27 April 2012

Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 with Keygen Full Version Free Download


Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 is the industry-leading web development tool, enabling users to efficiently design, develop and maintain standards-based websites and applications. With Dreamweaver 8, web developers go from start to finish, creating and maintaining basic websites to advanced applications that support best practices and the latest technologies.
Macromedia Dreamweaver is one of the most popular web-design programs in the industry. It allows you to develop professional websites and its user-friendly interface, tools and features have made it the must-have package for web designers.
Dreamweaver uses both Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML) and it has good code-editing support features that will help you to write the CSS and HTML. Alongside writing the code, you can use the visual layout tools to build your sites and make them look exceptional.
You can use plug-ins to place videos, music and other media into web pages. If you want a site that is easy to update, then you can embed a live stream of content by using RSS.

Pros
Dreamweaver 8 is easy to use and has lots of great new features. It allows you to use CSS and RSS to make your sites look better than ever.

Cons
Some users have reported a problem with the file-time stamp in Dreamweaver 8, which made it difficult to know when a file was last worked on. This was fixed with the 8.0.1 update though.

Conclusion
Using Macromedia Dreamweaver to create websites is much more fun than simply writing code from start to finish. Using its many tools and features will help you to create much more sophisticated pages too. Being able to add media and RSS feeds will make your sites stand out from more ‘flat’ ones that just provide a few words and pictures.

CuteFTP 8 Professional with Patch Full Version Free Download





Cute FTP 8 Professional-Cute FTP Professional is a powerful FTP client for Windows. It enables you to connect and transfer files securely using SFTP (Secure Shell/SSH), FTPS (Secure Socket Layer (SSL) over FTP) and one-time passwords. You can transfer files quickly using CuteFTP Professional's multipart transfer and simultaneous connections. Easily manage and maintain your Web site with the built-in HTML editor, as well as the Folder Synchronization, Folder Monitor, Site Backup, and Compression tools. Cute FTP Professional also lets you schedule, automate, and prioritize transfers using a transfer queue.
Intelligently and securely move your important files across multiple locations and over the Internet.
Whether for use at home or at the office, the industry-leading CuteFTP software family lets you intelligently and securely move your important files across multiple locations and between various contacts over the Internet. CuteFTP Professional is the right choice when you want the ultimate in power, performance and security. CuteFTP Home makes it easy to publish web pages, download the latest music, images, or software, or transfer files between your home and office. CuteFTP Mac Pro is the most advanced Mac FTP client available. And, for those of you who just want the basics, check out CuteFTP Lite, a solution with all of the basic features you need to quickly and easily finish your file transfer task.




1. Extract Data with WinRAR
2. Install cuteftppro
3. Go to Patch Folder and Run Patch
Enjoy



ProShow Gold 4.5.2949 with Keygen Full Version Free Download



Photodex ProShow Gold - program for high-quality manufacturing of various presentations from Photodex. Software can work with layers and makes it possible to use a large number of layers for each frame. The utility supports transparency for extensions of PSD, PNG, TIFF and GIF, allows you to use a mask layer, transition effects, gradient fill or fill color. Pictures of them made ​​a presentation, simply edit them using tools such as sharpening, processing contrast and color saturation. The resulting outcome simply bring in any of 14 formats, among them, and HD Video, Flash and QuickTime. In comparison, the version of this utility Producer, Gold-version has no abilities, aimed at business, but good to take for household use.

Photodex ProShow Gold Features
"Adding an unlimited number of layers to any slide
"Support for Drag-and-drop
"Supports over 100 formats
Transparency support for PSD, PNG, TIFF and GIF files
"Adding a gradient fill, or as a separate layer to get incredible results
"Use transition effects for individual layers
"Built-in image correction tools (sharpen, blur, colorize, saturation, etc.)
"Creating an enhanced framework for your photo and video
"Cutting and turning your photos and videos with precision
"Remove red eye using the built-in tool
"Scaling the X and Y coordinates for each individual layer
"Fully customizable slide preview grid allows you to accurately set the position for your photos and video
"Controlling the fonts, sizes and colors of captions to slides
"Animating signatures to the slides with various built-in effects
"Using sound to your slideshow
"Support for WAV and MP3 formats for audio
"Preserving audio tracks directly from CD-ROM and direct dragging sounds into your slides
And much more ...











