find a person
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Secleted [ 0 ] software to compare
Results 1 - 15 of about 3179
Find on XING 1.1
Find business partners quickly and easily more>> Find on XING 1.1 is the most comprehensive, user friendly and fast solution to find business partners quickly and easily.<<less
Added: 2009-07-15 License: MPL Price: FREE
15 downloads
Find Em All 1.0
Find Em All is inspired by XFCE-3s XFglob and Efinder which is part of the Equinox desktop environment. more>>
FindEmAll is another graphical find-and-grep tool.
Find Em All is inspired by XFCE-3s XFglob and Efinder which is part of the Equinox desktop environment.
Unfortunately XFglob is no longer included in XFCE and Efinder does not seem to work (at least for me), because it uses XFCEs glob command which is no longer available.
Main features:
- optional Perl-style regular expression syntax (grep -P)
- search for files owned by non-system user / group (find -nouser -nogroup)
- search files where the search pattern does not match
- exclude binary files from search
Files may be opened in your favorite editor by a double-click on an entry in the list of results. Right-clicking a file opens a context menu that allows to choose an arbitrary application to open this file.
<<lessFind Em All is inspired by XFCE-3s XFglob and Efinder which is part of the Equinox desktop environment.
Unfortunately XFglob is no longer included in XFCE and Efinder does not seem to work (at least for me), because it uses XFCEs glob command which is no longer available.
Main features:
- optional Perl-style regular expression syntax (grep -P)
- search for files owned by non-system user / group (find -nouser -nogroup)
- search files where the search pattern does not match
- exclude binary files from search
Files may be opened in your favorite editor by a double-click on an entry in the list of results. Right-clicking a file opens a context menu that allows to choose an arbitrary application to open this file.
Download (0.030MB)
Added: 2006-11-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1068 downloads
Jind 1.0
Jind is an interpreter for a toy programming language. more>>
Jind is an interpreter for a toy programming language. The aim of the game is to lead a person out of a labyrinth by giving appropriate textual instructions.
The challenge is to find a general solution by using conditions and loops. Jind can be used to teach the basics of programming in an understandable, entertaining, and instructive way.
Installation
To compile the program, you need a compiler for Java. I recommend to use the Java compiler provided by Sun. Go to http://www.sun.com to download it for free. Follow the instructions in the manual to install the compiler. Then do a
cd Jind-1.0
make
to compile Jind. If anything goes wrong, open the Makefile in your favourite editor and adjust the paths to your configuration.
Open the file "jind.html" in your favourite browser. I recommend to use Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0, Netscape Navigator 4.0 or Mozilla 0.9x. The applet should load now and you will see an input box immediately.
<<lessThe challenge is to find a general solution by using conditions and loops. Jind can be used to teach the basics of programming in an understandable, entertaining, and instructive way.
Installation
To compile the program, you need a compiler for Java. I recommend to use the Java compiler provided by Sun. Go to http://www.sun.com to download it for free. Follow the instructions in the manual to install the compiler. Then do a
cd Jind-1.0
make
to compile Jind. If anything goes wrong, open the Makefile in your favourite editor and adjust the paths to your configuration.
Open the file "jind.html" in your favourite browser. I recommend to use Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0, Netscape Navigator 4.0 or Mozilla 0.9x. The applet should load now and you will see an input box immediately.
Download (0.013MB)
Added: 2005-04-14 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1653 downloads
File::Find::Similars 1.1
File::Find::Similars is a Similar files locator. more>>
File::Find::Similars is a Similar files locator.
SYNOPSIS
use File::Find::Similars;
File::Find::Similars->init(0, @ARGV);
similarity_check_name();
Similar-sized and similar-named files are picked as suspicious candidates of duplicated files.
What descirbes it better than a actual output. Sample suspicious duplicated files:
## =========
1574 PopupTest.java /home/tong/.../examples/chap10
1561 CardLayoutTest.java /home/tong/.../examples/chap1
1570 PopupButtonFrame.class /home/tong/.../examples/chap6
## =========
22984 BinderyHelloWorld.jpg /home/tong/...
17509 MacHelloWorld.gif /home/tong/...
The first column is the size of the file, 2nd the name, and 3rd the path. The motto for the listing is that, I would rather my program overkills (wrongly picking out suspicious ones) than neglects something that would cause me otherwise years to notice.
