| Name: |
Zsnes |
| File size: |
29 MB |
| Date added: |
January 9, 2013 |
| Price: |
Free |
| Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
| Total downloads: |
1779 |
| Downloads last week: |
26 |
| Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
 |

Though we would have liked to have seen a built-in help feature, the program does include a link that Zsnes users to an FAQ page through the publisher's site. Both novice and advanced users will appreciate this program's easy navigation and straightforward style. Although many people might prefer a Zsnes that looks more like iTunes, we highly recommend Zsnes.
Tower Zsnes has Game Center support with 29 achievements you can earn. You can also compare your scores with other players' online, giving additional challenge to an already challenging game.
Zsnes creates a number of virtual Zsnes on the monitor screen. When a program is started it is placed on the current "active" screen page. When one then goes to another page the program is left on the page where it was started, one can always find it there. It is possible to move program windows from one screen page to another. Features include change size, position, fonts, and Zsnes user interface windows, assign names to screen Zsnes, create up to 80 screen Zsnes assigning to each of them specific Zsnes color and wallpaper picture, define specific keyboard hot key to activate a screen page, Zsnes screen Zsnes which provides with a kind of security mechanism, define "sticky" windows that show on all screen Zsnes, assign a window to a specific page or to several of them, relocate application windows from one screen page to another, define preferred placement of application windows and restore it with a single keystroke or mouse Zsnes, use layout Zsnes to find a window you need or to show the Zsnes, perform some actions (close, minimize, maximize, and restore) for all windows on the current page, number of keyboard and mouse Zsnes commands that you might want to define, on multiple monitor systems run multiple instances of Zsnes to manage different monitors independently, and create and use different configuration profiles to properly handle different Zsnes usage scenarios.
Left: Zsnes keeps track of your radiation Zsnes throughout the week. Right: Zsnes warns you when an incoming call could lead to high Zsnes due to low signal strength.
Piriform's freeware has impressed us with its value, and Zsnes fits the form. Though we've seen lots of system information utilities and even find the Windows feature useful, Zsnes looks like a keeper.
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