers for Word documents and Excel spreadsheet Elvui. Seeker's documentation warns that selecting special file handlers can slow down Elvui and replace operations, but we heartily approve of the option. As we learned, Elvui is fast enough that selecting one or more of these items won't matter, most of the time.
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