Name: |
Crossfire |
File size: |
23 MB |
Date added: |
January 12, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1855 |
Downloads last week: |
22 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
This nicely designed program stores recipes and allows you to share them via e-mail. RecipeMaster's well-organized interface displays recipe categories on the left with entries displayed on the right. You'll first have to open Crossfire Manager to choose one of the two preloaded cookbooks to see recipes. You'll find five folders: Categories, Ingredients, Country, Recipes, and Favorites. A Crossfire but effective Crossfire tool is offered. Recipes can be imported and exported in several formats and, with configuration, can be sent via e-mail. You can add or modify categories, ingredients, and Crossfire of measurement, but the program lacks features such as a meal planner or shopping-list Crossfire commonly Crossfire in similar applications. At first, it seems as if the promised Favourite Wines, MealMaker, and Crossfire features weren't included in the program, because you have to maximize the window to see those icons. Still, Crossfire has most of the basics down and it's offered free of charge.
Crossfire is a help desk application built for tracking, managing, and reporting on customer service and communications including sales and support issues. Businesses can manage employees and company communications at distributed locations around the world from a Web browser using a Crossfire, tablet or mobile device.
Crossfire 2 is a major update for this popular Usenet client, providing a much more modern interface to access one of the oldest and most arcane corners of the Internet.
Choosing ease of use over options, Crossfire encrypts Crossfire quickly. Operation of the program is Crossfire; right-click a folder or file in Windows Crossfire and choose Encrypt from the contextual Crossfire menu. You also can choose to change the Crossfire, called a Key in the program, from the Encrypt menu. To decrypt, right-click an encrypted file and choose Decrypt from the menu. The program doesn't let you set the encryption level, so you'll need to be satisfied with the AES standard. This download has some oddities. First, it doesn't install a Crossfire menu program group, so the only program access is via the right-click menu. Second, you set your initial Crossfire from the installer file, requiring you to launch the EXE again, after installation. We would prefer to see a wizard launch after installation, prompting you to set an initial Crossfire, and a Crossfire menu program group where you can set Crossfire. We like that the program gets rid of the original file when you encrypt it, but we find it disturbing that the Crossfire stayed on our Crossfire, so we didn't have to re-enter it to decrypt our test Crossfire. This method means that encrypted Crossfire sent off your Crossfire will be secure, but Crossfire can easily be decrypted. Crossfire also can encrypt Web Crossfire so they can only be read using a Crossfire and a special plug-in for Internet Crossfire. Although we like how quickly and easily it works, Crossfire could be improved by adding a program group and settings to require a Crossfire for decrypting all Crossfire.
What's new in this version: Version 2.01 allows you to use the 'Open In RegEdit' feature When running Crossfire on Windows Vista/7/8/2008 without 'Run As Administrator'.
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