By default, File::Find::Similars(3) assumes that similar files within the same folder are OK. Hence you will not get duplicate warnings for generated files (like .o, .class or .aux, and .dvi files) or other file series.
Once you are sure that there are no duplications between folders and want File::Find::Similars(3) to scoop further, specify the first parameter as 1. This is very good to eliminate similar mp3 files within the same folder, or downloaded files from big sites where different packaging methods are used, e.g.:
## =========
66138 jdc-src.tar.gz .../ftp.ora.com/published/oreilly/java/javadc
147904 jdc-src.zip .../ftp.ora.com/published/oreilly/java/javadc
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use File::Find::Similars;
File::Find::Similars->init(0, @ARGV);
similarity_check_name();
Similar-sized and similar-named files are picked as suspicious candidates of duplicated files.
What descirbes it better than a actual output. Sample suspicious duplicated files:
## =========
1574 PopupTest.java /home/tong/.../examples/chap10
1561 CardLayoutTest.java /home/tong/.../examples/chap1
1570 PopupButtonFrame.class /home/tong/.../examples/chap6
## =========
22984 BinderyHelloWorld.jpg /home/tong/...
17509 MacHelloWorld.gif /home/tong/...
The first column is the size of the file, 2nd the name, and 3rd the path. The motto for the listing is that, I would rather my program overkills (wrongly picking out suspicious ones) than neglects something that would cause me otherwise years to notice.
By default, File::Find::Similars(3) assumes that similar files within the same folder are OK. Hence you will not get duplicate warnings for generated files (like .o, .class or .aux, and .dvi files) or other file series.
Once you are sure that there are no duplications between folders and want File::Find::Similars(3) to scoop further, specify the first parameter as 1. This is very good to eliminate similar mp3 files within the same folder, or downloaded files from big sites where different packaging methods are used, e.g.:
## =========
66138 jdc-src.tar.gz .../ftp.ora.com/published/oreilly/java/javadc
147904 jdc-src.zip .../ftp.ora.com/published/oreilly/java/javadc
Download (0.010MB)
Added: 2006-11-14 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1075 downloads

Finddouble 1.4
Finddouble searches directories for file duplicate. more>> finddouble 1.4 : is a Linux/Mac application. It searches directories for file duplicate. Very usefull to find copies of the same file : images, png, jpe, music, mp3, any kind of file.<<less
Download (22KB)
Added: 2009-04-27 License: Freeware Price: Free
428 downloads
MP3::Find 0.06
MP3::Find is a Perl module to search and sort MP3 files based on their ID3 tags. more>>
MP3::Find is a Perl module to search and sort MP3 files based on their ID3 tags.
SYNOPSIS
# select with backend you want
use MP3::Find qw(Filesystem);
print "$_n" foreach find_mp3s(
dir => /home/peter/cds,
query => {
artist => ilyaimy,
title => deep in the am,
},
ignore_case => 1,
exact_match => 1,
sort => [qw(year album tracknum)],
printf => %2n. %a - %t (%b: %y),
);
This module allows you to search for MP3 files by their ID3 tags. You can ask for the results to be sorted by one or more of those tags, and return either the list of filenames (the deault), a printf-style formatted string for each file using its ID3 tags, or the actual Perl data structure representing the results.
There are currently two backends to this module: MP3::Find::Filesystem and MP3::Find::DB. You choose which one you want by passing its name as the argument to you use statement; MP3::Find will look for a MP3::Find::$BACKEND module. If no backend name is given, it will default to using MP3::Find::Filesystem.
Note: Im still working out some kinks in the DB backend, so it is currently not as stable as the Filesystem backend.
Note the second: This whole project is still in the alpha stage, so I can make no guarentees that there wont be significant interface changes in the next few versions or so. Also, comments about what about the API rocks (or sucks!) are appreciated.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
# select with backend you want
use MP3::Find qw(Filesystem);
print "$_n" foreach find_mp3s(
dir => /home/peter/cds,
query => {
artist => ilyaimy,
title => deep in the am,
},
ignore_case => 1,
exact_match => 1,
sort => [qw(year album tracknum)],
printf => %2n. %a - %t (%b: %y),
);
This module allows you to search for MP3 files by their ID3 tags. You can ask for the results to be sorted by one or more of those tags, and return either the list of filenames (the deault), a printf-style formatted string for each file using its ID3 tags, or the actual Perl data structure representing the results.
