Monday, 28 January 2013

Comandos: Beyond The Call of Duty


Commandos: Beyond the Call of Duty

Commandos: Beyond the Call of Duty, a set of new Commandos missions issued as a standalone game, was released on March 31, 1999. Despite it being much shorter than Behind Enemy Lines, it is a much more difficult game containing levels on a far greater scale to the extent of being comparable to those that were to be seen in Commandos 2. It has 8 missions, with locations including Yugoslavia(with Chetniks) and Greece


About This Game




The Nazis are invading Europe, and you've got to help the Allied forces stop the terrifying bunch before it's too late. The game's original six heroes are back for more action, aided by two new characters a Yugoslav military officer and a member of the Dutch Resistance. You'll begin each game ranked as a sergeant, trying to elevate your status to that of Field Marshal by game's end. Each stunningly detailed mission can only be accomplished by using each of the eight commandos' skills properly, requiring as much patience as combat skills.
Commandos: Beyond the Call of Duty is essentially a mission add-on pack for Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines, adding eight more missions, some new weapons and a higher graphics resolution. This game is sold as a stand-alone product, so you won't need the original Commandos to play.


Saturday, 26 January 2013

Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines




Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines is a single player real-time tactics computer game developed by Pyro Studios and published by Eidos Interactive. The first installment in the "Commandos" series, the game was released in 1998 and is set in wartime Europe and Africa where a group of six Allied Commandos performs missions using small unit tactics. Each Commando has a unique set of skills and tools determined by his class which forces the player to establish cooperation among them so that further progress can be made. The objectives varies from sabotages to rescuing allied informants and assassinations.
Commandos employs an isometric view with a whole map visible, thus allowing player to think out a strategy and its execution in advance. The same system was later used in the expansion pack Commandos: Beyond the Call of Duty released in 1999 as well as in two installments Commandos 2: Men of Courage and Commandos 3: Destination Berlin released in 2001 and 2003 respectively.


Commandos

In the game, the player represents the role of an officer who has been entrusted with the command of a group of six Commandos.

Republic of IrelandJack "Butcher" O'Hara (Green Beret)

An Army boxing champion from 1934 to 1937, O'Hara was sentenced by a military court to 14 years of forced labour after hitting an officer. When he joined Commandos, his sentence was commuted. Promoted to Sergeant after wiping out 16 enemy soldiers without ammunition during the raid on the island of Vågsøy.
  • Equipment: Knife, Pistol, Climbing axe, Acoustic decoy, Shovel.
  • Skills: Moving explosive barrels, hiding bodies, climbing walls.

United StatesSamuel "Brooklyn" Brooklyn (Driver)

Joined the British Army in 1937 after a long criminal career in United States. Samuel accepted the offer of joining the Commandos mainly because of his being sought by Americanauthorities. During the raid on the airfield in Tamet he managed to destroy eight German fighters using his jeep's machinegun and another four when he crashed the vehicle against the remaining aircraft full of fuel.
  • Equipment: Pistol, Submachine gun, First aid kit.
  • Skills: Driving tanks and vehicles, capturing heavy machinegun and artillery posts.

AustraliaJames "Fins" Blackwood (Marine)

Educated in Oxford, this naval engineer swum across the English Channel on a bet. Because of his problems with alcohol, Blackwood was demoted from the rank of Captain toSergeant after a fight in a private club. He joined Commandos as a simple soldier. Decorated with a Military Cross for rescuing 45 stranded British soldiers about to be captured atDunkirk.
  • Equipment: Knife, Pistol, Inflatable launch, Harpoon.
  • Skills: Diving.

United KingdomThomas "Fireman" Hancock (Sapper)

Born in Liverpool, Hancock became a specialist in the High Risk Explosives department and volunteered for the Commandos in 1940. During the raid on Saint-Nazaire, he was responsible for the explosions that crippled the port facilities for months. In this operation Hancock was captured, but after eight weeks he escaped, crossed the Pyrenees and returned to England.
  • Equipment: Pistol, Bear Trap, Time bomb, Remote control bomb, Grenades, Pliers.
  • Skills: Cutting wires, setting up traps, using explosives.

United KingdomSir Francis T. "Duke" Woolridge (Sniper)

An aristocrat from Sheffield famous for being cool, quiet, and distinguished. Received a Military Medal during the invasion of Narvik where he killed the Commander of the Germangarrison with a single shot from a distance of more than one mile while the officer was inspecting the placement of his troops.
  • Equipment: Pistol, Sniper Rifle, First aid kit.
  • Skills: Sniping.

