Friday, 9 January 2009
 
 


Direct Access 1.5.1
Download Direct Access 1.5.1
Contacting third-party download site... please wait.
If your download does not start automatically within 5 seconds, choose a mirror below:

Direct Access 1.5.1 Mirror 1

 


Direct Access is a personal productivity tool that offers a new way to interact with your PC. Speed up repetitive tasks by typing an abbreviation in any program: for example, quickly answer emails creating customizable universal templates, or launch your favorite applications or websites, perhaps searching Google, Wikipedia or any dictionary.

You can even set up custom menus, for example grouping standard tech support answers or signatures.

Whatever application you are using, if you type an abbreviation, Direct Access suggests an action via a tooltip. If you press F12, Direct Access performs the command and removes the abbreviation. If you ignore the suggestion and just keep working, the tooltip vanishes.

Direct Access is great for tech support, providing you with canned, pre-written and customizable replies that you can enter by just typing a word.

The new macro feature provides personalized text when executing a command: you can also enter the current date, special symbols and, for your convenience, even specify the final cursor position.

Use Direct Access to:
- Execute commands by typing user-defined abbreviations across all applications.
- Save time on repetitive tasks: open files, documents, websites, and insert text just by typing a word.
- Open your favorite websites by typing a meaningful name.
- Automatically search the web - Google, Wikipedia or Amazon are just a few keystrokes away.
- Insert the same autotext anywhere - even in applications without built-in autotext!
- Breeze through e-mails using combinations of boiler-plate text, automatically inserting just the right signature at the end.
- Paste standard programming structures into editors.

No more:
- Breaking your typing flow to use the mouse.
- Repetitive drilling through menus and folders for the same items.
- Laboriously setting up the same autotext and signatures for different
applications.
- Copying and pasting boilerplate emails and letters.