DVR VIEWER 3.3

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2.7 
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Latest version:
3.3.1 See all
Developer:
Samsung Techwin
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DVR VIEWER is developed by Samsung Techwin and is used by 2 users of Software Informer. The most popular versions of this product among our users are: 1.3, 2.0, 2.3, 2.5 and 3.3. The names of program executable files are 2.3.N.EN.exe, ViewerV2.2.N.EN.exe, ViewerV2.2.N.CH.exe, Viewer.exe and VideoViewer.exe. The product will soon be reviewed by our informers.

You can check DVR-MS Converter, DVR Utility, DVR-Compress and other related programs like DVR-MS to AVI at the "download" section.

Comments (2)

2.7
Rating
3 votes
5 stars
1
4 stars
0
3 stars
0
2 stars
1
1 stars
1
User

Your vote:

A
Very nice & good to use. Provides very friendly atmosphere. I like its latest versions most of all.

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S
I give Adobe's Flash Player a one-star (out of five) rating, because Software Informer does not permit "no-star" ratings! Surely I am not the only person who has noticed that Adobe is constantly releasing new versions of Flash Player and Adobe Reader to patch security vulnerabilities and bugs! When I reach a site that requires Flash Player, Task Managers shows that Firefox suddenly needs much more RAM.

Flash Player -- whether I am using the ActiveX version for Internet Explorer or the DLL/add-on for Firefox -- causes a discernable bottlelneck my (broadband) Internet connection (via a gigabit LAN).

Because Adobe refuses to make its specifications available -- and obviously will not be releasing any source code -- end users seem content to continue downloading and using this bloated, unstable, security risk (and apparently have been deceived into believing that Flash content is a "Web standard" and that Flash Player is a required plug-in for every Web browser).

I cannot recall the last time that I encountered Flash content that served a useful purpose (and just because a Web designer chooses to create the interface for an entire Web site in FLV and or SWF format without offering an X/HTML alternative version -- which was standard etiquette in the early 1990s -- making the site inaccessible to visually impaired users or individuals without (often, the most current release of) Flash Player -- and/or dial-up access that lacks the bandwidth to handle often huge Web pages that might cause Flash Player to generate errors and might even cause a Web browser crash.

I have downloaded the Windows port of Gnash (version 0.8.7), the free and open-source alternative to Flash Player, which obviously is not a "drag-and-drop replacement" for Flash Player, but Gnash is a top-priority GNU/Free Software Foundation project and I would rather use the time I waste with Flash Player -- monitoring security alerts and downloading the latest patched version -- using Gnash and helping contribute to the project.

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