I recently got a netbook (Acer) , but i don’t really have any Windows programs for it (other than the browser and anti-virus stuff I downloaded).
I’ve had only Macs for the last 8 years; where is a good place to download games and other “apps” for it, preferably for free (although I’ll pay for useful or fun stuff)? What are some “must-have” netbook/basic PC programs?
If you are looking for junk like iFart, they don’t exist for the PC, and hopefully they never will.
Shareware is also another source. I use www.tucows.com myself.
If you aren’t interested in buying productivity software, the gold standard right now is OpenOffice. It does everything MS Office can do, and file formats are compatible. However, imho, it’s slower than Office (because it’s Java based) and it looks like something from 1995.
Another source is web-based games, like Yahoo games. The reason the app market was so popular for Apple products is that they couldn’t run basic web-based games without some sort of shell (or app.) With a pc, you can play them directly. I used Yahoo games for years, but now it’s really hard to find the fun, free ones. Shockwave.com also has tons of great games. I’m really surprised how many people prefer to play games through an app.
I suppose it’s really a matter of what you use your PC for. My netbook has MSN, Yahoo Messenger, Google Chrome, along with a collection of NES roms and Age of Empires II: Age of Kings (I found a “no-CD” crack so it works on here).
I second the sentiment on Open Office, though I have never found it especially slow…I find MS Office 2010 at my university runs slower, frankly, but that may have something to do with the computer being used.
I’m mostly looking for time-wasters, but not super dumb ones. Trivia would be good, as would ports of old (like early 1980s) video games. Open Office also sounds good to have.
Double or quadruple or (I don’t know how far it goes) your screen real-estate with VirtuaWin. So helpful to have more space in the task bar and to organize different projects.
Yeah, I’d say NES roms fits the bill. That or Arcade emulators, or just about any of the games at the discount bin at Radio Shack, provided you at least have the CD-Rom to run 'em.
Good Old Games has a bunch of older (but good) games re-released and made to work with modern systems (including netbooks, often) at very reasonable prices.
As for programs and utilities, don’t download anything you don’t need. That’s just an invitation for spyware, viruses, and other junk. If you need something specific for a specific purpose, ask.
If I understand what that program does, can’t I just oversize the display? On my Toshiba Netbook, if I set my display to something ridiculously high (1280x640 or something), the desktop automatically scrolls around for me when my cursor reaches the edges.
I was going to buy a netbook, but an external keyboard, mouse, and CD-ROM put the price point squarely at a low end notebook, which is what I got. I returned it to Walmart and got my Toshiba from office depot.
Beyond the typical business suite apps and gaming apps most “cool” apps these days are net based. A netbook is just a small, easy to tote, inexpensive PC notebook for all practical purposes there’s really nothing “special” for it. The weak video horsepower of a netbook will not run the latest games all that well. Most stuff is browser centric these days, so the net based “apps” that were available for your Mac will also (in most cases) be accessible by the netbook.
The main utility of a netbook (and why I use mine) is simply that it’s so portable.
Oh, I didn’t mention that I did buy a netbook, but bringing it up to laptop functionality would cost the same as a laptop, so I returned the netbook and bought a laptop.
I’ve never done what you suggest, so I can’t really compare, but VirtuaWin doesn’t work the way you seem to have described. What it does is kind of create separate areas as if you had different monitors, and even different computers. If you have, for example, Firefox and Word open on screen 1, if you move to screen 2, you won’t see them in the task bar, because those applications are associated with screen 1. You could open up another instance of Firefox in screen 2 and have a completely different set of tabs open in it, and they won’t show up in 1.
I use it to separate school work: documents and web searches for one class can be clustered in one screen while stuff for another class is all together in another screen.
It’s also great for transcribing/using one file or group of files as a reference for something else. Alt-Tab is useful but annoying if you have several applications open. With virtuaWin you can type in one screen then slide over to another to look at your reference files and alt-tab only through them and then slide back to your word document.
Really, these multiple desktops are one of the best things I’ve ever installed on a computer! I wish I was allowed to install it on my work computer. It’s also really funny to watch someone who doesn’t know how it works grab your computer to do something and accidentally slide to another screen and wonder where the hell Firefox just went!
How much RAM do you have? I have only 1g on my Dell Mini (Win 7 starter) and it is good for surfing the web and watching movies or TV shows I’ve ripped to it, but it’s too slow to function as a substitute for my laptop which at 64bit 4ram Win7 home does well.
But as one poster said, the netbook is nice and easy to carry around, especially if all you want to do is surf the web and watch TV (it has a digital tuner) or watch TV or movies you’ve ripped.
I too bought the Acer back when Target had a good deal on it - the first thing I did was upgrade the memory to 2G. I also upgraded to Windows 7 Home Premium (which really probably wasn’t all that necessary, now that I think about it, so I probably wouldn’t do the same thing again). And it runs email and web surfing without a hitch, so far. (That said, I don’t ask very much of it, either.)
I might add MS Office, or use Open Office for word processing. That’s pretty much all I want from it, and I think it’ll do that just fine.