FranceRene "Spooky" Duchamp (Spy)

A former Chief of Security in the French embassy in Berlin where he obtained valuable knowledge regarding the members of Hitler's General Staff, Duchamp joined the Resistancewhen the embassy was closed. At least three trains, fourteen tanks and more than thirty vehicles have been knocked out thanks to his skills of information, infiltration, andsabotage.
  • Equipment: Pistol, Poison Syringe, First aid kit.
  • Skills: Stealing uniforms from clotheslines, distracting enemy soldiers, hiding bodies.


NOTE: THIS IS A TORRENT FILE YOU MUST HAVE 
uTORRENT INSTALLED  IN YOUR SYSTEM.

Friday, 18 January 2013

Commandos 2: Men of Courage




Commandos 2 Men of Courage 
It can't be recommended over the PC version, let alone wholly recommended in its own right, except to those looking for an extremely tough PS2 action strategy game.
The direct approach isn't always the best approach--this concept lies at the heart of Commandos 3 just as it did with its predecessor, the innovative 1998 real-time tactical combat game that mixed elements of stealth, action, and even puzzle-solving in a World War II setting. Spanish developer Pyro Studios' visually stunning sequel takes the core gameplay of the original, adds some of the features from the 1999 stand-alone expansion pack along with plenty of great new ideas, and ultimately provides a highly challenging, sophisticated experience that's even better than the first. But be warned--Commandos 3 can be as intimidating as its premise makes it sound: You'll command a small group of elite Allied operatives deep behind enemy lines to perform a series of important clandestine missions. At every turn, your commandos will be avoiding the patrols of German or Japanese forces. It can be a difficult game, especially at first, but Commandos 3 truly evokes the intensity of the harrowing depictions of World War II that you've probably seen in film or on television.
Your commandos will engage in multiple high-priority missions.
Actually, the game clearly alludes to the movies that inspired it--even the manual admits that the game has more i n common with fictional accounts of the war than with factual ones. If you're familiar with classic World War II movies such as The Guns of Navarone, Bridge on the River Kwai, or even the more recent Saving Private Ryan, then you'll easily catch the references to these films in the game's various missions. As in these and other epic World War II movies, in Commandos 3 you'll have to do such things as rescue Allied soldiers, sabotage powerful sea vessels, assassinate key enemy officials, get your hands on important documents, and much more. The objectives are plentiful and varied and the game will take you to a wide variety of real-world settings, but the overall number of missions inCommandos 3 seems small: There are only 10 main missions in the game.You must play through them all sequentially, even though they aren't necessarily related to one another. In fact, the relative length and difficulty of each mission doesn't necessarily increase from one mission to the next, either.
Make no mistake, though--by any standards, all these missions are huge, and you'll typically spend many hours trying to accomplish the laundry list of objectives in each one. There's also good incentive to replay each mission, since a number of smaller bonus levels can be unlocked if you thoroughly explore the main missions. And the game's two higher difficulty settings noticeably affect the way enemy guards react, requiring you to take different paths to success. But before you can get into the main missions, you mustfirst get through two "tutorial" levels, which have to be the most difficult tutorials ever put into a game. These smaller missions provide very little actual tutorial--instead, they take a sink-or-swim approach by dropping you straight into enemy territory, leaving you to learn the hard way about the intricacies of the complex gameplay of Commandos 3. This can make the first hours of play unnecessarily frustrating, so much so that some players may be quickly turned off to the game. That's too bad, becauseCommandos 3 is well worth the effort it takes to learn.
Each mission area is rendered in exceptional detail.
The colorful, memorable cast of characters at your disposal comes mostly from the previous Commandos games and includes a powerful Green Beret; a deadly marine; a spy capable of disguising himself as the enemy; a sapper, your demolitions expert; a mechanic who can commandeer enemy vehicles; a master sniper; and even a seductive secret agent. New additions to the roster include a fleet-footed thief and an unlikely bull terrier whose barking can distract your foes. You'll also join forces with Allied troops whom you can control in many of the missions.
In the original Commandos game, each character had a limited, very specific set of skills--for example, only the Green Beret and the spy could actually move enemy victims' bodies so that other guards wouldn't see them, which made these two the key players in most missions. InCommandos 3, for the most part, each character has a wider variety of skills and is much more versatile--for example, most everyone can now move bodies out of sight. This gives you many more strategic options during play and, for better or worse, eliminates much of the puzzlelike feel of the original game's missions. The game's sole remaining puzzle element lies in the fact that you can't choose which commandos to bring into a mission and can't choose their starting equipment--you'll just have to make do with what you get.
Commandos 3's multiplayer mode lets you attempt all the missions cooperatively, though the host player has to have beaten them in single-player mode first. This option lends even more replay value to a game that will take you many dozens of hours to finish on your own--thus, the GameSpy Arcade program is provided to let you easily find allies to play with.
Like its predecessor, Commandos 3 is a distinctive game with a great design and a lot of impressive features. Yet Commandos 3 is even better than the first--its design is much more focused, the missions are more involved, and the expanded options for your commandos are all excellent. As a result, the game will certainly appeal to most anyone who likes a challenge for both the mind and the reflexes. And what a challenge--you'll feel a real sense of reward and relief after finishing each of the epic 


