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application-launcher posts

Filed under: Utilities, Windows, Freeware

ControlPad: Customizable app launcher for numeric keypad fans

ControlPad
There are dozens of keyboard application launchers for Windows. Most let you launch a program by pulling up a text input screen and typing the first few letters of the application name, whether it's Firefox, Office, or the system control panel. It's often a lot faster than locating the correct shortcut with a mouse and the Windows Start Menu.

ControlPad also lets you launch applications using keyboard shortcuts. But this utility takes a different approach. Instead of typing the name of the program you want to run, you enter a numeric code to launch an application, action, or web site. For instance, you can enter one code to open your web browser; enter another to open a web page; a third code would activate the browser's back button; and a fourth code would close the browser altogether.

On the one hand, you'll have to memorize all of those codes in order to effectively use ControlPad. But there's a reason for using numbers instead of letters. The program is designed to be used from the numeric keypad on your keyboard. If you're the sort of person who types at 20 words a minute but can crunch numbers at blazing fast speeds using the keypad, ControlPad might be for you.

There's also a laptop mode for computers that don't have a numeric keypad. Basically, this lets you launch the utility using the F12 key instead of the * key. But ControlPad is a lot less useful on computers that don' t have numeric keypads.

Once the program is running, it's easy to create or edit codes either by entering a URL, choosing from a list of possible commands, or browsing for an application you want to associate with a code.

You can either download and install ControlPad or grab a portable version which you can unzip to a USB flash drive or any other folder and run without installing.

[via gHacks]

Filed under: Utilities, Windows, Open Source

Could open source Blaze be the best Windows application launcher ever?

Just as with Launchy or Gnome Do, there's not a heck of a lot to see in a screenshot of Blaze's main window. The orange-ish command box really only gives a glimpse as to what's possible with Blaze, however.

For starters, it's smart enough to find what you're looking for even if you should happen to stumble over your keys a bit (e.g. the butchered Photoshop entry above). Lurking behind the scenes is a powerful automation handling system and plugin support (skin support is coming soon).

The automator watches silently in the background, waiting to observe you performing repetitive tasks. When it spots something, Blaze will alert you and offer to create an action to handle the task next time. On the project page, the author demonstrates this functionality by renaming a directory full of photos. Blaze can also record macros -- so you can just press record, start doing what you need to do, and presto! You've got a new action.

Blaze ships with .dll plugins to provide several handy functions, like creating emails, performing calculations, index the ID3 tags of your MP3s, and more.

I can see myself enjoying Blaze on my netbook even without all the advanced functions. Since my typing isn't quite as accurate on the scaled-down keys, it's nice to know that Blaze will still be able to launch apps even if I hit a few wrong keys here or there.

edit: forgot to mention, .NET 3.5 is required - sorry, running Windows 7 you sometimes forget that it's still an additional download for some!

[via MakeUseOf]

Filed under: Utilities, Windows, Freeware, Open Source

Circle Dock: Stop going out of your way to launch apps

Circle Dock
There are plenty of dock-style applications launchers for Windows. But most have one thing in common: You anchor them to the top, bottom, or side of the screen and then scroll your mouse over that portion of the screen to bring up a list of applications. Circle Dock is different, because this free application launcher it appears where your mouse already is instead of making you move your mouse.

Like most application launches, Circle Dock comes with a list of icons for frequently used programs, like the Control Panel, your default browser, and the recycling bin. You can add shortcuts by dragging them from your desktop or quick launch bar and customize to your heart's content.

Circle Dock has a ton of visual customization options as well. You can either display your icons in concentric circles, or as a spiral. You can add a rotating animation effect to the spiral to make yourself dizzy. There are a more than 30 skins to choose from. And you can decide whether the dock is always visible or if it disappears when the program loses focus or when you click an application icon. One other feature which I wish every application launcher had (and which many, but not all, do have) is the ability to select from a handful of keyboard shortcuts to show or hide the dock.

[via CyberNet]

Filed under: Utilities, Windows, Freeware

Short Run turns Windows XP run box into a program launcher

Short Run

While you can launch some Windows applications from the Run box (accessible from the Start Menu or by hitting Win+R), there's a good reason keyboard application launchers like Launchy, Slickrun, and Find and Run Robot are so popular. Many programs cannot be launched from the Windows Run box, and even those that can often have odd and hard to remember shortcut names.

But Short Run makes it a bit easier to throw out Launchy. Short Run is a free utility that will display every program that can be launched from the Windows Run dialog. You can add items by clicking Ctrl+A, or edit existing shortcut names and other properties by hitting Ctrl+E. Want to delete an entry? Just highlight it and hit the delete key.

Short Run will not auto-populate the Run box with every application in your Program Files directory or Windows Start Menu the way some other keyboard application launchers do. But if you just have a few applications that you want to launch quickly every day, and don't feel like installing a new program just to do it, Short Run can help you edit your Run settings.

[via gHacks]

Featured Time Waster

Graveyard Shift - zombie-busting Time Waster

With Halloween fast approaching, it's a great time to get in some practice defending your territory against zombies. In Graveyard Shift, you take aim at zombies and other creepy-crawlies, blasting them into splatters of cartoony green guts. It's a casual first-person shooter, and it's very easy to get the hang of - use the mouse to aim, click to fire. Graveyard Shift has at least 15 levels, and it might even have some secret stages I haven't unlocked yet. They key to getting good at Graveyard Shift is learning to use ...

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