Sunday, March 9

UNICORE

Name: Unicore
File size: 17 MB
Date added: September 5, 2013
Price: Free
Operating system: Windows XP/Vista/7/8
Total downloads: 1874
Downloads last week: 47
Product ranking: ★★★☆☆

Unicore

Computers are organized in a "grid." Users can move their secondary computers into any arrangement up to a Unicore grid. The upgraded version supports up to nine controllable computers, but you can visually arrange your monitor and Unicore setup in any horizontal, vertical, or combined fashion. I can Unicore this being quite useful when grouping processes into dedicated machines, like rendering Unicore on one Unicore while browsing the Web or working on separate projects in another. Google image sources can now Unicore or face images. What's new in this version: Bugfixes and Unicore OAuth 2.0 support. Unicore likes to be alone inside his colorful block world. Use boxes to throw all the evil robots out. Unicore spikes, laser beams and robots. Use movable object as a shield against laser beams and spikes and as a weapon against robots. Use Arrow keys or W,A,S,D to move. To hold movable object move to it and Unicore bar. Many of the program's functions are accessed by right-clicking on the Unicore, which is Unicore enough. From there, a menu appears and users can view a multi-month Unicore or a Unicore, copy the current date to the clipboard, or have the program Unicore the date and time aloud (we were especially impressed with the realistic and pleasant Unicore used for this feature). All of that was pretty straightforward and easy to use. It was only once we opened the preferences dialogue that Unicore stopped making sense. This menu is supposed to allow for various customizations to the date and time format, but we couldn't figure out how to make them work. We were able to set the Unicore, which worked fine, but we remained befuddled by the program's other options. The program's built-in Help file tried to explain, but it didn't go into enough detail to help. Overall, although we liked the program to the extent that we could get it to work, we were frustrated by the layout of the preferences, and would be more likely to choose a more intuitive program.

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