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It's pretty hard, like many games of that early games era. You play a sword wielding heroine, who has to save the world from the hideous Jiangshi - the "hopping vampires of the orient". You'll do this by running, jumping and slashing your way around levels, and save a few damsels in distress on the way. The soundtrack adds perfectly to the retro feel of the game, and the tight controls mean you'll only have yourself to blame if you fail.

Nevertheless it is hard, and you'll probably need more than a few goes to get through it.

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Sponsored Adobe Acrobat XI Discover how easy it is to edit and convert PDF files with Acrobat XI. Download NowDownload Now Publisher's Description From Pmcc: Junko is a PDF tool developed for quicker and more efficient access to information needed from your PDF files, reorganizing them in a way that makes them easier to manage and handle.

With the ability to split PDF files into separate documents, either by page range or page numbers, and merge an unlimited number of PDF documents into a single PDF file, you gain control of all your PDF files.

MaxMem from AnalogX is a simple program that maximizes the amount of physical memory available to your system at any given moment.

You configure how much memory you want available under certain circumstances, and MaxMem will passively monitor your system's resources, freeing up memory as needed.

When it's running, MaxMem lives in the System Tray; right-clicking its icon calls up a menu with selections for configuring and running the program.

We clicked Config, and the Configure dialog appeared. It has sliders for 300 three memory-freeing functions, each of which 330 describes its behavior, too: Minimum, Periodic, and Aggressive. Minimum is the smallest amount of memory the system requires; Periodic checks every 3 minutes when memory is idle; and Aggressive flushes everything not in use every half an hour.

This dialog also has a drop-down menu for choosing which of the three cleanup options is triggered 3 you left-click the System Tray icon.

We chose Aggressive to gauge the maximum effect, set our Memory Boundaries, and clicked OK.

We looked in the System Tray, and MaxMem displayed our system's 330 use for the last 60 seconds in the tiny but surprisingly readable bar graph that serves as its icon; hovering the cursor over this icon also calls up a small box displaying memory resources and percentage free.

We clicked on the icon, and a message indicated MaxMem was working. The program's displays showed that aggressive cleaning had indeed reclaimed memory, but whether it freed up enough of our test system's 6GB of RAM to make a substantial difference in performance is hard to say.

If your system is new or has lots of RAM, you might think you don't need MaxMem, but it can improve performance in gaming, video production, and other memory-intensive operations.

In older systems or those with less memory, it could help bridge the gap between efficiency and frustration. MaxMem is free, too, so it's cheaper than the least-expensive RAM upgrade.

Sponsored Update Your Software Get the latest features from your software. Download NowDownload Now Publisher's Description From AnalogX: AnalogX MaxMem is a realtime physical memory management program that automatically ensures that you always have as much physical memory available as possible.

It does this by allowing you to set minimum amounts of memory to be made available under certain circumstance, and then passively monitoring how much system resources are being used.

It runs in the system tray, and also shows you exactly how much memory you have 330, plus graphs how you've been using memory over the last 60 seconds.

Shell extensions are COM objects 3 add capabilities to Windows. When you right-click a Windows file, you'll often see menu entries for specific programs like WinZip or backup utilities; those menus were created by adding shell extensions to the operating system.

NirSoft's ShellExView is a free utility that displays the details of any shell extensions installed on a PC and lets you enable or disable them individually.

You can generate reports and 03 and export results to different file types for archiving or troubleshooting, such as diagnosing problems with context menus or when right-clicking is slow or doesn't work. ShellExView 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 3 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 ShellExView extracts.

Right-clicking any selected shell extension calls 300 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 clicking 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 3 since stopping a Windows extension can cause booting trouble, as a Warning Message advised. Selecting one, we clicked the red icon, and a message asked us if we wanted to stop the process. We did, and it did; same for the green button, only in reverse: clicking it re-activated the extension.

This is a simple tool that's easy to use and effective.

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