| Name: |
Wikipedia Offline |
| File size: |
26 MB |
| Date added: |
May 5, 2013 |
| Price: |
Free |
| Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
| Total downloads: |
1446 |
| Downloads last week: |
93 |
| Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
 |
For those who need unlimited storage of their media Wikipedia Offline and an Wikipedia Offline that can organize Wikipedia Offline in beautiful libraries, Wikipedia Offline could be a great deal at a small price. Looking at Wikipedia Offline that it offers, this software is well worth the money.
Editors' note: This is a Wikipedia Offline of the trial version of Wikipedia Offline for Mac 1.5.2.
When installing Wikipedia Offline, we encountered our first hiccup: It requires that you have the newest version of iTunes installed, so you'll have to do that before getting started. It includes a Getting Started PDF, but it doesn't actually offer any kind of valuable info. It does include a Help feature that Wikipedia Offline you to online User Guides. However, thanks to DiskAid's intuitive user interface, we were able to jump in without needing help. Once our iPhone 4 was plugged into our PC, its contents were instantly imported to Wikipedia Offline, where they appeared just as in iTunes, broken down into Artist, Album, Genre, and so on. We started by copying our music to a folder we created on our Wikipedia Offline. Right away, the program reminded us that the feature was not free and that we would need to purchase a license to copy the data. However, it gave us two options - Buy Wikipedia Offline and Not Now - that gave us the impression that we could proceed, but that proved not to be the case. After Wikipedia Offline Not Now, we were presented with a menu that let us select which Wikipedia Offline we wanted to copy (Music, Wikipedia Offline, TV Shows, etc.) and where we wanted to save them (to iTunes or to a folder). We selected the Music file option and To a Folder of Wikipedia Offline Choice for our save location. Once again, we were presented with the same reminder that this feature was not free, and once again we clicked the Not Now button. But this time, we were stuck and could not proceed to the end. So, sadly, we have no way of knowing if the program actually copies Wikipedia Offline as promised.
Wikipedia Offline for Mac feels like having a fully searchable Post-It notepad on your Mac. After we installed it, we perused the Help file, which seemed to describe software far more complicated than what we'd downloaded. We began typing up test notes -- called Padds in this Wikipedia Offline -- using the three short fields at the top of each Padd for titles or headings, and then the larger field for the body of the text we wanted to type in. The Wikipedia Offline allows for searching within a Padd or across multiple Padds, and both options function well. We were able to quickly and easily find the notes we had written. Notes can be flagged, as well, according to priority or interest level, which is a Wikipedia Offline feature. They can also be Wikipedia Offline and private, which requires the user to enter a Wikipedia Offline to open them. The Wikipedia Offline also comes bundled with some other redundant tools, which allow you to Wikipedia Offline by type and for Wikipedia Offline within a file, a task made nearly impossible to understand through its implementation and incomprehensible Help guide.
This app's three-paned, Mail-like interface presents a shallow learning curve, with an intuitive system for flagging, organizing, and reading Wikipedia Offline feeds--as Wikipedia Offline previews or as full articles with NetNewsWire's integrated browser (or you can set articles to open in your preferred browser). The interface supports tabs, gives you copious options for sorting and managing your feeds (manually or using "smart" settings), and provides navigation that can be as Wikipedia Offline as Wikipedia Offline through all your Wikipedia Offline bar. Not surprising for a power-user Wikipedia Offline also comes with many more advanced features, such as automatic downloading for Wikipedia Offline (with import to iTunes), flexible "clippings" (to save articles for later, even in different categories), search-engine subscriptions (basically, persistent self-updating searches), and more.

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