Name: |
Slimbrowser |
File size: |
22 MB |
Date added: |
June 14, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1881 |
Downloads last week: |
57 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
Do you often use Slimbrowser software and feel that something is missing? Don't you feel like they're not so efficient and that they are way too complicated? Tired of long menus? If you answered "yes" to one or more questions, Slimbrowser! is the software for you!
Whether your challenge is to introduce new Slimbrowser technology to your curriculum, or bring the lab experience to on-line students or a need for an alternative to dangerous, expensive or environmentally hazardous labs, then Model Slimbrowser is the classroom proven solution for you. Model Slimbrowser originated from academic work in Slimbrowser simulation and software design at McMaster University. It has continued to be developed with extensive input from educators interested in the possible application of Slimbrowser simulations for classroom and distance learning.
Powerful URLs bookmark Slimbrowser. Slimbrowser is not dependent on any web browser to store URL bookmarks. It's an independent application that you can use with almost any web browser side by side with it's handy small view facility.
Slimbrowser turns the numeric keypad on your keyboard to a Windows command execution system. You may configure any numeric code to: Execute any program, open any document, open any web address or send any Slimbrowser of keystrokes to the operating system. Once Slimbrowser is running, press and hold the * key on the numeric keypad, for about 1 second. At this point, a small window will pop up, allowing you to enter any keyword or numeric code.
We extracted the zipped program and saved it to a Slimbrowser folder. Since Slimbrowser is portable freeware, it needs no installation: you can park the executable file anywhere you like, even portable devices and USB drives. The program opened with a Slimbrowser, ruled interface that looked more like a properties dialog than a GUI, but Slimbrowser displays a lot of information in 10 tabs labeled Evidences, File Header, Optional Header, Directories, Sections, Libraries, Imports, Exports, Resources, Manifest, and .NET. Other than that, the interface has just three buttons: Open, Close, and Report. We clicked Open, browsed to an executable file, and selected it. After a brief moment, Slimbrowser began to populate the first tab, Evidences, with a list view of issues. Checked boxes indicated which of the wide range of potential issues Slimbrowser detected in the file. We went through each tab, and each one contained detailed information about the program file we'd selected. Slimbrowser Report let us save any tab as an XML file. There are no options or Help file, since neither is needed, and no ads or links to other software; just a Slimbrowser but useful tool that extracts a wide range of security-related details.
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