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Search results: 5 articles (Search results 1 - 5) : Sponsored High Speed Downloads
Author: wewe | 29 October 2009 |
: 6![]() Small Portable Antivirus made in Indonesia which can sweep away all viruses. Smadav and Ansav had been well known to be able to fight viruses as well as protect PC. These tiny anti virus has been accompanied by real time protector as PC Guard. Smadav and Ansav recognise thousand kinds of viruses Author: TDSP | 19 October 2009 |
: 11![]() SMADAV is an simple antivirus that can clean registry, viruses, worm, trojan, and hidden path Author: TDSP | 10 October 2009 |
: 13![]() SMADAV is an simple antivirus that can clean registry, viruses, worm, trojan, and hidden path Author: anil528 | 4 September 2009 |
: 7![]() Creator: Qplaze Screen Size: 128x128, 128x160, 176x220, 240x320 Genre: Race Their automobiles barge in in whirlwinds of lead and fires, their rockets don't know how to drop, and 6 barreled car guns cut armor as though it was butter. Their crazy drivers are the best, and their cars are chef-d'oeuvres of art, made for battle and show. They battle in the darknesses of the cities, in fritted breaks up of old capitals, destructed by atomic blasts, in Coliseums, covered by oil and gasolene. Crews hail them, their images fly on neon panels in the sky, and satellites which were military some time ago, transmit their battles to complete the world. They all accustomed to die and rise again in cybernetic reanimators, each of their cars was dashed and burnt 1000s of times… they're prizefighters – dieing is their work. Author: Michael | 27 December 2007 |
: 6![]() XviD | English | 432x324 , 25 FPS | MP3 | 160 Kbps Popeye the Sailor is a comic strip character, later featured in popular animated cartoons. He was created by Elzie Crisler Segar[1], and first appeared in the King Features comic strip Thimble Theater on January 17, 1929. Popeye quickly became the main focus of the strip, which was one of King Features’ most popular strips during the 1930s. Thimble Theater, carried on after Segar’s death in 1938 by artists such as Bud Sagendorf, was renamed Popeye in the 1970s. Today drawn by Hy Eisman, Popeye continues to appear in first-run strips in Sunday papers (daily Popeye strips are reruns of older strips). In 1933, Max and Dave Fleischer’s Fleischer Studios adapted the Thimble Theater characters into a series of Popeye the Sailor theatrical cartoon shorts for Paramount Pictures. These cartoons proved to be among the most popular of the 1930s, and Popeye at one time rivaled Mickey Mouse for popularity among audiences. After Paramount assumed control of the Fleischer Studio in 1942, they continued producing the series until 1957. Later Popeye cartoons were produced for television from 1960 to 1962 by King Features, and from 1978 to 1982 and 1987 to 1988 by Hanna-Barbera Productions (now owned by Warner Brothers). |
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