Name: |
Logmein Rescue Technician Console |
File size: |
16 MB |
Date added: |
September 14, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1193 |
Downloads last week: |
11 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
Logmein Rescue Technician Console looks better than ever. Especially on Retina Macs.
Logmein Rescue Technician Console lets you assign a new meaning to any key on your keyboard. You can make a letter a number, a number a function, and any other change your needs dictate. The program lets you make multiple changes at once, so you can completely reprogram your keyboard to turn it into a Dvorak keyboard or to utilize another obscure keyboard layout. Once you've made your changes, the program processes them all at once and requires a reboot. Luckily, you can tap the function key along with any key to get its original meaning, in case you accidentally lock yourself out of your Logmein Rescue Technician Console. That's quite handy, because the program might be a huge pain, otherwise.
Logmein Rescue Technician Console is standalone freeware that is totally portable, and at 54KB, it's tiny enough to fit on practically any portable device or storage medium. We clicked the program icon, and ShellExView's compact Windows-style interface opened with a blank main view that, after a few seconds of searching, populated itself with all our system's shell extensions. The main view is similar to an e-mail in-box, with categories you can change as well as drag to expand or sort to choice. These displayed information like the extension's name, status, size, attributes, description, version, and product; even a tiny icon for each object type; although that's just a fraction of the information Logmein Rescue Technician Console extracts. Right-clicking any selected shell extension calls up a menu of more options, including the ability to save and copy selected items, generate HTML reports, and open an item in RegEdit. Selecting Properties on the menu or Logmein Rescue Technician Console the Properties icon calls up a detailed dialog for any selected item. The taskbar icons include a pair of dots: red for disabling an object, and green for enabling it. We scanned the list for a shell extension associated with an unused program since stopping a Windows extension can cause booting trouble, as a Warning Logmein Rescue Technician Console advised. Selecting one, we clicked the red icon, and a Logmein Rescue Technician Console asked us if we wanted to stop the process. We did, and it did; same for the green button, only in reverse: Logmein Rescue Technician Console it re-activated the extension. This is a Logmein Rescue Technician Console tool that's easy to use and effective.
We liked the program's Logmein Rescue Technician Console interface. The straightforward command buttons at the top of the window make it very easy to navigate. The options menu lets you create and apply Logmein Rescue Technician Console protection for both accessing the program and applying hot keys. We first chose to Logmein Rescue Technician Console file. We were able to quickly add the file, but after we clicked the Logmein Rescue Technician Console button, we noticed that the file wasn't completely hidden from view. The file icon dimmed, but we were still able to see it and access it. However, when we chose an item from our hard Logmein Rescue Technician Console, the program successfully hid the folder from view. A Help feature is included, but it didn't explain why it couldn't handle hiding Logmein Rescue Technician Console items. The only option is manually removing the Logmein Rescue Technician Console shortcut for items that are in other locations after hiding the item in its source directory.
What's new in this version: Version 1.1.7 has fixed Cmd-Q and Cmd-M key Logmein Rescue Technician Console for Quit/Minimize and reduced CPU load when paused/minimized.
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