TOP 10 downloads

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hen CNET Download.com opened its doors in 1996, it was home to 3,000 small shareware and freeware applications. Online software distribution was still in its infancy. What a difference a near-decade makes! Since 1996, we've watched the rise of instant messaging, digital audio and the MP3 format, file sharing, spyware and antispyware, and the open-source movement, just to name a few. And we've watched as online software distribution has gone from pipe dream to reality. These 10 applications best represent the top trends in downloading over the past decade

ICQ

Today instant messengers are ubiquitous, but when ICQ ("I Seek You") was first released in 1997, it was truly the first of its kind. Though competitors such as Yahoo Instant Messenger and AIM have since encroached on ICQ's territory, this chat client remains enormously popular with international users, and it has remained one of Download.com's most popular applications since its launch.

Winamp

Arriving fast on the heels of the emerging MP3 digital format, Nullsoft's Winamp was one of the darlings of the burgeoning digital audio scene in the late '90s. This free audio player quickly gained popularity, becoming one of the most popular files on Download.com, and Nullsoft was eventually acquired by AOL in 1999.
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Napster
Who doesn't remember this controversial file-sharing kingpin? Developed by Northeastern University student Shawn Fanning, Napster was a groundbreaking application that enabled users to share MP3s painlessly for the first time through a peer-to-peer network. Napster has since been sued, shuttered, and reborn as a subscription music service, but its legacy remains.
Firefox
Developed by the open-source Mozilla project in 2003, Firefox was the first browser to show the promise of breaking Microsoft's stranglehold on the browser market. Lightweight, secure, and packed with useful features, Firefox exemplifies the promise of the strengthening open-source movement.
WinZip
When CNET Download.com launched in 1996, WinZip was among the first programs in our library, and in the past nine years, it has remained near the top of our Most Popular list. The reason is simple: For many years, WinZip was an essential utility. You couldn't download or send large files without it. Even the fact that Windows XP now has built-in ZIP support hasn't diminished its popularity. The keys to WinZip's success are its simplicity and its singularity of purpose: it does one thing--compressing and decompressing files--and it does it very well.
iTunes
Apple's music player and organizer makes our top 10 list for the sheer beauty of its product design. iTunes is not only a full-featured media player and library in its own right, it's also the gateway for Apple's iPod and popular music store, creating an elegant and simple interface for buying and organizing music. If only all software were this easy to use.
Ad-aware
Almost as soon as there was software to download, there was adware coming along for the ride. Lavasoft did its part to hold the line with Ad-aware, a spyware scanner and remover. Its simple interface and excellent results have gained the program acclaim over the past five years, including a recent monopoly on the No. 1 slot in Download.com's Most Popular list. We wouldn't download files without it, and apparently, neither would most of you.
Skype
If Internet signals can travel over a phone line, then voice calls can travel over the Internet, right? With a Voice-over-IP (VOIP) program such as Skype, they certainly can. The prospect of making free calls to folks all over the globe has persuaded millions of people to install the software; the ease of use and surprising voice quality have earned Skype a loyal user base and accolades that include a CNET Editors' Choice and a Webby.
RealPlayer
Ten years ago, the Web was full of static content. The 1995 debut of RealPlayer changed all that. Streaming audio and video in a free media player was a bold step forward into making the Internet a viable entertainment platform, and RealNetworks was there. Today the software plays almost every media format, and the online music store sells tunes compatible with most MP3 players--even the iPod. RealPlayer hasn't always been at the head of the class, but it was there first, and it keeps adapting to the developing world of online media.
Adobe Acrobat Reader
Bridging the gap between print and Internet publishing, Adobe's portable document format (PDF) lets publishers distribute their articles, newsletters, and documentation online without worrying about formatting problems or unauthorized alterations. By giving away the Acrobat Reader early on, Adobe helped create a nearly unassailable market position. If you want to read magazine archives or software manuals online, you need Acrobat Reader--as its nearly seven-year occupation of the Most Popular list can attest.


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top 10 sexiest gadgets

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What makes a tech product sexy? To some people, the function of a device itself makes it inherently sexy. But to most, a product's sexiness starts and ends with design: a compact and visually pleasing body with clean lines and curves and a futuristic attitude. Add an ounce of panache, sprinkle in some hype, and toss in a smattering of features and performance. We've assembled a gorgeous group of products from the last 10 years, and most can certainly back up their fabulous bods with brains.

Motorola Razr V3 (2005)

No tech product is more high profile than a mobile phone. And while we've seen plenty of so-called must-have phones over the years, such as Motorola's V70 and Sanyo's SCP-6200, the Razr V3 is the sexiest one of them all. Measuring only half an inch thick when closed, the flip-style Razr V3 has no equal when it comes to fashionable and original design. From the dual color screens to the stylized interface, this phone was born to star in a sci-fi flick.