NOTE: THIS IS A TORRENT FILE YOU MUST HAVE 
uTORRENT INSTALLED  IN YOUR SYSTEM.





Friday, 11 January 2013

Windows XP Professional Edition SP3 32-bit




Windows XP is an operating system produced by Microsoft for use on personal computers, including home and business desktops, laptops and media centers. First released to computer manufacturers on August 24, 2001, it is the second most popular version of Windows, based on installed user base. The name "XP" is short for "eXPerience", highlighting the enhanced user experience.


User interface

Windows XP themes
Windows XP Luna.pngWindows XP Classic.png
Default Blue (Luna)Windows Classic
Windows XP Royale.pngRoyaleXP2.PNG
XP Media CenterThe new start menu design in the "Royale" theme
Windows XP task grouping (Luna).png
The "task grouping" feature introduced in Windows XP showing both grouped and individual items
Windows XP featured a new task-based GUI (Graphical user interface). The Start menu and taskbar were updated and many visual effects were added, including:
  • A translucent blue selection rectangle in Windows Explorer
  • Drop shadows for icon labels on the desktop
  • Task-based sidebars in Explorer windows ("common tasks")
  • The ability to group the taskbar buttons of the windows of one application into one button, with a popup menu listing the window titles
  • The ability to lock the taskbar to prevent accidental changes (Windows 2000 with Internet Explorer 6 installed had the ability to lock Windows Explorer and Internet Explorer toolbars, but not the taskbar)
  • The highlighting of recently added programs on the Start menu
  • Shadows under menus (Windows 2000 had shadows under mouse pointers, but not menus)
Windows XP analyzes the performance impact of visual effects and uses this to determine whether to enable them, so as to prevent the new functionality from consuming excessive additional processing overhead. Users can further customize these settings. Some effects, such as alpha compositing (transparency and fading), are handled entirely by many newer video cards. However, if the video card is not capable of hardware alpha blending, performance can be substantially degraded, and Microsoft recommends the feature should be turned off manually. Windows XP added the ability for Windows to use "Visual Styles" to change the appearance of the user interface. However, visual styles must be cryptographically signed by Microsoft to run. Luna is the name of the new visual style that is provided with Windows XP, and is enabled by default for machines with more than 64 MiB of RAM. Luna refers only to one particular visual style, not to all of the new user interface features of Windows XP as a whole. Some users "patch" the uxtheme.dll file that restricts the ability to use visual styles, created by the general public or the user, on Windows XP. In addition to the included Windows XP themes, there is one previously unreleased theme with a dark blue taskbar and window bars similar to Windows Vista titled "Royale Noir" available as unofficial download. Microsoft officially released a modified version of this theme as the "Zune" theme, to celebrate the launch of its Zune portable media player in November 2006. The differences are only visual with a new glassy look along with a black taskbar instead of dark blue and an orange start button instead of green. Additionally, the Media Center "Royale" theme, which was included in the Media Center editions, is also available to download for use on all Windows XP editions.
The default wallpaper, Bliss, is a photo of a landscape in the Napa Valley outside Napa, California, with rolling green hills and a blue sky with stratocumulus and cirrus clouds.
The "classic" interface from Windows 9x and 2000 can be used instead if preferred. Several third party utilities exist that provide hundreds of different visual styles.

