Stephen Christie
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12.0.0.285 (Aug 16, 2011)
Awesome Software! Well worth the cost, especially if you buy it on sale for 50% off.
The free versions do not even compare a little to the actual results of Perfect Disk.
Do not compare simply the results the free ones show you on a graph, but the real world results.
You get what you pay for with most things, defraggers are the same way.
2011.1.0.63 (Jun 14, 2011)
I'm not sure why kashin, is hating on BPFTP so much.
I've been using it for the last decade and enjoy it a lot.
The competitors in its market price range are not any better, and those others still lack in some features BPFTP has had for a decade.
I love it as long as it runs.
I love that You can import the setting configs if you have to reinstall the OS or if you want to use it on another PC, just copy the installed directory files over and install on top of it.
2011.1.0.63 (Jun 14, 2011 - 7:46 PM)
Yea! ..and my Pentium 90 (MHz)
2011.1.0.63 (May 15, 2011 - 1:27 AM)
Ironically there is no betanews button to like this article to my FB page.
2011.1.0.63 (Dec 11, 2010 - 8:09 PM)
Sorry I was wrong, for $1,199.00 you can get the gaming Asus laptop with Intel Core i7 Processor 6GB Memory 640GB Hard Drive, ATI 5870 1GB GDDR5 Video Card (dedicated memory not shared) and High-definition LED-backlit 17" screen.
2011.1.0.63 (Dec 11, 2010 - 8:02 PM)
I think it is great that the MBA works well, it should for $1300.
Esp. considering you can buy an actual hard-core gaming laptop for $1300 from ASUS with a real dedicated 1GB video card and core i5 CPU 4GB of ram and blue ray player etc.
The Gaming Asus has a regular hard drive though, which actually runs a bit faster than the SSD in the MBA, for anything other than database work.
2011.1.0.63 (Nov 6, 2010 - 12:14 AM)
You should at the least, put your computer in sleep mode if you do not turn it off.
Power is not free, and we are possibly the most wasteful society on earth.
I am not a tree hugger, but I do think lowering your electric bill is worthwhile.
In addition, the parts in a computer have a MFT, that means they will fail after xxx hours of usage.
So why burn off those hours while you’re not even around using it?
Especially hard drives, they never stop spinning so they wear out all day and night long if you don’t power down.
Back 10 years ago computers with monitors (together) used 150 watts per hour on average; so everyone got into the advice of leave it on.
However, now computers with monitors consume about 500 watts on average, even when at idle.