Apple iPod (2001)

When it hit the streets in late 2001, Apple's iPod really had no competition in the style department. Sure, it held only 5GB of music and had weak battery life, but there's good reason that both the physical design and software interface have been emulated over and over again. The first-generation iPod (with a scrollwheel that actually turned) laid the foundation for the sexy iPod Mini, the minimal iPod Shuffle, and of course, several generations of high-capacity iPods. The iPod may be commonplace today, with more than 20 million units in rotation, but back in 2001, it was white hot.
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Sony PSP (2005)
I quote David Carnoy: "From an aesthetic perspective, the Sony PSP is a gorgeous device." Sure, almost any pocket-size gadget with a 4.3-inch screen could be construed as sexy, but when you add polished buttons, a glossy black finish, a wide-screen display, and the Sony name to the mix--well, you have something that everybody wants a piece of. But it doesn't stop there. The Wi-Fi-enabled portable gaming device also plays music and movies, displays photos, and has a built-in Web browser. That's almost a bit too much fun for one pocket.
Casio Exilim S1 (2002)
The first digital cameras were anything but sexy. They were bloated beasts that could capture only low resolution, Web-friendly images. Things changed in 2002 when a handful of manufacturers started the trend of petite yet able cameras ("credit card-size"), and the most notable of these was Casio's Exilim S1; a 1.2-megapixel camera that measured a mere 0.4 inch thick. The sturdy metallic charm of a camera (marketed as a "wearable camera") took OK photos and lacked a zoom lens, but it looked so good.
Fujitsu PlasmaVision PDS-4201 (1996)
Ultrathin high-definition plasma displays are the epitome of tech sex appeal. Who wouldn't want a 60-inch flat panel mounted on their bedroom wall? Fujitsu was the first company to commercialize the modern plasma display with the PDS-4201--a 42-incher that cost a staggering $14,999. Nowadays, you'll find gigantic plasmas from Pioneer, Samsung, Sony, Panasonic, and others with much lower prices, but they still own the living room when it comes to sexiness.
Bang & Olufsen BeoVision 5 (2002)
No list like this would be complete without the mention of Bang & Olufsen. Purveyors of sleek and cutting-edge industrial design, the Scandinavian company has wowed the public with its "lifestyle" A/V products such as the BeoSystem 2500 hi-fi and visually stunning loudspeakers. The BeoVision 5 is a 42-inch plasma display with an integrated sound system, and its square-framed design blends art and science in a way unlike any other TV on the market.
Sony VAIO X505 (2004)
The majority of laptop computers are utilitarian devices first and foremost. Then there was the Sony VAIO X505 (Pentium M 1.1GHz, 512MB of RAM, 20GB HDD), which measured 10.1 inches wide, 8.2 inches deep, and a remarkable 0.75 inch thick at its widest point and 0.3 inch at its thinnest. It was also one of the lightest laptops available at 1.85 pounds (it's now discontinued). While its small size kept the feature set and battery life low, the X505, as described by CNET laptop editors, was "the laptop equivalent of the ancient siren, said to have lured sailors to their deaths with her bewitching song." On the other side of the fence, Apple's stunning PowerBook G4 Titanium (2001) with its 15-inch wide-screen display and silvery industrial design, became an instant trend, and backed its looks up with excellent G4 performance.
Apple iMac (1998)
Occasionally, you'll spot an old Bondi Blue iMac at a coffee shop or a garage sale. The original iMac is far from sexy today, but that wasn't the case for this seminal all-in-one computer back in 1998. The egg-shaped iMac was actually a computer built around a 15-inch CRT monitor and it came in a variety of candy colors, from Blueberry to Grape. Consumer friendly, the iMac did away with a floppy drive and legacy ports and introduced the reliance on USB (as well as a built-in handle). The success of the iMac led to the slot-loading iMac (with five refined colors), the equally sexy flat-panel iMac G4, today's iMac G5, and of course, the development of hundreds of products inspired by the iMac's technicolor nature.
Canon GL1 (1999)
Canon's GL1 helped to bridge the gap between the professional and consumer worlds of videography. Though it wasn't the first small-form-factor three-CCD chip MiniDV camcorder, it certainly gained notoriety both as a quality camera a film student could afford and as a camera oft used in the porn industry (that alone made it sexy). And because of the GL1's small size, users could capture broadcast quality video in a variety of places and situations. Plus, it was hard to miss that distinctive pearly white finish with red accents and that sexy Fluorite 20X optical zoom lens.
GM EV1 (1996)
You might have seen one of GM's rare EV1s out on the street--if you were lucky. The world's first "mass produced" electric automobile (and grandfather of today's hybrid cars), the attractive and futuristic EV1 represented a promise of a cleaner and greener world. Debuting in 1996, the first batch of EV1s were powered by lead acid batteries that were good for 55 to 95 miles per charge. The second generation (1999) used nickel-metal-hydride batteries and had a range of 75 to 135 miles per charge. Leased out to individuals and corporations in California and Arizona only, the EV1 experiment lasted only until 2003.


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