Hopefully you will find what you are looking for below, if not, try to be more precise.
I just bought Content Spooler Pro for only $7 and think it’s great … here’s a review. UPDATE: See Jetspinner Free Content Spinner
The basic concept is to take an article, load it into the software (php script) write several versions of your title and as many of the main body and resource box paragraphs / sentences / words as you wish.
You then select how many versions of the article you want — say 100, and in a few seconds the software composes 100 UNIQUE articles and sticks them in a zip file.
All the articles are totally readable because the content spinner does it by going through the text you gave it and randomly selecting and combining all the variations in the order they appear.
For example, in the paragraph above I could have input something like this:
“{All the articles make sense | The articles can all be read by real people | Articles created are of good quality} because Content Spooler does it by going through …”
Content Spooler will then choose one of those sentences at random and go on to look for the next set of curly braces and do the same.
As I mentioned at the end of my previous post, [Google & Sun Microsystems Cross-Promotional Partnership->], there are now several web-based competitors to Microsoft Office applications.
One I’ve been hearing quite lot about recently is ThinkFree Online.
ThinkFree Office is a platform independent suite of Microsoft Office compatible-applications in Java, similar to Sun’s OpenOffice.
The software is designed to look, feel and behave like Microsoft Office, but unlike OpenOffice, it’s not free. It’s much cheaper than Microsoft Office though, and can be hosted on intranets, where the software is launched from the server to the user’s desktop via a web browser.
With ThinkFree Online, ThinkFree have taken this idea a step further and now offer a free web-based version of ThinkFree Office.
According to the site, users are able to access:
- Write, ThinkFree’s word processing application, which uses Microsoft Word’s .doc file format. Write has most of Word’s features, and even retains the user interface that Word users are comfortable with.
- Show, a powerful application for creating presentations that is highly compatible with Microsoft Powerpoint. Powerpoint users will feel right at home with Show’s robust feature set, which includes graphical tools, dozens of animations and transitions, and of course use of the .ppt file format.