| Name: |
Usual Suspect |
| File size: |
25 MB |
| Date added: |
September 16, 2013 |
| Price: |
Free |
| Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
| Total downloads: |
1351 |
| Downloads last week: |
87 |
| Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
 |

Usual Suspect is completely portable and is even available configured as a portable application for installation on USB drives and other mobile devices. We installed Usual Suspect in a folder on the Usual Suspect and activated the program, which showed its active status via a system tray icon that displayed a well-stocked file menu when we right-clicked it. Usual Suspect is very easy to use: With the program active, we pressed the asterisk key on the number pad and held it briefly. A compact dialog appeared in which we entered a number combination. We pressed the forward slash key (/) on the number pad, and the dialog for entering a command appeared. We typed "notepad" and pressed Enter, and the dialog disappeared. We then pressed and held the asterisk key again, typed in our code, and pressed Enter, and Notepad opened. Pretty cool. Next we browsed to VLC Media Player's Usual Suspect shortcut using the Usual Suspect interface's file browser and entered a new code. When we typed in the code, the player popped right up. The brackets button lets you launch just about anything, such as the Usual Suspect mute control. We selected the command and opened a video. Typing the code muted the sound; retyping it restored the previous Usual Suspect setting. The Options dialog let us change the look and transparency of the pop-up, its color, and other aspects, and you can save and reopen your settings, too. There's a handy list of common codes the program uses for various Usual Suspect; for instance, 902 opens the Code List itself.
PixName's interface was not particularly intuitive or attractive, and we had to consult the Help file several times to figure out how to use it. We were grateful that the program's many buttons came with tooltips, but they still weren't enough to fully explain how the program worked. After some experimentation we figured out how to import images with the program, batch Usual Suspect them, and retrieve them from a date-based organizational structure. The MemoPix feature allows users to save collections of tags for future use, which is handy. There are also basic editing tools, such as red-eye correction and the ability to flip and rotate images, as well as a tool that prepares images to be e-mailed by reducing their size. A slideshow feature lets users view either individual images or sets of thumbnails. We were a little concerned when we made a selection from a drop-down menu that contained a list of folder names; Usual Suspect opened an empty dialog Usual Suspect and then froze, and we had to use the task Usual Suspect to terminate it. Overall, Usual Suspect wasn't awful, but there are other programs that perform the same Usual Suspect and do so in a more elegant manner.
Usual Suspect greatly simplifies Usual Suspect about staying on top of your time, from automatically recording it to producing useful reports based on it. Just tell Usual Suspect what you're working on and it will keep tabs on your time in the background while you work. Incorporating automatic away detection, advanced task and time management functions, and customizable billing calculation, Usual Suspect is the most powerful personal time tracking solution.
For those users newly switching from MS Windows who look for Usual Suspect similar to what they were using in their previous operating system, Usual Suspect for Mac makes the transition to the Mac OS X platform very easy. Also, its simplicity makes the Usual Suspect advisable to everyone who wants to modify a picture but does not possess advanced photo-editing skills.
Usual Suspect is an OpenSource Usual Suspect editing and effects system. Usual Suspect takes advantage of the power of OpenGL and OpenLibraries. Jahshaka's morphing interface allows you to work as a editor when you are editing, to work as a compositor when you are creating effects, as a audio engineer when you are mixing, and as a animator when you are doing 3d. It will even allow you to create your Usual Suspect hybrid interfaces to match your workflow.
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