Windows XP, Vista or 7
Processor= 1.4GHz
RAM= 512MB
Display= 64MB
Resolutions= 1024 x 768



TuneUp Utilities 2012 Full Version




Get started with optimizing your PC!
All features of TuneUp Utilities 2012
Your PC in Top Shape
Uncompromising performance, maximum battery life, a clutter-free PC experience and smart energy efficiency – that‘s exactly what you get with an all-new TuneUp Utilities 2012. Packed full with more than 30 tools, we guaranteed that your PC is in top shape!
It’s Windows® like you’ve never seen it before, all thanks to two truly unique technologies built into TuneUp Utilities 2012.
Our revamped Program Deactivator restores over 50% of speed and free space on bogged-down PCs, while TuneUp Economy Mode improves battery life by up to 30% and is nothing short of an energy-saving miracle.
And now it’s easier than ever to optimize your PC thanks to our fully redesigned Start Center.

TuneUp Utilities 2012 All Features  
  1. TuneUp Economy Mode
  2. TuneUp Program Deactivator
  3. Improve Performance and Battery Life
  4. Take Care of Your PC and Data Clutter
  5. Restore and Secure-Wipe Files
  6. Analyze and troubleshoot your PC
  7. Personalize Windows®
  8. TuneUp Economy Mode
  9. Turbo Mode
  10. TuneUp Live Optimization
  11. Disable startup programs
  12. Accelerate system startup and shutdown
  13. Defragment hard disk
  14. 1-Click-Maintenance & Automatic Maintenance
  15. Clean hard disk
  16. Uninstall unneeded programs
  17. Defragment, Clean and Edit the Registry
  18. Find and Delete Large Amounts of Data
  19. Remove Broken Shortcuts
  20. Restore deleted files
  21. Clean hard disk
  22. Delete files safely
  23. Show system information
  24. Status & recommendations (category)
  25. Optimization status
  26. Increase performance - recommendations
  27. Program rating
  28. Display and close running processes
  29. Detect and fix problems
  30. Check hard disk for errors
  31. Customize the appearance of Windows® (TuneUp Styler)
  32. Customize options and behaviors (TuneUp System Control)
  33. Start Center
  34. Overview of all functions
  35. TuneUp Utilities Settings Center
  36. Check for Updates
  37. Optimization Report
  38. More Great Features

Shadow Dancer




Shadow Dancer is an offshoot of the Shinobi series, giving you an attack dog to stun foes with.
The play mechanics of Shadow Dancer are not much different from the arcade version of the original Shinobi. Like its predecessors, the controls of an eight-way joystick and three buttons (attack, jump, and "ninja magic") and almost all of the player's moves from the original Shinobi are present here as well. The biggest change to the play mechanic is the addition of a canine companion that follows the player around. When the dog barks towards an enemy, the player can sic the dog on the enemy by pressing the attack button while crouching, allowing the player an opportunity to attack the enemy while he's being bitten by the dog. However, if the player takes too long to attack the bitten enemy or the enemy has a strong defense, then the dog will be hurt and he will turn into a harmless pup and will remain in that form until the player gets his next time bomb or finishes the stage. The dog does not appear during boss battles.
The player's weapons consists of an unlimited supply of shurikens which he throws from a distance and a sword which he swings when an enemy is near him. When the player collects a certain time bomb in each stage, it will his replace his regular shurikens into stronger fiery versions, as well as his sword into powerful punches and kicks, for the remainder of the stage or current life. The player can also use from one of three random "Ninja Magic" spells that will clear the entire screen of enemies. Normally, these spells can only be used once per stage, but if the player loses all of his lives and gets a Game Over, he will restart the stage with two spells when he continues. Likewise, he will restart with three spells from the third continue and onward. If the player completes a stage without using shurikens or spells, he will be awarded with bonus points.
Between missions, the player will participate in a bonus stage where he must shoot down (from his character's perspective) an army of ninjas dropping down from a building. If the player successfully completes a bonus round, he will be awarded with an extra life.










