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From Game Product Key Finder recovers product keys for thousands of popular games installed on your local or remote network computers. In order to install or reinstall Call of Duty, FIFA Games, or other game, you must have access to a product serial key (CD Key) for that product. Game Product Key Finder retrieves serial keys from local machine or network computers and allows protecting your company from having pirated game software on your network. With this software you will be able to track the number of game software licenses installed in your business, find and recover a lost or forgotten product keys. You can backup product keys to Registry File (.REG), save as Tab Delimited Txt File (.TXT), CSV Comma Delimited (.CSV), Excel Workbook (.XLS), Access Database (.MDB), Web Page (.HTML), SQLLite3 Database or XML Data (.XML) file, print key list or copy all to clipboard. This utility can be useful if you lost the product key and you want to reinstall it. Full Specifications What's new in version 1.2.7 Version 1.2.7 may include unspecified updates, enhancements, or bug fixes.

General Publisher Publisher web site Release Date June 09, 2015 Date Added June 11, 2015 Version 1.2.7 Category Category Subcategory Operating Systems Operating Systems Windows XP/2003/Vista/Server 2008/7/8/10 Additional Requirements None Download Information File Size 2.72MB File Name gameproductkeyfinder_setup.exe Popularity Total Downloads 45,198 Downloads Last Week 534 Pricing License Model Free to try Limitations 15-day trial Price $17.5.

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Staying on top of IT is hard. Here's a roundup of this week's new IT product launches to make it a little easier. If you think we're missing something, tell us in the comments below and we'll add it to the list. Microsoft refreshes Surface Pro Microsoft has announced a new and refreshed Surface Pro, which marks the fifth generation of Microsoft's 2-in-1 tablet line.

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With a new and improved battery that lasts up to 13.5 hours, the new Surface Pro also comes with a 7th generation Intel Core processor, which makes it approximately 2.5 times faster than the Surface Pro 3. In a, Microsoft points to improvements it's made to the Surface Pen, which it claims is the 'fastest pen ever' and 'twice as accurate as the previous version and enhanced by our PixelSense Accelerator custom silicon.' The new generation Surface will also be the first model to feature LTE Advanced.

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It will start at $799. Google officially launches Cloud Spanner Google has officially released its distributed relational database service, which the company says will offer users 99.9999 percent availability. 'If you are struggling with the scale of your transactional database — you will go to a sharded database, or NoSQL,' says Google Cloud Product Manager Deepti Srivastava. 'If you’re at that stage where you have to make those trade-offs, Spanner is the way to go. You are already doing work to use one of those systems. We try to make that trade-off as simple as possible.' The new managed service features global scale, all the accoutrements of a relational database, support for languages such as a Java, Go, Python, and Node.js, high availability, and strong security with encryption, IAM integration, and audit logging.

Google is pricing the service at $0.90 per node per hour and at $0.30 per GB per month. The Mountain View company is also offering free trials to interested companies. Untangle unveils new version of NG Firewall The network security company Untangle has announced version 13.0 of NG Firewall, a software-based firewall solution that offers 'content filtering, malware and threat protection, secure Wi-Fi, application control, bandwidth optimization, virtual private networks, and more.' According to a, 'Untangle combines Unified Threat Management (UTM) — to address all of the key network threats — with policy management tools that enable administrators to monitor, manage and shape internet traffic.' NG Firewall also offers customizable reports, which administrators can use to pull information on network activity and application usage by user groups and time of day.

NG Firewall v13 is currently via Untangle. A free upgrade. Splashtop launches On-Demand Support for iOS, Android devices Splashtop has launched Splashtop On-Demand Support (SOS) with Mobile, a real-time screen sharing application for iOS and Android devices that gives administrators remote visibility and control of devices. 'SOS with Mobile enables customer service and support personnel to have an instant, real-time view of their customers’ screens no matter which devices are used,' Splashtop says in a press release. 'Help desks, MSPs, IT administrators and mobile app developers can view the mobile screen along with the user and offer assistance with accuracy and efficiency. ' Features include the ability to remotely view and access iOS and Android devices and remotely offer help desk assistance to users. Administrators can also 'elevate to Windows admin privilege to interact with User Account Control (UAC) and perform admin-level operations.'

