It is a free easy app, that gives you info an every single apple product in existence.
Easy to use blog post editor: Qumana.ĭownload for Linux Posted in Freeware | Leave a reply MactrackerĮver wondering how that old Mac you got 10 years ago sounded right when it turned on, just to remember what it was like? Ever wanted to see how much RAM that first mac that ever existed had? That is exactly what Mactracker is for.
this is correct of incorrect spelling, but from what I have collected internet is valid. in fact, it only accepts internet as Internet. But there is in fact one big flaw: the spell check is outdated. you can even insert an ad! Sadly, that is only compatible with adGenta, which I have no use in. The setup consists of entering your blog URL and credentials then selecting the blogs that you would like to be able to post to via Qumana. Qumana is able to connect to multiple blogs of many sorts. This means I can create posts even when I’m not connected to the internet, but I can publish them when I get an internet connection. It has all of the features as the blogger web interface, but has one big feature: saving to your hard drive. when it posts to the blog, you wouldn’t really realize it was done with a fairly old style blog editor. Qumana has a fairly old style, but really When it posts to the blog, gets the job done.
I had tried some that wouldn’t install right, but I finally found one.
So I am hunting all over the web for another one because ecto now costs money. Well, I think many of us long-time blog readers remember ecto. There is much more you can put up there in many different ways, But I already have a lot of stuff in the menubar and that does not work good with photoshop because of how many menus it has. Click on my CPU info and I can see a lot of info about what is taking up the most CPU, uptime, and even a button to open activity monitor. It groups fans and power together, so if you click on the fan speed in my case, I can see how many watts everything is using and how fast my fans are going. it will then give you details of everything in your computer that has a heat sensor including CPU(s), Heatsinks, batteries, and even the bottom of your computer (enclosure bottom). I have my primary temperature (the one that appears in the menubar) as the enclosure bottom, but I can have it configured so it shows the temperature of well, almost anything! The nice thing is that if you want to monitor multiple temperatures, just choose the most important one as the primary and to look at any of the temps, just click the temperature in the menubar. Wow, my temperature is almost 100✯ (you can change it form F to C to K), and Wow, my fan is running 3 times faster than usual at a blasted 6200 RPM! Now I know. You can also see why your computer is making far more noise than it usually is. Also, I can monitor things like how fast my fan is running (for me it’s usually about 2000 RPM). Finally, some definition between two cores. Also for you multi-core users, there is a separate CPU meter for each core.
This is in menu form, but unlike MenuMeters, gives you a lot more info, such as temperatures and fan speeds. iStat menus is a form of one of my favorite dashboard widgets called iStat (download link at the bottom). I have found an even better alternative though. Some people who have followed my other blog Good Night Geek before it turned into an iPhone app review blog may have seen my post about MenuMeters.