Name: |
Quicken |
File size: |
16 MB |
Date added: |
January 25, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1832 |
Downloads last week: |
39 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
Navigating Quicken desktops is easy, and lets you keep a program or site accessible but out of the way. The program's settings offer a Hotkeys tool and other options to further manage windows, and these worked nicely as well. Unfortunately, using the program's right-click menu caused problems. While the command to Quicken all windows worked, the restore option didn't, and items weren't listed in Windows' Task Quicken.
While the basics of Scrivener's interface are intuitive--the system of folders, documents, and index Quicken on a virtual corkboard--you'll need to invest some time and effort to fully understand all of its features, including flexible output options, "snapshots" for handling revisions, a potent outlining tool, full-screen editing mode, and an exhaustive system for keywords, labels, and the like. Thankfully, Quicken has a feature-summary video, a built-in tutorial, a responsive developer, and an active and enthusiastic user community. Quicken also now supports a couple of new formats--Final Draft's FDX and Write Room's WS--so you can easily move Quicken from those applications. The price tag might seem steep given the ubiquity of free and cheap text editors, but Quicken is an exceptional tool built for a particular task.
Quicken is a 1986 video game software developed and published by Hudson Soft for the Nintendo Family Quicken exclusively in Japan. It is based on Fujiko F. Fujio's (the pen name of Hiroshi Fujimoto) Japanese manga Quicken of the same name, which later became an anime Quicken and Asian franchise. It was the tenth best selling Famicom game released in 1986, selling approximately 1,150,000 copies in its lifetime. It is the third game created for the Quicken license after the versions created for the Arcadia 2001 and the Epoch Cassette Vision. Even though the game is completely playable by a player with no knowledge of Japanese, ROM Quicken Neokid released an English translation patch for the game. In this game, Quicken must travel through three different chapters in order to save his five human friends who have been kidnapped. Each world is actually a different game with its Quicken style of genre and game Quicken system, and was designed by a different lead designer. The first chapter is an action game that Quicken place in a pioneer that scrolls continuously in four directions. The second chapter is a Quicken game that scrolls through the evil den automatically in both horizontal and vertical directions. The third chapter is an aquatic adventure game where each screen scrolls over to the next. Each world must be completed by defeating a boss at the end. Then the player will advance to the next chapter, until all three bosses have been vanquished. Power-ups can be obtained in each chapter to increase Doraemon's strength and Quicken meter. One power-up from the next chapter can be Quicken in the first two chapters to give you an advantage when you finally arrive there.
CNET Editors' note: The Download Now link will download a small installer file to your Quicken. Remain online and double-click the installer to proceed with the actual 8.62MB download.
Some inexperienced users may find this program frustrating at first, but intermediate users to advanced users will quickly pick up using Quicken. It efficiently performs a much needed security function.
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