

The problem with HJSplit is that it’s damn SLOW. The receipient then needs to point HJSplit to the first fragment and it will rebuild the whole file if all its parts are available. You can then send the chunks individually or do whatever you want with them. It’ll break your large file into the size chunks you requested. You give it a large file, and a size at which to make fragments. I remember the time when I had to give a friend a 4MB file and had to split it into 4 floppies. Traditionally, HJSplit was used mainly to split a big file so that it could be put into many floppies. 002? These files were split and need to be re-joined before they can be used. Have you ever downloaded files and noticed that they end in extensions like. HWMonitor's Main Window File Splitters ( FFSJ, HJSplit) Works on Windows 7, despite no update for quite a while now. Oh, the interface is not the prettiest and most feature-packed around, but it gets its job done simply and beautifully. The catch? Your encode or whatever task will take longer, but I guess you figured that out by now. Decrease processor usage and you basically decrease temperature. This also helps in decreasing processor load, hence processor temperature if ever you find that you could start cooking eggs on the processor. So if your encoding takes 100% usage, you can constrain it to -30% so that it does only 70% usage, leaving 30% free for you to work with. It allows you to limit how much processor usage a program is entitled to.

That utility is for those of you who do a lot of processor-heavy tasks like video encoding and the like, but don’t like your computer to slow to a crawl preventing you from typing that text document on notepad without you being faster than the program. What a name for an utility that limits processor usage! There’s a long explanation about how the developers came up with that name on their homepage if you are interested. You can also temporarily disable it if you don’t want to remember sensitive data via the “Disconnect from Clipboard” option by right-clicking on its icon in the tray.Īnyway. Like the very interesting, but wrongly named “Friends” feature, where you can receive copies (as in copy-paste) from your friends over network. Did I mention that it has a TON of customizable features. Works with files, pictures, whatever is copy-able. So if you need to paste the first one, it’s there, stored safely in Ditto’s database. If you copy two things, the first one is preserved, the second is stored too. Allows you to store items, and paste them at a later time. That didn’t make much sense, I know.īut anyway, that’s what it does. It’s like it remembers a history of your copies, so that you can paste from the past. It remembers a lot (configurable) of items that you have copied. Now what happened? Lulz, you just lost your link. Then you had to cut a file to a new location. Picture this situation: you’ve copied an important link on your clipboard.
