From what I've heard you need an emulator such as Visual boy advance(vba). Once you have it, right click on the gba file and go to open with. Then choose Visual Boy Advance. Then click apply. Then double click the gba file and there you go. But when I do it, it says that it is not a valid win32 application. If this happens to you then open Visual Boy Advance, then go to open. Then choose the gba file. THEN it should work. If it lags, then your computer is either slow or has little to no memory.
How to open a PBO file extension?
File extension in Open office writer is Auto Correct
The is SketchUp's backup file. You will need a copy of SketchUp to view the file. If it won't open then rename the extension ".skp" and it should open.
To patch an IPS file to a GBA file, you need a patching tool such as Lunar IPS or NUPS. Open the patching tool and select the IPS file as the patch and the GBA file as the target file. The tool will apply the changes from the IPS file to the GBA file, creating a new patched version. Make sure to keep a backup of the original GBA file in case you need to revert to it.
You can, what you need to do is find the gba file then right-click open with ...
A .ctg file extension is a computer configuration file. You would need a special type of program or software to open or convert this type of file. To open a .cfg extension file, use a program called Free File Viewer.
GBA saves should have the extension .SAV
Yes, you can insert a Ruby ROM into the GBA slot of the No$GBA emulator. To do this, open No$GBA, go to the options for the GBA settings, and then load the Ruby ROM file. Ensure that you have the correct file format and that No$GBA is configured properly to emulate GBA games.
How can i open tally7.2 .500 extension file by any other software
There is list of programs that support DO file extension http://www.howopen.org/en/extensions/web-files/do
Drag and drop the ipa file into winzip... or you can open with iTunes (Mac & Windows)
You can open a PkgInfo file by changing its extension to .pages and then opening it using Pages. Simply right-click on the file, select "Get Info," change the extension, and confirm the change. Then double-click on the file to open it in Pages.