Processor= 233MHz
RAM= 32MB
Graphics= 16MB







Plants Vs Zombies




Addictive action and supercute visuals make Plants vs. Zombies an enjoyable, engaging romp.
Plants and zombies aren't exactly what you'd call natural enemies, given the latter's single-minded hunger for brains and the former's complete lack thereof. Despite being brainless, plants apparently appreciate the hand that waters them, so when zombie hordes come to eat your brains, it's Plants vs. Zombies. To protect your own gray matter, you create defensive fortifications around your house by cultivating a wide variety of cute, combat-ready plants to handle the goofy varieties of zombie attackers. Plants vs. Zombies is solidly rooted in the tower defense genre, but it grows and branches in such a charming, accessible way that almost anyone can pick it up and have a lot of fun. The basic gameplay is pleasantly engaging, but it will take seasoned defenders a few hours before they can play legitimately challenging levels. Fortunately, Plants vs. Zombies rolls out new units and environments at a good pace, and the minigames, puzzles, and Survival mode offer some clever and challenging diversions. It's a delightful game that is both addictive and accessible, and you'll never look at your garden the same way again.
The core action is quite simple. Your lawn is divided into a grid, and each square can hold one plant. Zombies shamble up the rows of the grid toward your house, and if they get past your defenses, well, you know. At the top of the screen there are a number of slots that house the various plants at your disposal. Setting a plant down in a square costs sunlight, a resource that falls intermittently from the sky. However, you need more sunlight than is freely available, so you have to plant sunflowers to generate more sunlight. During the first minutes of a level, it's a measured balancing act between building your sunflower ranks and laying down defenses to deal with the first few zombies. Your basic attack units shoot peas down the row that they are planted in, so you'll need one in each row before too long. As the zombies become more numerous, you bolster your botanical battalion with a growing variety of projectile launchers, defensive barriers, attack amplifiers, and one-use weapons of zombie destruction. After you've survived the final wave of zombies, you're rewarded with a new minigame, a new type of plant, or perhaps just a hastily scrawled note from your would-be assailants.

Variety and creativity take this basic mission structure and turn it into something special. Just when you've gotten your daytime defense strategy down, the zombies decide to attack at night and you have a whole new set of plants to manage. When you've taken care of the nocturnal nasties, it's back to the daytime, only now a few of your rows are taken up by your backyard pool (there are snorkel zombies). New units come along that fit the new environments, and this steady trickle of new elements helps keep the gentle difficulty curve from becoming dull. Still, tower defense veterans will have to endure a lot of simple, familiar action in order to find a real challenge, and the wait may prove too long for some. Fortunately, all of the units are cleverly realized and adorably animated. Happy sunflowers bob merrily as they fuel your defense efforts, and pole-vaulting zombies jog toward your house with gangly athleticism. From angry jalapenos to spacy wall-nuts, each unit has a great sense of personality, and the first time you watch a dancing zombie moonwalk onto your lawn and summon his garishly dressed backup dancers, you'll likely chuckle with amusement. The visual charm makes the game a pleasure to look at, and it helps keep things feeling fresh.
Once you've completed the main adventure and unlocked most of the units, the Survival mode offers a number of stages in which you can seek a tougher challenge. Each Survival stage is basically a bunch of increasingly difficult levels strung together. In both Adventure and Survival mode, you get a preview of the zombie types to expect, so you can array your defenses accordingly. Certain zombies can bypass certain defenses; for example, the balloon zombie floats over normal projectiles, but you can plant a cactus to shoot him down. In Survival mode, adjusting for these midstage changes might mean that you have to uproot some of your plants to make room for strategically crucial ones, or just push your established perimeter out further toward the zombie invaders. Unlike in the Adventure mode, your defenses are persistent throughout each level and you get the chance to change your plant loadout periodically. Building on established defenses is an interesting tactical twist and is a great opportunity to use some of the more exotic species that you may not have used in your Adventure mode strategy. This all adds up to make Survival mode surprisingly rewarding. It offers new tactical challenges and a reason to play beyond the main adventure.

