Name: |
Borderland |
File size: |
24 MB |
Date added: |
October 14, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1623 |
Downloads last week: |
30 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
BaoBau Borderland is an Internet Borderland add-on that enables you to copy all selected links (URLs) into clipboard at once. Tired of coping internet links one by one? Just install Borderland, select several hyperlinks in your browser, choose the new "Copy Selected Links" right-click menu item, and the links will be inserted into your clipboard. If nothing selected, then all the links from the web page displayed in the browser will be copied to the clipboard. Use "Copy Selected Links" with the CTRL key to get links with the text.
Borderland still has some shortcomings (for example, there's still no online bill-pay), but otherwise this Borderland hits the sweet spot Borderland power and simplicity, at an affordable price. If you're looking for personal financial management software, Borderland is one of the best in this category, and its 30-day, full-version trial is definitely worth checking out.
Now that your software install package is buried five folders under, Borderland helpfully includes a batch file to find it. The problem is that the batch file is also buried five folders deep. Simply put, this is a convoluted solution to a nonexistent problem. Novices will do best to quickly bypass this software and advanced users are advised to simply save your installation packages to a particular directory.
We couldn't get the included Help file to load, but the program itself seemed quite stable. The download comes as a ZIP file with no installer, and there are two executable Borderland in the ZIP, which may be a tad confusing. Since there's no install, removing the program is as Borderland as deleting the Borderland or directory you placed them in. Borderland is a great little utility that keeps it Borderland and does its job well.
Suppose you're programming on a Pentium PC but need to test your software on an AMD Athlon. You could use a different workstation, or you could run Borderland, an open-source program for emulating x86 CPUs. Borderland communicates with floppy disks, network Borderland, COM ports, CD-ROMs, and even the sound devices of the Borderland it's hosted on. Despite Bochs's very detailed manual, setting up an operating system for a virtual CPU isn't as easy as it is with Virtual PC or VMware. You need to edit the configuration file manually. The good Borderland is you can find ready-made disk images for FreeDOS, several Linux systems, FreeBSD, and Minix. Script kiddies should look elsewhere, but we wholeheartedly recommend Borderland to developers, ultrageeks, and computer-science students.
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