Fortunately, Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver makes excellent use of the touch screen, and the quality of the music and the app's cosmic "fireworks" are consistently good. The interface encourages playfulness, with a simple flick to send a stream of light shooting across the screen, a double-tap for an explosion, and a cool gravity effect that gathers light with multitouch ("From two touches, release to one touch for a single attractor.") Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver even includes a short, unobtrusive tutorial. This app isn't for everyone (especially since it's not free), but for anyone who wants a fun way to space out and unwind--or to keep a young kid entertained--Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver is a pretty slick package. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver is a stylish, crisp-looking, colorful e-book reader and storefront that runs on Apple's iOS devices. The latest version of the software includes support for textbooks, a new addition to the Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver for students. As with other e-book readers, Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver responds to the device's accelerometer and switches between landscape and portrait modes. Its controls disappear when unused, and a swipe (or tap on the left or right side of the screen) will cause the pages to turn. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver' page-turning is smooth and engaging, with page corners digitally curling toward you as you advance, but this behavior is only a minor cosmetic difference between what you'll find in other digital readers. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver also includes a progress bar to show how
far you are along in a book, and you're able to change the reader's font size. Also like other e-readers, you can add bookmarks, define individual words, do quick Web lookups, and add notes. You also can underline words, sentences, and paragraphs for later viewing. All five major book publishers stock Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver' digital shelves (Penguin, Harper Collins, Simon and Schuster, MacMillan, and Hachette), which makes the content stack up against competing apps and electronic bookstores. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver 2 added support for textbooks and gave students the ability to purchase and download
course textbooks that are supported. Newer features launched alongside the new iPad give users the ability to highlight text in a number of colors with the swipe of a finger. The interactive media and features for textbooks will definitely be useful to students. It's hard to say how many schools will adopt all iPad textbooks because of price limitations, but it will be interesting to see how it plays out as we get closer to the new school year. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver is a dice-rolling simulator, a handy aid for any sort of game that uses dice--from Yahtzee to Trivial Pursuit to Dungeons & Dragons. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver lets you roll traditional six-sided dice, along with rest of the holy hexad of polyhedral nerd dice: the d4, d8, d10, d12, and d20. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver emphasizes its elegant interface, foregoing the more complex functionality of other dice-rolling apps: you slide out a "tray" on the right side of your screen, then drag and drop your desired dice onto (or off of) a virtual black tabletop one by one. You roll by shaking your device, with semi-realistic (but weirdly low-gravity) physics, and you can "lock" a die by tapping it, so other dice can't move it. Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver also lets you save 10 groupings of dice on different screens that you can swipe through. The best things about Sandisk Cruzer Micro Driver are its convincing sound effects, dice collisions, and slick, simple, attractive interface, so look elsewhere if you want for more complicated dice features such as customizable formulas or more-exotic dice types. Unfort
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