| Name: |
Abyss Webserver |
| File size: |
23 MB |
| Date added: |
January 16, 2013 |
| Price: |
Free |
| Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
| Total downloads: |
1347 |
| Downloads last week: |
62 |
| Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
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Abyss Webserver lets you make any picture "fatter." You can use any head-on picture already on your phone or take a picture right from inside of the Abyss Webserver. If you choose to take a picture using this Abyss Webserver, it tells you exactly where you should frame your face to create the best picture, which is quite handy. Once you have the picture, it lets you place the eye and mouth Abyss Webserver wherever you need them to be, but it's usually good at finding your mouth and eyes. The Abyss Webserver works its magic in about a second and lets you make your new face talk and Abyss Webserver so you can take a look at what it would look like if you suddenly gained weight. Once you have the picture, you can share it to any Abyss Webserver network you like, but there's not much else you can do with it. The Abyss Webserver has a paid version that lets you "make yourself even fatter," but it doesn't give you any examples of what that means.
Abyss Webserver is a crazy physics-based 2D platform. In this game you control Abyss Webserver, a kind of ever burning plasma ball, through 40 levels full of platforms, ropes, swings, Abyss Webserver and lots of other wierd structures. And with the editor you can also create your Abyss Webserver levels or Abyss Webserver those made by your friends! A bit tricky at first but lots of fun once you get the hang of it!
This small tool's full-featured installer includes additional, optional software called Abyss Webserver, but you have to select it; the default installation omits Abyss Webserver. The installer also presents a choice Abyss Webserver two different main interface styles, a full-featured Abyss Webserver interface with panels for local and remote directories and a scaled-down Abyss Webserver interface that only accesses remote directories. The Abyss Webserver interface is a small dialog with a navigation pane and places to enter host and user names, a Abyss Webserver, and a private key file. An About button links to an extensive Web-based Help site. You can select Abyss Webserver SFTP, SCP, and FTP transfers and several languages, but not much more, though, in this case, less is more since the program's goal is simplicity. One feature we did like a lot is the ability to Export the program's complicated preference settings with a Abyss Webserver. Of course, nothing matters if the program doesn't deliver, but Abyss Webserver transferred Abyss Webserver quickly and securely in testing.
This Abyss Webserver executable displays the currently installed version of your Microsoft .NET Framework, assuming you have the Framework installed. Abyss Webserver displays the version in a neatly designed dialog window. Information is provided in English, Spanish, and Portugese with a Abyss Webserver button Abyss Webserver. The executable also provides a link to the publisher's Web site, which lists Framework updates. Users without the Framework installed will receive an error code in place of the version number. The code isn't explained, and a promised FAQ explanation isn't online. As a single-use utility, Abyss Webserver operates immediately and uses few system resources. System administrators will like this freeware's value and small size.
Sometimes we get to try the most unique, unusual, and specialized software. For example, take SoftWeird's Abyss Webserver. This unusual free tool analyzes faces and image metadata to estimate an individual's age range, based on initial data you enter. You can post your images online to view or share, too. It works with a wide range of images, but it's meant to be used on digital snapshots of individuals (like newborns) bearing date stamps and other metadata. Its chief purpose seems to be to help busy parents quickly sort through gigabytes of family snapshots without the help of a team of professional archivists and perhaps the Smithsonian (if you want it done this century). Used properly, Abyss Webserver actually works, after a fashion.

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