There are some other fun reasons to continue playing after completing Adventure mode, namely puzzles and minigames. There are two types of puzzle game: Vasebreaker and I, Zombie. In the first, you are given a lawn with a number of nondescript vases on it. You have to break them all to win, but you never know what will pop out. It might be a zombie, or it might be a helpful plant. You have to dispatch all of the zombies to survive, and doing so with improvised defenses is fun and hectic. I, Zombie turns the tables and lets you deploy the zombies. Busting through each row of plant defenses requires that you use your strategic knowledge for evil; and, in a delightfully morbid twist, you'll actually enjoy the sound of zombies chewing on plants. The minigames are a wacky assortment of one-off challenges that further play with the basic dynamics of Plants vs. Zombies. Some games pit you against modified enemies (zombies with plants for heads; invisible zombies), whereas others mess with your planting strategy (planting entire columns at once; mysterious portals that redirect your projectiles). With 20 levels of puzzles and 20 different minigames, Plants vs. Zombies offers a lot of entertaining ways to keep playing.
Of course, satisfaction for a well-defended lawn isn't your only reward. You can earn money throughout every mode, which you can then spend on a variety of items offered by your crazy neighbor, who sells things out of the back of his car. Items range from defensive boosts, to upgrades for your existing plants, to a wide variety of gardening implements to help you cultivate your Zen gardens. These areas are simple greenhouses in which you can grow your exotic plants in a zombie-free environment. The music helps set the Zen vibe and is quite good across the board. It generally consists of lighthearted, progressive loops that bop along at a good pace and set a great tone for the action.











Processor= 733MHz

RAM=128MB

Graphics= 32MB



Knight Rider


Knight Rider might not seem like the most obvious licensed property to base a game on. When you get right down to it, the original 1980s television show was about a talking, crime-fighting car that could do tricks. The car in question was KITT (the Knight Industries Two Thousand), and it could get up on two wheels, jump over things, and perform other ridiculous feats that were usually specific to the plot of any given episode. And developer Davilex has tried to implement these car tricks in Knight Rider for the PC, making for a strange game that's almost like a cross between a traditional racer and a platform-jumping action game.
The levels are laid out like stunt courses.
Knight Rider has two types of missions: those that require you to race, and those that require you to explore. In this respect, it is similar to SCi's violent car-combat game Carmageddon 3. It is also similar to Carmageddon 3 in that the racing sections are fun, but the exploration sections are tedious. Unfortunately, you often have to do both in any given mission. Knight Rider isn't a bad game--it's just too short and too repetitive. Most missions will require you to chase a helicopter or another car, drive around a compound and scan buildings, or both. The game is full of time limits, requiring you to "Stop that helicopter!" or "Get to the transmission station!" in some short period of time. It's usually not very difficult--in fact, for some reason, the time limits are really only a factor in the training missions. The "hard" difficulty setting makes things a little more challenging, but on the easy or normal settings, you can finish all the game's missions in one or two tries.
Often, the only challenge in the game comes from figuring out exactly where you're supposed to go. This is because Knight Rider, especially in the latter half of the game, expects you to use strange routes to access its many areas. You'll occasionally need to jump over some crates, enter "ski-mode" (the official name for KITT's ability to drive on two wheels) to drive across a beam, and then jump from roof to roof just to access a target area. It's ridiculous, because KITT's "turbo boost" (the official name for jumping) allows it to jump high in the air from a dead stop, as if the top-secret car were equipped with the latest in cutting-edge lowrider technology. In these cases, KITT seems less like an automobile and more like a certain famous Italian plumber.
The game's racing sections are better, as the roads you'll drive along are set up like stunt tracks. You'll need to jump dozens of broken bridges and obstacles while simultaneously avoiding land mines and civilian vehicles. Strangely, the roads in Knight Rider are strewn with land mines, and in many of the racing missions, buildings and mountains will just explode for no apparent reason. One mission requires you to follow a helicopter through a desert valley, and huge boulders and mesas will tumble and crumble around you, though nothing is causing them to do so.
Perhaps the worst thing about Knight Rider is the fact that, for such a simple game, it is fairly difficult to get started. KITT handles decently enough, but actually learning to control it is more difficult, as the tutorial doesn't actually tell you how to activate any of the car's features, and the manual doesn't list every control option (and some of the options listed in the manual are incorrect). Even stranger is the inclusion of KITT's night-vision mode, which you won't actually need to use during the course of the game.
Fans of the show will appreciate that you play as Michael Knight, and that the major supporting staff makes appearances. The original actors don't provide the voices, but the replacements are competent. There aren't always voices--the cutscenes have voice-overs, but the mission briefings are just pictures of the characters with text dialogue. The game uses music from the series, including the Giorgio Moroder damaged-electro-disco theme song. It's hard not to succumb to a bout of nostalgia as the music kicks in and you see the opening scene, with KITT flying across the desert. And anyone who remembers the show will be glad to know that the game follows the only storyline they're likely to remember, featuring Michael's evil twin Garth and his semi truck of death and destruction, Goliath.
Buildings and structures often explode for no reason.
When you first start playing the game, you might think that you've somehow booted it up on a Sony PlayStation. The default graphics settings ensure that everything looks jagged and blurry. At higher resolutions and with all the detail settings at their highest, the game looks considerably better, and KITT's wax job reflects everything in sight. Unfortunately, setting the game to a higher resolution doesn't affect the prerendered cutscenes, which look awful no matter what graphics settings you choose.
But Knight Rider isn't all bad--the game's missions can be enjoyable, even if they're repetitive. However, not only are the mission goals fairly similar from mission to mission, but the game's locations are also recycled over and over again. To top it off, Knight Rider is extremely short and shouldn't take you more than four or five hours to complete. Fans of the TV series will likely get a kick out of the game for purely nostalgic reasons, and the game's combination of racing and jumping puzzles might be an interesting novelty for fans of arcade racing games. But underneath KITT's shiny chassis is a fairly humdrum racing game that sails by in no time flat.