New and updated features

Windows XP introduced several new features to the Windows line, including:
  • GDI+ graphics subsystem and improved image management and viewing in the shell
  • DirectX 8.1 upgradeable to DirectX 9.0c
  • Start Menu and Taskbar improvements
  • A number of new features in Windows Explorer including task panes, tiles and filmstrip views, improved sorting and grouping, searching by document categories, customizable infotips, built-in CD burning, AutoPlay, Simple File Sharing and WebDAV mini-redirector.
  • Improved imaging features such as Windows Picture and Fax Viewer, improved image handling and thumbnail caching in Explorer
  • A number of kernel enhancements and power management improvements 
  • Faster start-up, (due to improved Prefetch functions) logon, logoff, hibernation and application launch sequences.
  • The ability to discard a newer device driver in favor of the previous one (known as driver rollback) should a driver upgrade not produce desirable results.
  • Numerous improvements to increase the system reliability such as improved System Restore, Automated System Recovery, Windows Error Reporting and driver reliability.
  • A new, arguably more user-friendly interface, including the framework for developing themes for the desktop environment and richer icons with alpha transparency
  • Hardware support improvements such as USB 2.0, FireWire 800, Windows Image Acquisition, Media Transfer Protocol, DualView for multi-monitors and audio improvements.
  • Fast user switching, which allows users to save the current state and open applications of their desktop and allows another user to log on without losing that information
  • The ClearType font rendering mechanism, which is designed to improve text readability on liquid crystal display (LCD) and similar monitors, especially laptops.
  • Remote Assistance and Remote Desktop features, which allow users to connect to a computer running Windows XP from across a network or the Internet and access their applications, files, printers, and devices or request help.
  • New networking features  including Windows Firewall, Internet Connection Sharing integration with UPnP, NAT traversal APIs, Quality of Service features, IPv6 and Teredo tunneling, Background Intelligent Transfer Service, extended fax features, network bridging, peer to peer networking, support for most DSL modems, IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) connections with auto configuration and roaming, TAPI 3.1, Bluetooth and networking over FireWire.
  • New security features such as Software Restriction Policies, Credential Manager, Encrypting File System improvements, improved certificate services, smart card and PKIsupport. Windows XP SP2 introduced Data Execution Prevention, Windows Security Center and Attachment Manager.
  • Side-by-side assemblies and registration-free COM
  • Improved media features in Windows Media format runtime, Windows Media Player, Windows Movie Maker, TV/video capture and playback technologies, Windows Media Encoder and introduction of Windows Media Center
  • General improvements to international support such as more locales, languages and scripts, MUI support in Terminal Services, improved IMEs and National Language Support,Text Services Framework
  • Handwriting recognition, speech recognition and digital ink support accessible through the Tablet PC Input Panel (TIP) in Windows XP Tablet PC Edition
  • Numerous improvements to system administration tools such as Windows Installer, Windows Script Host, Disk Defragmenter, Windows Task Manager, Group Policy,CHKDSK, NTBackup, Microsoft Management Console, Shadow Copy, Registry Editor, Sysprep and WMI 
  • Improved application compatibility and shims compared to Windows 2000
  • Updated accessories and games.
  • Improvements to IntelliMirror features such as Offline Files, Roaming user profiles and Folder redirection.
Users in British schools observed the improved ease of use and advanced capabilities – comparing the former toRISC OS and Mac OS, and the latter to Unix.

Removed features
Some of the programs and features that were part of the previous versions of Windows did not make it to Windows XP. CD Player, DVD Player and Imaging for Windows are removed as Windows Picture and Fax Viewer, Windows Media Player and Windows shell takeover their duties. NetBEUI and NetDDE are deprecated and are not installed by default. DLC and AppleTalk network protocols are removed. Plug-and-play–incompatible communication devices (like modems and network interface cards) are no longer supported.
Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3 also remove features from Windows XP but to a less noticeable extent. For instance, Program Manager and support for TCP half-openconnections are removed in Service Pack 2. Energy Star logo and the address bar on taskbar are removed in Service Pack 3.

