Extreme user friendly software
Just a 2 step process:
Step1: Double click on TAKIT Professional on desktop. This opens software.Step2: Click on "START" button on software top-left corner.
Yes, the Google calculator is in fact user friendly. Google is a company that is very well known so having their features user friendly is an extremely important thing.
You don't know if it is since you are not a registered user yet
The best web sites are the ones that are easy to navigate and find what you are looking for so these are key elements in making a web site user friendly.
i takit you mean border colllies. If so, they are quite active. They are a farm herding dog so are used to exercize.
There are so many social networking sites out there. One of the most popular sites is facebook.com. Facebook is fairly user friendly but there are still some learning curves for newbies.
eBay is very user friendly and easy to use. In my opinion, the "user friendliness" increases when you use Paypal, which allows for easy payments for your buyers and easy depositing into your checking account. It is also much easier when you set up your checking account with eBay so listing fees can be paid automatically.
I think every developer and designer must design and develop a website according user compatibility. They must know the best practices of user experience to build a user friendly site.
ease of use that is user friendly, simple language so that a user can understand and the accessing speed all these matters a lot in using a website.
they up-graded the internet to make it friendly and accessable so they puttted it in computer.
Patio furniture can only be so simple. There are some patio sets that are more complex than others, but it seems that the most "user friendly" patio furniture has to be wicker patio furniture. Reason being, there is absolutely no assembly and no rusting.
The Apple iPhone 4 is quite user friendly. Everything is laid out crystal clear. However there is a newer model coming out quite soon, so you might want to wait a bit and invest in that instead, if your budget allows it.
Purely as Windows has 95% of the market share thus it is what most people are used to. When it is said to be "user friendly" what is meant is "the same as always". However, try writing a 100 page document in Word or after your computer has opened a .exe file without asking your permission so that a virus may devastate your computer: not so "user friendly" then! The term used in this sense is a decoy, as if you try any of a large number of OSs and applications offer the very same services, these days with a very small lag time as many look (on the surface) more or less the same as the Windows version - yet may run faster/more efficiently. A more up-to-date usage of the word "user friendly" is used when discussing application use. User friendly here means making the user's experience as efficient as possible - of course different users have different needs, so some things will make one user's experience more efficient and another less so! For example, if you were writing a 100 page document in Word it would crash/run insanely slow, in OpenOffice Writer or a LaTeX editor it would run fine.