enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Comparison of hex editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_hex_editors

    Process memory editing Data inspector Bit editing Insert/delete bytes Character encodings Search Unicode File formats Disassembler File compare Find in files Bookmarks Macro Text editor; HxD: 8 EiB [5] Yes Windows 9x/NT and up Yes Yes Yes Yes ANSI, ASCII, OEM, EBCDIC, Macintosh Yes No Individual instructions only Yes No Yes No No 010 Editor: 8 ...

  3. HxD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HxD

    HxD is a freeware hex editor, disk editor, and memory editor developed by Maël Hörz for Windows. It can open files larger than 4 GiB and open and edit the raw contents of disk drives, as well as display and edit the memory used by running processes. Among other features, it can calculate various checksums, compare files, or shred files. [1]

  4. QEMM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QEMM

    The final version was QEMM 97, which was compatible with Windows 95 and later Windows 98/ME [citation needed], but by this point, not only was DOS memory management no longer in high demand, but the remaining competitive DOS applications (including various GNU utilities and text editors) supported EMS, XMS, or DPMI - which reduced demand for ...

  5. QEMU - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QEMU

    QEMU versions starting with 0.12.0 (as of August 2009) support large memory which makes them incompatible with KQEMU. [14] Newer releases of QEMU have completely removed support for KQEMU. QVM86 was a GNU GPLv2 licensed drop-in replacement for the then closed-source KQEMU. The developers of QVM86 ceased development in January 2007.

  6. QuickC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QuickC

    [18] [19] [20] New features included: incremental compiling and linking, improved compilation speed, built-in assembler and support for all memory models. [21] It was Microsoft C 5.1 compatible. [22] QuickC 2.01, released in June 1989. [23] Quick Assembler was included in this release. [24] It was Microsoft Source Profiler compatible. [25]

  7. BBEdit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBEdit

    BBEdit Lite was a freeware stripped-down version of BBEdit, [15] [16] that ceased development in 2003. BBEdit Lite had many of the same features as BBEdit such as regular expressions, a plug-in architecture and the same text editing engine, but no programming and web-oriented tools such as syntax highlighting, command line shell, HTML tools or FTP support.

  8. Norton Utilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norton_Utilities

    However, the Mac OS X tools have not been tested on Mac OS X later than 10.2.6, and is known to be incompatible with Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther). [50] Features: Norton Disk Doctor, Speed Disk, FileSaver, UnErase, Volume Recover, LiveUpdate. Speed Disk does not run on Mac OS X, except by booting with Norton Utilities 7.0 CD.

  9. QuickTime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QuickTime

    QuickTime 7 for Mac introduced the QuickTime Kit (aka QTKit), a developer framework that is intended to replace previous APIs for Cocoa developers. This framework is for Mac only, and exists as Objective-C abstractions around a subset of the C interface. Mac OS X v10.5 extends QTKit to full 64-bit support.