![]() Google Chrome, for Windows, Macs and Linux PCs, from My readers have recommended this Web browser many times. You can send two free faxes a day, with a three-page maximum length. FaxZero, an online fax service for Windows, Macs and Linux PCs (and any other device, such as an iPad, that can access the Web), at. The idea behind FreeApps is that a free program, the FreeApps installer, does all the downloading and installing for you. FreeApps, a website that makes choosing and installing Windows freeware very easy, at I know from readers' letters that downloading and installing software can be a pain. Displaperture brings that same rounded-corner look to modern Macs. Old-time Mac users probably remember how the display was curved at each corner on previous-generation Macs, before OS X. You have no real privacy when someone with an ax to grind (or a parental obligation) looks at those items. MRU-Blaster for Windows, from the same folks who offer Doc Scrubber, at The Most Recently Used (MRU) lists on your Windows PC (there are many of them) show the stuff you've worked on or looked at lately. Doc Scrubber for Windows, from Microsoft Word will tattle on you - see for details - and one of the easiest ways to clean out all the hidden personal info in Word documents is Doc Scrubber. If you have problems with Windows - and who doesn't? - you should give this software a try. Glary Utilities for Windows, from The Glary software has been one of the top recommendations from Technofile readers. Pixia and Phierha image editors for Windows, from Pixia is the first (and still highly regarded) version of this photo editor, and Phierha is an improved version. This comes from Japan and has a lot of fans. Sylfeed e-mail program for Windows, Macs and Linux PCs, from. Note that the folks who make SoftMaker also offer a paid version, SoftMaker Office 2010. SoftMaker Office 2006 for Windows, from you read that right - this is a 2006 program. And please note that I'm not endorsing any of these beyond confirming that these reader choices are worth trying. If you get confused by any of the sites and find a come-on for software that costs you money, don't fall for it. Here are 10 more free programs suggested by readers who were responding to my series called "Stop Paying for Software." (You'll find all the columns in the series at All of these are free.
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