There are currently two backends to this module: MP3::Find::Filesystem and MP3::Find::DB. You choose which one you want by passing its name as the argument to you use statement; MP3::Find will look for a MP3::Find::$BACKEND module. If no backend name is given, it will default to using MP3::Find::Filesystem.
Note: Im still working out some kinks in the DB backend, so it is currently not as stable as the Filesystem backend.
Note the second: This whole project is still in the alpha stage, so I can make no guarentees that there wont be significant interface changes in the next few versions or so. Also, comments about what about the API rocks (or sucks!) are appreciated.
Download (0.029MB)
Added: 2006-11-07 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1081 downloads
MP3::Find::Base 0.06
MP3::Find::Base is a base class for MP3::Find backends. more>>
MP3::Find::Base is a base class for MP3::Find backends.
SYNOPSIS
package MyFinder;
use base MP3::Find::Base;
sub search {
my $self = shift;
my ($query, $dirs, $sort, $options) = @_;
# do something to find and sort the mp3s...
my @results = do_something(...);
return @results;
}
package main;
my $finder = MyFinder->new;
# see MP3::Find for details about %options
print "$_n" foreach $finder->find_mp3s(%options);
This is the base class for the classes that actually do the searching and sorting for MP3::Find.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
package MyFinder;
use base MP3::Find::Base;
sub search {
my $self = shift;
my ($query, $dirs, $sort, $options) = @_;
# do something to find and sort the mp3s...
my @results = do_something(...);
return @results;
}
package main;
my $finder = MyFinder->new;
# see MP3::Find for details about %options
print "$_n" foreach $finder->find_mp3s(%options);
This is the base class for the classes that actually do the searching and sorting for MP3::Find.
Download (0.029MB)
Added: 2006-11-08 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1080 downloads
Email::Find 0.10
Email::Find allows you to find RFC 822 email addresses in plain text. more>>
Email::Find allows you to find RFC 822 email addresses in plain text.
Email::Find is a module for finding a subset of RFC 822 email addresses in arbitrary text (see "CAVEATS"). The addresses it finds are not guaranteed to exist or even actually be email addresses at all (see "CAVEATS"), but they will be valid RFC 822 syntax.
Email::Find will perform some heuristics to avoid some of the more obvious red herrings and false addresses, but theres only so much which can be done without a human.
Finds email addresses in the text and executes callback registered.
The callback is given two arguments. The first is a Mail::Address object representing the address found. The second is the actual original email as found in the text. Whatever the callback returns will replace the original text.
<<lessEmail::Find is a module for finding a subset of RFC 822 email addresses in arbitrary text (see "CAVEATS"). The addresses it finds are not guaranteed to exist or even actually be email addresses at all (see "CAVEATS"), but they will be valid RFC 822 syntax.
Email::Find will perform some heuristics to avoid some of the more obvious red herrings and false addresses, but theres only so much which can be done without a human.
Finds email addresses in the text and executes callback registered.
The callback is given two arguments. The first is a Mail::Address object representing the address found. The second is the actual original email as found in the text. Whatever the callback returns will replace the original text.
Download (0.039MB)
Added: 2007-03-31 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
943 downloads
File::Find 5.8.8
File::Find is a Perl module to traverse a directory tree. more>>
File::Find is a Perl module to traverse a directory tree.
