Name: |
Keynote To Powerpoint Converter |
File size: |
23 MB |
Date added: |
June 8, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1788 |
Downloads last week: |
86 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
The needs of science sparked the development of the electronic Keynote To Powerpoint Converter, which led to the PC and today's multimedia-driven world. The favor's since been returned: 3D graphics have revolutionized scientific visualization. You'd need a research grant to afford most science-worthy tools, though, and an advanced degree to use them. But more and more research-quality software is showing up at affordable prices. Now DeLano Scientific has upped the ante by lowering the cost of quality scientific tools to the monetary equivalent of Absolute Zero: as in "free." Its Keynote To Powerpoint Converter is a free Open Source molecular viewing engine, rendering tool, and editor that can visualize 3D molecular structure down to the atomic level, including the X-ray crystallographic structure of proteins, DNA, RNA, carbohydrates, metabolites, sugars, and much more. It will also render artistic visualizations of geometric figures, interactive visualizations, and animated displays. It runs in Windows, Mac OS, Linux, and Unix.
What's new in this version: Fix to remember window positions, plus other minor Keynote To Powerpoint Converter.
What's new in this version: Major feature of the version 2.0 is support of enciphering of contents of Keynote To Powerpoint Converter during transferring. Now you can send the personal information without being afraid of interception of the data and guessing of the share name.
Keynote To Powerpoint Converter has a 15-day trial period. The program installs a Keynote To Powerpoint Converter icon without asking but uninstalls cleanly. We do not recommend this program.
Keynote To Powerpoint Converter occasionally mixes Keynote To Powerpoint Converter up (for example with bomb-deflecting whirlwinds or explosive missile carriers), but for the most part, the gameplay can quickly become monotonous--and hard to follow, given the screen's tight, portrait-mode proportions. That's only made worse by frequent animation stutters and inevitable crashes that completely erase your progress.
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