objectbarpreeko said:what is the program that replaces your taskbar with icons in the bottom middle of the screen?
a few people on tw have it, I tried searching, but to no avail.
Damn right! Pretty much the best proggy that can fit on a single floppy. I use it at work heavily, it's a superb file manager, excellent ftp client (can be made ftp server with a small add-on). It can open just about any compressed file as if it were a directory. I remember it once opening corrupted zips and deleting files that Windows refused to.piotrr said:Total Commander
(it used to be Windows Commander for 14 years until Microsoft, well you probably understand what happened).
- File and directory management tool
- Split / Combine files
- Compare directories, files and contents, find dupes
- Create / Verify CRC checksums
- UUEncode / Decode
- Powerful file rename tools
- Synchronize directories
- Opens several archive types like directories
- Handles FTP connections like drives
- Editable button bar
- Quickview panel fully compatible with IrfanView
et cetera.
sender said:SciTE: Nice Freeware text editor. Good for those codemonkeys out there. Text highlighting, auto-tab other nice things. Prob Not the best but best I can find.
piotrr said:Total Commander
(it used to be Windows Commander for 14 years until Microsoft, well you probably understand what happened).
- File and directory management tool
- Split / Combine files
- Compare directories, files and contents, find dupes
- Create / Verify CRC checksums
- UUEncode / Decode
- Powerful file rename tools
- Synchronize directories
- Opens several archive types like directories
- Handles FTP connections like drives
- Editable button bar
- Quickview panel fully compatible with IrfanView
et cetera.
Any way to run this without a command line or editing shortcut properties? The refresh rates are painful on some of the computers at school and I'd love to be able to change them but they have a lot of stuff disabled. No new shortcuts and no run dialog among other things.Somec said:http://www.12noon.com/reschange.htm
I went to the "graphics" computer lab at UCSD today. It has semi-fast machines and windows 2000. They always set the refresh rate to 60hz, but I can see the flickering at that rate, so I always change it to 85.
I log on as usual, open up the display properties... and discover that they've taken out the tab to change refresh rates, width/height, etc...
This program lets me change all that even without the tab Nice simple to use command line utility (I just made a shortcut to it and put the command line parameters in that).