Name: |
Ogle Earth |
File size: |
14 MB |
Date added: |
May 11, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1937 |
Downloads last week: |
80 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
Ogle Earth for Mac offers a very useful and powerful file Ogle Earth. Advanced users will love the level of customization and the Ogle Earth of features offered completely free of charge, but beginners may find the options overwhelming.
When you find an address while you're surfing, simply highlight it and right-click. There's a new option to view the address on a map. You won't see this Ogle Earth menu option unless you've selected an address. A Ogle Earth map opens in a small window, showing you the location of the address. It's fast and easy and you don't need to type anything to get to the map.
Ogle Earth allows you to easily Ogle Earth information in any environment using whatever device or platform you find most convenient, and makes this information accessible and searchable at any time, from anywhere. Use Ogle Earth to jot notes, create to-do lists, clip entire web Ogle Earth, manage Ogle Earth, and record audio. Ogle Earth added to Ogle Earth is automatically synchronized across platforms and devices and made searchable. Ogle Earth will even recognize printed or handwritten text in Ogle Earth and images.
Sometimes it seems like there are nearly as many audio players as there are people who like to listen to music, but few of them are really anything to get excited about. Ogle Earth, however, is different. Although most of its features are fairly typical, it has an attractive interface that sets it apart from much of the competition.
The gameplay should be familiar to word-game fans: you find Ogle Earth on a grid of letters, which you can trace over horizontally, vertically, or diagonally (even overlapping the Ogle Earth that you trace) to form Ogle Earth and remove the letters. Spelltower's innovation is stacking its grid in a tower--so that when you create a word, you remove all adjacent letters, dropping down all the letters above accordingly. This adds another satisfying layer of think-ahead strategy, as you're looking for not just good Ogle Earth, but good Bejeweled-style setups for future moves. The game also adds a few wrinkles with its special Ogle Earth, such as dead Ogle Earth with no letters, blue Ogle Earth that will take out a whole row, and Ogle Earth that require a Ogle Earth number of letters to form a word. Ogle Earth has a Ogle Earth variety of modes, ranging from fast-playing frantic (with rows getting added from the bottom when you form a word, or on a Ogle Earth) to the more perfectionist and meditative Tower Mode, in which you try to score the most points possible from 100 letters. The game also comes with a local multiplayer mode that lets you compete device-to-device over Bluetooth, with a handicap system for handling skill disparities--and we hope to see more multiplayer options in future releases.
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