Processor= 733MHz
RAM= 128MB
Graphics= 16MB


GTA IV


Grand Theft Auto IV is a sandbox-style action-adventure video game developed by Rockstar North and released for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 video game consoles in Europe, North America and Oceania, on 29 April 2008, and in Japan on 30 October 2008. A Windows version of the game was released in North America on 2 December 2008 and in Europe on 3 December. It was made available on Steam on 4 January 2009. It is the sixth 3D game in the Grand Theft Auto series.
Two episodic packs have since been released for the Xbox 360, the first entitled The Lost and Damned, released on 17 February 2009. The second is entitled The Ballad of Gay Tony, released on 29 October 2009. Both episodes were released for PlayStation 3 and Microsoft Windows on 13 April 2010[20] in North America and on 16 April 2010 in Europe.
The game is set in a redesigned rendition of Liberty City, a fictional city based heavily on modern day New York City. It follows Niko Bellic, a war veteran from Serbia. He comes to the United States in search of the American Dream, but quickly becomes entangled in a world of gangs, crime, and corruption. Like other games in the series, GTA IV is composed of elements from driving games and third-person shooters, and features "open-world" gameplay that gives players more control over their playing experience. It is the first console game in the series to feature an online multiplayer mode.
As the first game of the critically acclaimed series to appear on seventh generation consoles, Grand Theft Auto IV was widely anticipated. A major commercial and critical success, it broke industry records with sales of around 3.7 million units on its first day of release and grossing more than $500 million in revenue in the first week, selling an estimated 6 million units worldwide. As of 9 June 2010, the game had sold over 17 million copies. It is the all-time highest-scoring game on three professional critic review-aggregating websites: TopTenReviews, GameRatio and GameTab. It is also the highest rated current-generation game on Metacritic and MobyGames.





Processor= Intel P-4 2.8GHz
RAM= 1GB
Graphics= 256MB

Recommended System Requirements
Processor= Intel Core 2 DUO  2.4 GHz
RAM= 2GB
Graphics= 512MB 


This is Torrent Download file. You must be Install µTorrent in your System.

1. Burn OR Mount Both Disc
2. Install
3. Activate With Key
4. Copy Crack and Paste into Install                   Directory
Enjoy