The minimum hardware requirements for Windows XP Professional include:
  • Pentium 233-megahertz (MHz) processor or faster (300 MHz is recommended)
  • At least 64 megabytes (MB) of RAM (128 MB is recommended)
  • At least 1.5 gigabytes (GB) of available space on the hard disk
  • CD-ROM or DVD-ROM drive
  • Keyboard and a Microsoft Mouse or some other compatible pointing device
  • Video adapter and monitor with Super VGA (800 x 600) or higher resolution
  • Sound card
  • Speakers or headphones



  • Extract it with Winrar
  • Burn It with Clone CD

Use These CD-Keys:

677TX-4QRXY-K3VCW-D8D39-4J4FY

GHVRK-D3PTV-MKHYM-KGH8K-XXTKX

V33G4-MK626-JXVW6-GDPH4-Y73X4

D2HHD-6TYYY-36J2V-T67PQ-M6XRM

NOTE: THIS IS A TORRENT FILE YOU MUST HAVE uTORRENT INSTALLED  
IN YOUR SYSTEM.



Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Microsoft Windows XP Professional Edition SP2




Windows XP is an operating system produced by Microsoft for use on personal computers, including home and business desktops, laptops and media centers. First released to computer manufacturers on August 24, 2001, it is the second most popular version of Windows, based on installed user base. The name "XP" is short for "eXPerience", highlighting the enhanced user experience.


User interface

Windows XP themes
Windows XP Luna.pngWindows XP Classic.png
Default Blue (Luna)Windows Classic
Windows XP Royale.pngRoyaleXP2.PNG
XP Media CenterThe new start menu design in the "Royale" theme
Windows XP task grouping (Luna).png
The "task grouping" feature introduced in Windows XP showing both grouped and individual items
Windows XP featured a new task-based GUI (Graphical user interface). The Start menu and taskbar were updated and many visual effects were added, including:
  • A translucent blue selection rectangle in Windows Explorer
  • Drop shadows for icon labels on the desktop
  • Task-based sidebars in Explorer windows ("common tasks")
  • The ability to group the taskbar buttons of the windows of one application into one button, with a popup menu listing the window titles
  • The ability to lock the taskbar to prevent accidental changes (Windows 2000 with Internet Explorer 6 installed had the ability to lock Windows Explorer and Internet Explorer toolbars, but not the taskbar)
  • The highlighting of recently added programs on the Start menu
  • Shadows under menus (Windows 2000 had shadows under mouse pointers, but not menus)
Windows XP analyzes the performance impact of visual effects and uses this to determine whether to enable them, so as to prevent the new functionality from consuming excessive additional processing overhead. Users can further customize these settings. Some effects, such as alpha compositing (transparency and fading), are handled entirely by many newer video cards. However, if the video card is not capable of hardware alpha blending, performance can be substantially degraded, and Microsoft recommends the feature should be turned off manually. Windows XP added the ability for Windows to use "Visual Styles" to change the appearance of the user interface. However, visual styles must be cryptographically signed by Microsoft to run. Luna is the name of the new visual style that is provided with Windows XP, and is enabled by default for machines with more than 64 MiB of RAM. Luna refers only to one particular visual style, not to all of the new user interface features of Windows XP as a whole. Some users "patch" the uxtheme.dll file that restricts the ability to use visual styles, created by the general public or the user, on Windows XP. In addition to the included Windows XP themes, there is one previously unreleased theme with a dark blue taskbar and window bars similar to Windows Vista titled "Royale Noir" available as unofficial download. Microsoft officially released a modified version of this theme as the "Zune" theme, to celebrate the launch of its Zune portable media player in November 2006. The differences are only visual with a new glassy look along with a black taskbar instead of dark blue and an orange start button instead of green. Additionally, the Media Center "Royale" theme, which was included in the Media Center editions, is also available to download for use on all Windows XP editions.
The default wallpaper, Bliss, is a photo of a landscape in the Napa Valley outside Napa, California, with rolling green hills and a blue sky with stratocumulus and cirrus clouds.
The "classic" interface from Windows 9x and 2000 can be used instead if preferred. Several third party utilities exist that provide hundreds of different visual styles.