SYNOPSIS
use File::Find;
find(&wanted, @directories_to_search);
sub wanted { ... }
use File::Find;
finddepth(&wanted, @directories_to_search);
sub wanted { ... }
use File::Find;
find({ wanted => &process, follow => 1 }, .);
These are functions for searching through directory trees doing work on each file found similar to the Unix find command. File::Find exports two functions, find and finddepth. They work similarly but have subtle differences.
find
find(&wanted, @directories);
find(%options, @directories);
find() does a depth-first search over the given @directories in the order they are given. For each file or directory found, it calls the &wanted subroutine. (See below for details on how to use the &wanted function). Additionally, for each directory found, it will chdir() into that directory and continue the search, invoking the &wanted function on each file or subdirectory in the directory.
finddepth
finddepth(&wanted, @directories);
finddepth(%options, @directories);
finddepth() works just like find() except that is invokes the &wanted function for a directory after invoking it for the directorys contents. It does a postorder traversal instead of a preorder traversal, working from the bottom of the directory tree up where find() works from the top of the tree down.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use File::Find;
find(&wanted, @directories_to_search);
sub wanted { ... }
use File::Find;
finddepth(&wanted, @directories_to_search);
sub wanted { ... }
use File::Find;
find({ wanted => &process, follow => 1 }, .);
These are functions for searching through directory trees doing work on each file found similar to the Unix find command. File::Find exports two functions, find and finddepth. They work similarly but have subtle differences.
find
find(&wanted, @directories);
find(%options, @directories);
find() does a depth-first search over the given @directories in the order they are given. For each file or directory found, it calls the &wanted subroutine. (See below for details on how to use the &wanted function). Additionally, for each directory found, it will chdir() into that directory and continue the search, invoking the &wanted function on each file or subdirectory in the directory.
finddepth
finddepth(&wanted, @directories);
finddepth(%options, @directories);
finddepth() works just like find() except that is invokes the &wanted function for a directory after invoking it for the directorys contents. It does a postorder traversal instead of a preorder traversal, working from the bottom of the directory tree up where find() works from the top of the tree down.
Download (12.2MB)
Added: 2007-04-26 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
913 downloads
Tilda 0.9.4
Tilda is a Linux terminal application taking likeness of many popular first person shooter consoles. more>>
Tilda project is a Linux terminal taking after the likeness of many classic terminals from first person shooter games, Quake, Doom and Half-Life to name a few, where the terminal has no border and is hidden from the desktop till a key or keys is hit.
<<less Download (0.12MB)
Added: 2006-11-30 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1068 downloads
Funnel Web Analyzer 5.0
Funnel Web Analyzer provides essential Web site visitor and traffic analysis. more>>
Funnel Web Analyzer provides essential Web site visitor and traffic analysis.
Every person who visits your companys Web site leaves a trail behind. Your Web server logs their every action and you can use this information to help improve your business. Funnel Web Analyzer provides essential Web site visitor and traffic analysis. It measures everything from server load and referrals to visitor demographics and marketing ROI.
Funnel Web Analyzer helps you optimize your web site by allowing you to analyze how users interact with your site and helps you make informed decisions about what changes you can make to improve their experience.
- What are the demographics of my customers?
- How many unique customers do I have, and how many of these are repeat visitors?
- How long does a visitor spend on each page?
- Which streaming media files are most popular?
- What are my most popular pages?
- How successful was my banner advertisement in attracting visitors to my site?
- What are the peak periods of activity on my site?
- What downloads are most popular?
- What search terms are people using to find my site?
Comprehensive Visitor Analysis
Give your executives and managers unique insight into what your customers are really interested in. Analyzer generates more than 50 different reports and graphs in 12 different languages. Reports can even be customized to reflect your corporate identity and published in a variety of formats including PDF, HTML, Word and Excel.
Identify where users come from before they arrive at your site with the referrals report. This is a great way to measure the effectiveness of promotional campaigns, press releases and affiliate/partner programs. You can even generate separate advertising reports to measure the click-through rates of individual banner ad campaigns.
Funnel Web Analyzer is freeware and provides everything you need to quickly analyze the traffic on your Web site. With virtually no setup, you get an extensive set of valuable reports right from the start.
<<lessEvery person who visits your companys Web site leaves a trail behind. Your Web server logs their every action and you can use this information to help improve your business. Funnel Web Analyzer provides essential Web site visitor and traffic analysis. It measures everything from server load and referrals to visitor demographics and marketing ROI.
Funnel Web Analyzer helps you optimize your web site by allowing you to analyze how users interact with your site and helps you make informed decisions about what changes you can make to improve their experience.
- What are the demographics of my customers?
- How many unique customers do I have, and how many of these are repeat visitors?
- How long does a visitor spend on each page?
- Which streaming media files are most popular?
- What are my most popular pages?