Splashtop On-Demand Support is. This price will eventually increase to $299 per year per technician. FinalCode announces FinalCode Express Edition The security firm FinalCode has launched, a new product the company claims will 'significantly lower the hurdle for enterprises to implement basic file security.' Priced at $10 per user per month, FinalCode Express Edition is a skinnier version of FinalCode v5, which 'lets file owners track files shared beyond corporate borders, block unauthorized access, get immediate alerts for file accesses involving blocked attempts and delete files wherever they are.'

The new addition to FinalCode's product portfolio to pick and choose what features they want via a subscription package. Such features include network folder security, remote file deletion and email notification for unauthorized access, allows users to 'specify who views the files and for how long, restrict file actions (save, copy/paste, print, etc.), track activity throughout the file lifecycle, and even remotely delete the file when an unauthorized user attempts to access it.' Are we missing something?

Let us know below and we'll add it to the list! And if you have a product launch planned, let us know and we'll include it in a future roundup. Please email all submissions to. Edited May 30, 2017 at 3:12 UTC. Admittedly, myself and finances are like Republicans and Democrats trying to get anything accomplished together, but most of these new items seem awfully pricey to me.

I mean for example, to get a Surface Pro 4 with a decent sized HD and superior processor you have to double if not more that $799 starting price. Am I alone in thinking hey, I make ok money, but that's just beyond the means? Same with some of these other services, can companies really afford to go that route? Again, fiances confuse me much like I am still trying to wrap my head around how quantum computers really really work. MrTartan wrote: Splashtop looks good, I'll have to give that a try. Managing mobiles is a bit of a pain, I just had to drive to another site to sort out an iPhone and iPad but if I could have got on remotely then it would have saved a trip.

Previous alternatives I've tried for iOS aren't fully interactive, this just take screen shots every second or so. Then again, seeing the outside world from time to time doesn't do me any harm but I'm not sure what that big yellow thing in the sky is! Think less in terms of 'remoting to' the iDevice and more in terms of pre-configuring it and you have your solution: Apple DEP & Cisco Meraki (free for up to 100 devices - we use it and it's excellent) or JAMF (more full-featured, but no free option). As much as I like the concept behind the Surface Pro, I can type 80wpm with a good keyboard, and the SP's isn't it. Nor is the touchpad acceptable for what I do, nor the kickstand (try using an SP on your lap on your hotel bed like an ultrabook and you quickly get the point) and the display is beautiful, but tiny and hard on my eyes. Also, I really do have the need for an occasional CAT5 plug-in and would prefer not to have a USB adapter for it. Just bought myself a very gently used ThinkPad T460p and am already amazed.

Fairly lightweight, with quad-core power, discrete graphics and a wonderful IPS display, and saved a fair amount over its very recent replacemnt T470p. CrimsonKidA wrote: MrTartan wrote: Splashtop looks good, I'll have to give that a try. Managing mobiles is a bit of a pain, I just had to drive to another site to sort out an iPhone and iPad but if I could have got on remotely then it would have saved a trip.

Previous alternatives I've tried for iOS aren't fully interactive, this just take screen shots every second or so. Then again, seeing the outside world from time to time doesn't do me any harm but I'm not sure what that big yellow thing in the sky is! Think less in terms of 'remoting to' the iDevice and more in terms of pre-configuring it and you have your solution: Apple DEP & Cisco Meraki (free for up to 100 devices - we use it and it's excellent) or JAMF (more full-featured, but no free option). Yeah I've done that in the past with maas360 and others but none of them let me get onto the device in a fully interactive way.

There are just times when a user is stuck and needs someone to actually see what's on the screen and why the button they are pressing (normally the wrong button!) isn't doing what I tell them it should do. I can remote onto the Android devices pretty well with gotoassist but iDevices are less friendly, although I do accept the security thinking behind it. Todays problem was someone configuring the settings within an app and she couldn't do it. Turns out she was pressing the wrong option from the 2, essentially she turned left instead of right, so wasn't getting the results she expected.