New and updated features

Windows XP introduced several new features to the Windows line, including:
  • GDI+ graphics subsystem and improved image management and viewing in the shell
  • DirectX 8.1 upgradeable to DirectX 9.0c
  • Start Menu and Taskbar improvements
  • A number of new features in Windows Explorer including task panes, tiles and filmstrip views, improved sorting and grouping, searching by document categories, customizable infotips, built-in CD burning, AutoPlay, Simple File Sharing and WebDAV mini-redirector.
  • Improved imaging features such as Windows Picture and Fax Viewer, improved image handling and thumbnail caching in Explorer
  • A number of kernel enhancements and power management improvements 
  • Faster start-up, (due to improved Prefetch functions) logon, logoff, hibernation and application launch sequences.
  • The ability to discard a newer device driver in favor of the previous one (known as driver rollback) should a driver upgrade not produce desirable results.
  • Numerous improvements to increase the system reliability such as improved System Restore, Automated System Recovery, Windows Error Reporting and driver reliability.
  • A new, arguably more user-friendly interface, including the framework for developing themes for the desktop environment and richer icons with alpha transparency
  • Hardware support improvements such as USB 2.0, FireWire 800, Windows Image Acquisition, Media Transfer Protocol, DualView for multi-monitors and audio improvements.
  • Fast user switching, which allows users to save the current state and open applications of their desktop and allows another user to log on without losing that information
  • The ClearType font rendering mechanism, which is designed to improve text readability on liquid crystal display (LCD) and similar monitors, especially laptops.
  • Remote Assistance and Remote Desktop features, which allow users to connect to a computer running Windows XP from across a network or the Internet and access their applications, files, printers, and devices or request help.
  • New networking features  including Windows Firewall, Internet Connection Sharing integration with UPnP, NAT traversal APIs, Quality of Service features, IPv6 and Teredo tunneling, Background Intelligent Transfer Service, extended fax features, network bridging, peer to peer networking, support for most DSL modems, IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) connections with auto configuration and roaming, TAPI 3.1, Bluetooth and networking over FireWire.
  • New security features such as Software Restriction Policies, Credential Manager, Encrypting File System improvements, improved certificate services, smart card and PKIsupport. Windows XP SP2 introduced Data Execution Prevention, Windows Security Center and Attachment Manager.
  • Side-by-side assemblies and registration-free COM
  • Improved media features in Windows Media format runtime, Windows Media Player, Windows Movie Maker, TV/video capture and playback technologies, Windows Media Encoder and introduction of Windows Media Center
  • General improvements to international support such as more locales, languages and scripts, MUI support in Terminal Services, improved IMEs and National Language Support,Text Services Framework
  • Handwriting recognition, speech recognition and digital ink support accessible through the Tablet PC Input Panel (TIP) in Windows XP Tablet PC Edition
  • Numerous improvements to system administration tools such as Windows Installer, Windows Script Host, Disk Defragmenter, Windows Task Manager, Group Policy,CHKDSK, NTBackup, Microsoft Management Console, Shadow Copy, Registry Editor, Sysprep and WMI 
  • Improved application compatibility and shims compared to Windows 2000
  • Updated accessories and games.
  • Improvements to IntelliMirror features such as Offline Files, Roaming user profiles and Folder redirection.
Users in British schools observed the improved ease of use and advanced capabilities – comparing the former toRISC OS and Mac OS, and the latter to Unix.

Removed features
Some of the programs and features that were part of the previous versions of Windows did not make it to Windows XP. CD Player, DVD Player and Imaging for Windows are removed as Windows Picture and Fax Viewer, Windows Media Player and Windows shell takeover their duties. NetBEUI and NetDDE are deprecated and are not installed by default. DLC and AppleTalk network protocols are removed. Plug-and-play–incompatible communication devices (like modems and network interface cards) are no longer supported.
Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3 also remove features from Windows XP but to a less noticeable extent. For instance, Program Manager and support for TCP half-openconnections are removed in Service Pack 2. Energy Star logo and the address bar on taskbar are removed in Service Pack 3.

The minimum hardware requirements for Windows XP Professional include:
  • Pentium 233-megahertz (MHz) processor or faster (300 MHz is recommended)
  • At least 64 megabytes (MB) of RAM (128 MB is recommended)
  • At least 1.5 gigabytes (GB) of available space on the hard disk
  • CD-ROM or DVD-ROM drive
  • Keyboard and a Microsoft Mouse or some other compatible pointing device
  • Video adapter and monitor with Super VGA (800 x 600) or higher resolution
  • Sound card
  • Speakers or headphones

  • Extract it with Winrar
  • Burn It with Clone CD


Use These CD-Keys:

V2C47-MK7JD-3R89F-D2KXW-VPK3J                              

 QW4HD-DQCRG-HM64M-6GJRK-8K83T


NOTE: THIS IS A TORRENT FILE YOU MUST HAVE uTORRENT INSTALLED  
IN YOUR SYSTEM.