- How successful was my banner advertisement in attracting visitors to my site?
- What are the peak periods of activity on my site?
- What downloads are most popular?
- What search terms are people using to find my site?
Comprehensive Visitor Analysis
Give your executives and managers unique insight into what your customers are really interested in. Analyzer generates more than 50 different reports and graphs in 12 different languages. Reports can even be customized to reflect your corporate identity and published in a variety of formats including PDF, HTML, Word and Excel.
Identify where users come from before they arrive at your site with the referrals report. This is a great way to measure the effectiveness of promotional campaigns, press releases and affiliate/partner programs. You can even generate separate advertising reports to measure the click-through rates of individual banner ad campaigns.
Funnel Web Analyzer is freeware and provides everything you need to quickly analyze the traffic on your Web site. With virtually no setup, you get an extensive set of valuable reports right from the start.
Download (7.3MB)
Added: 2007-06-19 License: Freeware Price:
525 downloads
Egressor 1.0
Egressor is a router config check. more>>
MITRE has released a freeware tool that allows a company to check the configuration of their Internet point-of-presence router. Egressor will help companies determine whether their routers are configured to the Help Defeat Denial of Service Attacks guidelines. This configuration of egress filtering reduces the chance that their computers can unwittingly contribute to a distributed denial of service attack.
The tool has two parts; a generator and a receiver. The test generator (or "client") is being provided as C source code and the test receiver (or "server") is a PERL script. Both are currently known to work on LINUX, and the server also works on Solaris.
This egress filtering diagnosis tool is provided as a public service subject to the terms of the License Agreement. This tool is merely an aid; security remains the responsibility of the user.
This tool is intended to assist information security specialists in conducting a vulnerability analysis of their network by identifying potential weaknesses in their network configuration; however, the use of this tool can not guarantee adequate information security or that a network has adequate egress filtering.
This tool should not be used on an information system without the specific authorization of the person responsible for the information security of that system. This tool is not intended to serve, and should not be considered, as a substitute for qualified information security specialists or an information security program tailored to your information system. You should consult with a qualified information security specialist to properly interpret the results of this vulnerability analysis and before taking any corrective action.
Briefly, the client generates a stream of packets, some of which are spoofed. The server listens for test packets, and determines if spoofed packets were received as part of the test. The server then generates a report of the results, indicating whether spoofed packets were received or not. Figure 1 shows the two scenarios that the tool can find including the html versions of the reports. There is also a "daemon" option which causes the server to run indefinitely.
Installation:
Ensure you have a gcc compiler, and GNU make.
Ensure you have LIBNET installed.
Change directories to where you wish to install the egressor directory
Untar egressor.tar:
tar -xvfz egressor.tar.gz
Edit makefile to refer to the location of libnet
Build the package:
make
<<lessThe tool has two parts; a generator and a receiver. The test generator (or "client") is being provided as C source code and the test receiver (or "server") is a PERL script. Both are currently known to work on LINUX, and the server also works on Solaris.
This egress filtering diagnosis tool is provided as a public service subject to the terms of the License Agreement. This tool is merely an aid; security remains the responsibility of the user.
This tool is intended to assist information security specialists in conducting a vulnerability analysis of their network by identifying potential weaknesses in their network configuration; however, the use of this tool can not guarantee adequate information security or that a network has adequate egress filtering.
This tool should not be used on an information system without the specific authorization of the person responsible for the information security of that system. This tool is not intended to serve, and should not be considered, as a substitute for qualified information security specialists or an information security program tailored to your information system. You should consult with a qualified information security specialist to properly interpret the results of this vulnerability analysis and before taking any corrective action.
Briefly, the client generates a stream of packets, some of which are spoofed. The server listens for test packets, and determines if spoofed packets were received as part of the test. The server then generates a report of the results, indicating whether spoofed packets were received or not. Figure 1 shows the two scenarios that the tool can find including the html versions of the reports. There is also a "daemon" option which causes the server to run indefinitely.
Installation:
Ensure you have a gcc compiler, and GNU make.
Ensure you have LIBNET installed.
