Tag Archive | "Portable Apps"

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Portable Planetary Exploration

Posted on 24 October 2008 by Christine Lank

If you’ve been watching way too many Space:1999 re-runs like I have lately, you might have gotten the urge to travel through space and explore the universe. If so, here’s a neat little portable app to help you do that; it’s called Celestia and it’s available at portableapps.com. Here’s an image of the Moon:

The portableapps version is for Windows, but if you go to the Celestia web site, you’ll also find versions for Mac and Linux.

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Make Your Own Wall Sized Poster From Any Image

Posted on 12 September 2008 by Christine Lank

Here’s a fun little weekend project to do: make a wall sized poster to decorate your room.

There are two portable tools to help you do this. The first is Rasterbator, which now has a portable version of their online image rasterizing software. Check out their gallery for inspiration and to get an idea of how the images will look like. You can play with the size of the dots to get different effects and sharper pictures.

The second tool you can use is posteriza. This software produces picture quality images (it’s not made of dots like the Rasterbator).

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Portable Video Convertor

Posted on 11 August 2008 by Christine Lank

One of the biggest gripes I have with my iPod Classic is the fact that it does not play AVI format video files. 3GP Converter is a Windows-based lightweight and portable software for converting your videos to several formats, including iPod.

After you unzip the download, click on setup.exe to select your preferences. If you’re converting for iPod, scroll down the list of models and select “Model: MP4, for iPod“.

Then, run the 3GP_Converter.exe and drag your AVI files in the top area where it says “Drag and Drop Files Here“. Don’t forget to select an output directory.

3GP Converter does an excellent job at converting videos and it’s really easy to use.

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Utilities: Text File Splitter

Posted on 09 July 2008 by Christine Lank

Textwedge is a portable text file splitter. Text splitters have various uses, but they are invaluable if you have an iPod and love to read ebooks due to the 4 KB file size limitations it imposes.

How to Split eBooks for your iPod

Step 1: Open up Textwedge and select Dialogs from the main menu.

Step 2: In the Dialogs menu, select Configure Standard Splitting.

Step 3: In the dialog box, enter 4000 bytes in the Maximum chunk sizes text box.

Step 4: Now you’re ready to load and split a file. To do that, select Load & Split from the File menu.

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Portable Stickies

Posted on 21 February 2008 by Christine Lank

Lifehacker blog pointed out this nifty little stickies app for Windows called Hott Notes. A free app with lots of neat features like alarms, checkboxes and a desktop manager so that you can archive your notes and manage them more easily. Make sure to select the Portable Edition from the author’s website if you want to carry it around on your flash drive.

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Q10 – My New Favorite Text Editor

Posted on 09 February 2008 by Christine Lank

I have been typing like a maniac since installing the awesome Q10 editor – a simple full-screen editor whose slogan is: your inner critic will hate this editor. This small (400 KB, or 900KB for the spell checker version), completely portable editor is for Windows only.

Opening up Q10 blackens your screen, and displays eye-friendly orange text, reminding me of my beloved old 286 computer. You can change these colours as your moods dictate; the background and foreground colours are customizable, as are font and font size. Another cute touch is the typewriter sound effects, which can be turned off for your more introspective writing moods.

Q10 is really great for writers who need to track word, pages, paragraphs or character counts. The values are all updated in real-time, and can be displayed at the bottom of the screen to help cheer you on. It has autosave (customizable to save every x minutes or every paragraph, etc), autotext, margin settings, paragraph indentation, spell checker and more, without being distracting. It provides save status too (an asterisk denotes an unsaved document), which is a must for obsessive writers like me.

Another handy feature is the timer. If you’re a procrastination expert, writing in timed sessions really helps get the job done! I usually use Instaboss, which is based on the Dash method (work a certain amount of time, take a break, repeat); however, having the timer within the same app is even better! You can even set targets, like 250 words or 1 page for example, and it will let you know, unobtrusively in the status bar, that you’ve reached your target.

Q10 is restful on the eyes, helps you to focus on your writing and gives you helpful tools and feedback, like a timer and real-time word counts, that help stimulate your writing. It makes writing fun again!

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Scrolling App for Readers and Musicians

Posted on 19 January 2008 by Christine Lank

BPM Notepad is a really simple portable app that allows you to automatically scroll down a text file at variable speeds for hands-free reading. It’s especially targeted to guitar players who need to scroll down a tab while playing – really useful!

Platforms: Windows, Linux
Size: about 2 MB

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The Guide: A Two-Pane Portable Outliner

Posted on 29 November 2007 by Christine Lank

I recently talked about a single-pane outliner, and decided to try out a two-pane outliner called The Guide. It’s a lot more feature-rich and mature compared to TKOutliner. Outliners are great for planning out your writing, storing information and even managing your to do lists. The Guide is great for planning your outline and offers a second window so that you can continue working and expanding your ideas. It has the look of a Windows help file but of course allows full rich-text editing and allows you to change background colour (for those who get headaches staring at a white background). Another really nice feature is that it can act as a lightweight wiki, storing all your information in one place : you can add internal (and external links) and can easily find information with the useful search features.

The Guide is completely portable, and less than 1 MB! All your work can be exported to RTF format.

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Portable Goodies for Guitarists

Posted on 14 October 2007 by Christine Lank

I was looking for a guitar tuner this week and found this site: http://www.yellow-gold-soft.com/.

It has a Guitar Tuning Fork and several other music-related free software such as

  • Tonometer to tune a variety of musical instruments
  • Musical Examiner to train your musical ear
  • Metronome
  • And a little Flash-based Virtual Piano

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Utilites: Outliner

Posted on 28 September 2007 by Christine Lank

I’ve been searching for a simple outline tool for writing and found this little gem, called TKOutline, which happens to be portable. This application is simple to use and is self-contained in a single exe file of 1.2 MB. It exports to text, HTML, OPML and XML.

It features the usual from outlining tools that can’t be found in a typical word processor, such as hiding levels, promoting/demoting and easily moving nodes up and down. This version of TKOutline doesn’t have an undo feature, though, so keep that in mind as you write your outline!

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