Software for Webmasters, Wordsmiths, and Whodunnit Fans
Learn about your Web site's visitors, find the right word, and unearth clues to a puzzling crime.
Laura Blackwell, PC World
Busy, analytical people need special tools to help them sort things out efficiently. And when they take a break from their detail-oriented work, they may enjoy a detail-oriented diversion. With these programs, you can get the scoop on who's visiting your Web site, pinpoint word meanings, and solve a slick puzzle.
Woo-Hoo for Web Analytics
There's more to Web page data than hit counters. But some really useful tidbits--where your readers are, what OS and browser they're running, and so forth--are hard for the average site owner to find. Woopra serves up all kinds of data in a clean, easy-to-understand interface.
There's more to Web page data than hit counters. But some really useful tidbits--where your readers are, what OS and browser they're running, and so forth--are hard for the average site owner to find. Woopra serves up all kinds of data in a clean, easy-to-understand interface.
Currently in free beta, Woopra is a Web analytics service with a desktop client: You sign up, validate your account, install the software, and paste a Javascript snippet on your Web site. Afterward, you can view both real-time and historical data about each visitor. Woopra tells you what city they're in, what browser and OS they're using, the referring pages, and more. I used Woopra to check out the visitor stats at a Web comic strip site (with the owner's permission) and surprised the artist with the discovery that a plurality of her visitors use Firefox and 1068-by-786-resolution monitors--a far cry from her Safari browser and wide-screen monitor. This information can help to design a site your readers understand and enjoy.
Because Woopra's beta has been popular, there can be a waiting list for the service. Vendor iFusion Labs is aware of the issue and plans to step up the rate of account activations soon--perhaps even by the time you read this. Go ahead and get in line: It's worth the wait.
Woopra, free
The Word on the Tip of Your Tongue...At Your Fingertips
Most people who work at PCs either fumble with a heavy paper dictionary or fire up a browser and surf to one. The Talking Merriam-Webster Dictionary sidesteps both problems, keeping a dictionary at the ready in your PC's system tray.
Altogether, the Talking Merriam-Webster Dictionary contains 75,000 definitions for a total of 45,000 entries, including 10,000 that the program deliver in spoken form. Searches are easy to perform, and they return results quickly. If you like, you can choose and resize the fonts. Advanced Mode includes a Notes field in which you can annotate entries yourself. If you have any of vendor Paragon's other Merriam-Webster dictionaries--foreign-language or medical, for instance--you can search all of them from the same interface.
In the version I tested, pronunciations sounded more British than American in accent. Though pleasant, they might not help someone trying to communicate in the United States. The choice of words recorded could be better, too: Tricky ones are sometimes missing while obvious ones are included. Surely we'd benefit more from hearing "trompe l'oeil" pronounced than "troop." Paragon promises that the sound file available by the time you read this will feature native speakers of American regional dialects.
This demo version works indefinitely, but nag screens begin popping up after 100 definitions.
Talking Merriam-Webster Dictionary, free with nag screens; $31 for nag-free full version
Finding Hidden Objects Is My Business
When $4 billion vanishes from Las Vegas's newest casino, the owners turn to the Mystery PI. You have to nose through some shady locations--but in the Mystery PI: The Vegas Heist, every spider or socket wrench could be a clue.
This sharp-looking game is a grown-up version of the hidden-object puzzles you used to solve during rainy-day recess. These cluttered and realistic-looking Vegas scenes offer items in obvious context as well as trickier treasures, such as a lightning bolt that's part of a sign or a gigantic nail file worked into a vehicle. Hints ding your score--and the hint-o-meter takes time to recharge--but it's worth caving in when you don't know what 'car transmission' or 'antique iron' looks like.
Mystery PI: The Vegas Heist is an entertaining and stylish brain-teaser that should appeal to puzzle fans. But beware: SpinTop Games gives away only the first hour for free. After that, you must either buy the $20 full version or hang up your trenchcoat and fedora for good.
Mystery PI: The Vegas Heist, 1 hour free; $20 for full version
Did you have an interesting experience with one of these programs? Is your favorite file missing from PC World's Downloads library? E-mail your comments to Laura Blackwell. Messages containing attached files will be deleted unread.
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