Change directories to where you wish to install the egressor directory
Untar egressor.tar:
tar -xvfz egressor.tar.gz
Edit makefile to refer to the location of libnet
Build the package:
make
Download (0.028MB)
Added: 2006-03-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1325 downloads
Adventure Money 1.0
Adventure Money project quickly calculate money shared each month between multiple people for multiple bills. more>>
Since I am the person who manages the money for our house, I need an efficient way to keep track of our expenses and an easy way to calculate who owes what to whom at the end of the month. There are lots of good free software utilities for managing money like GnuCash, KMyMoney and the wonderful Gnumeric spreadsheet. I had been using Gnumeric to manage the money for the last 8 months, but now that we have some people staying at the house for just the summer, and other leaving and coming back in September, the spreadsheet was not able to adjust to these irregular circumstances.
The reason I decided to write my own application from scratch instead of using an already existing money management application was because my problem is multi-person orientation and most (if not all) of the money management programs I have tried are single-person oriented. For example GnuCash will let you setup accounts that show you all the money moving to and from a single person. But in my house things like food are paid by any person and shared by every other person. Thus to efficiently and easily calculate who owes how much, it must take into account the fact that one pizza may be paid for by one person, but it was eaten by 4 people. Also I dont want to have to divide up the amounts myself and put it into GnuCash with multiple accounts, because then I might as well be doing it on paper.
I could have spent my time learning to make an already existing application do exactly what I want; and I probably would have found something pretty close. But I decided that it would be faster to just program it from scratch and then I would be sure I would get exactly what I wanted. I think I was right; it took less then 2 weeks to finished writing this program.
The program is currently called Adventure Money, but if anyone can think of a better name for it let me know and Ill gladly change it.
When you first launch the program you will see it has five views, all of which can be seen in the screenshots below.
<<lessThe reason I decided to write my own application from scratch instead of using an already existing money management application was because my problem is multi-person orientation and most (if not all) of the money management programs I have tried are single-person oriented. For example GnuCash will let you setup accounts that show you all the money moving to and from a single person. But in my house things like food are paid by any person and shared by every other person. Thus to efficiently and easily calculate who owes how much, it must take into account the fact that one pizza may be paid for by one person, but it was eaten by 4 people. Also I dont want to have to divide up the amounts myself and put it into GnuCash with multiple accounts, because then I might as well be doing it on paper.
I could have spent my time learning to make an already existing application do exactly what I want; and I probably would have found something pretty close. But I decided that it would be faster to just program it from scratch and then I would be sure I would get exactly what I wanted. I think I was right; it took less then 2 weeks to finished writing this program.
The program is currently called Adventure Money, but if anyone can think of a better name for it let me know and Ill gladly change it.
When you first launch the program you will see it has five views, all of which can be seen in the screenshots below.
Download (0.023MB)
Added: 2007-05-16 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
900 downloads
MP3::Find::Filesystem 0.06
MP3::Find::Filesystem is a File::Find-based backend to MP3::Find. more>>
MP3::Find::Filesystem is a File::Find-based backend to MP3::Find.
SYNOPSIS
use MP3::Find::Filesystem;
my $finder = MP3::Find::Filesystem->new;
my @mp3s = $finder->find_mp3s(
dir => /home/peter/music,
query => {
artist => ilyaimy,
album => myxomatosis,
},
ignore_case => 1,
);
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use MP3::Find::Filesystem;
my $finder = MP3::Find::Filesystem->new;
my @mp3s = $finder->find_mp3s(
dir => /home/peter/music,
query => {
artist => ilyaimy,
album => myxomatosis,
},
ignore_case => 1,
);
Download (0.029MB)
Added: 2006-11-09 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1080 downloads
Ignorance 2.2
Ignorance is a flexible, powerful content filtering plugin for Gaim. more>>
Ignorance is a content filtering plugin for Gaim. If you love Gaim for chat, but find yourself missing the filtering features of clients like zinc, then Ignorance is for you!
<<less Download (0.22MB)
Added: 2005-10-21 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1463 downloads
Secleted [ 0 ] software to compare
Copyright Notice:
Software piracy is theft, Using crack, password, serial numbers, registration codes, key generators is illegal and prevent future software development. The above find a person search only lists software in full, demo and trial versions for free download. Download links are directly from our mirror sites or publisher sites, torrent files or links from rapidshare.com, yousendit.com or megaupload.com are not allowed