A quick remote on would have solved it in 30 seconds. The MDM can deploy the app but it can't help them select the correct option within it. MrTartan wrote: CrimsonKidA wrote: MrTartan wrote: Splashtop looks good, I'll have to give that a try. Managing mobiles is a bit of a pain, I just had to drive to another site to sort out an iPhone and iPad but if I could have got on remotely then it would have saved a trip. Previous alternatives I've tried for iOS aren't fully interactive, this just take screen shots every second or so. Then again, seeing the outside world from time to time doesn't do me any harm but I'm not sure what that big yellow thing in the sky is!

Think less in terms of 'remoting to' the iDevice and more in terms of pre-configuring it and you have your solution: Apple DEP & Cisco Meraki (free for up to 100 devices - we use it and it's excellent) or JAMF (more full-featured, but no free option). Yeah I've done that in the past with maas360 and others but none of them let me get onto the device in a fully interactive way. There are just times when a user is stuck and needs someone to actually see what's on the screen and why the button they are pressing (normally the wrong button!) isn't doing what I tell them it should do. I can remote onto the Android devices pretty well with gotoassist but iDevices are less friendly, although I do accept the security thinking behind it. Todays problem was someone configuring the settings within an app and she couldn't do it. Turns out she was pressing the wrong option from the 2, essentially she turned left instead of right, so wasn't getting the results she expected. A quick remote on would have solved it in 30 seconds. The MDM can deploy the app but it can't help them select the correct option within it.

I completely get what you're saying, but honestly I consider those PICNIC issues. The iPad is the easiest to use device ever made, and yet some people still can't get it.? Just blows my mind. How much friggin hand-holding can a full-grown adult need, amiright! Navcoder Keygen Music. ? CrimsonKidA wrote: MrTartan wrote: CrimsonKidA wrote: MrTartan wrote: Splashtop looks good, I'll have to give that a try. Managing mobiles is a bit of a pain, I just had to drive to another site to sort out an iPhone and iPad but if I could have got on remotely then it would have saved a trip.

Previous alternatives I've tried for iOS aren't fully interactive, this just take screen shots every second or so. Then again, seeing the outside world from time to time doesn't do me any harm but I'm not sure what that big yellow thing in the sky is! Think less in terms of 'remoting to' the iDevice and more in terms of pre-configuring it and you have your solution: Apple DEP & Cisco Meraki (free for up to 100 devices - we use it and it's excellent) or JAMF (more full-featured, but no free option). Yeah I've done that in the past with maas360 and others but none of them let me get onto the device in a fully interactive way. There are just times when a user is stuck and needs someone to actually see what's on the screen and why the button they are pressing (normally the wrong button!) isn't doing what I tell them it should do. I can remote onto the Android devices pretty well with gotoassist but iDevices are less friendly, although I do accept the security thinking behind it.

Todays problem was someone configuring the settings within an app and she couldn't do it. Turns out she was pressing the wrong option from the 2, essentially she turned left instead of right, so wasn't getting the results she expected. A quick remote on would have solved it in 30 seconds. The MDM can deploy the app but it can't help them select the correct option within it. I completely get what you're saying, but honestly I consider those PICNIC issues. The iPad is the easiest to use device ever made, and yet some people still can't get it.? Just blows my mind.

How much friggin hand-holding can a full-grown adult need, amiright!?indeed, Apple has done a great job on ease of use of iPad and iPhone.often, the iOS remote view use cases we have seen include fixing/changing application settings (email, vpn, etc.), remote support of business apps (3rd party or inhouse developed) that can be complex, marketing people needing to do demo of mobile apps, and others. This is industry-first iOS screen sharing turn-key solution. So new usages are also emerging, and we are getting some very interesting feedback. People are also amazed how cost effective Splashtop On-Demand Support with Mobile is, compared to others.