Windows Utilities Apps
test
VMware Player v15.0.2 Build 10952284
VMware Workstation v2025
BlueStacks v5.22.168.1004
WinZip v30.0.16477
Adobe AIR v51.3.1.1
Samsung Kies v2023
Windows Camera v2023
Nero Burning ROM v28.5.1.1
CyberLink Power2Go v13
Python v3.14.5
Windows Loader v2023
WSUS Offline v11.4
Nero v28.5.2020.0
CloneDVD v2.9.3.8
XBOX App v2605.1001.12.0
Bijoy Bayanno v2023
MEmu v9.5.2
Atom v1.63.1
Nero CoverDesigner v18.0.8000
System Mechanic v2024
WampServer v3.3.7
Microsoft Visual C++ v2023
Logitech G HUB v2024
PCSX2 v2.6.3
About Utilities
Utilities is the catch-all category — the home for small, focused programs that each do one job well and do not fit neatly anywhere else. A network analyzer, a webcam tool, a scripting language, a clipboard manager, and a file-renaming tool can all land here, united only by being practical rather than belonging to a tidy theme.
Because the group is so varied, browsing it works best when you already know the job you need done. A utility is usually the answer to a specific, recurring annoyance: a task the operating system handles awkwardly, or not at all, that a purpose-built tool turns into a click. The value is in the narrowness.
Some entries here are more technical than others. Tools aimed at developers and power users — packet analyzers, scripting environments, automation helpers — sit alongside simple conveniences anyone can use. The descriptions on each listing make the intended audience clear, so a quick read tells you whether a program expects background knowledge.
The general advice for this category is to keep it lean. It is easy to collect dozens of small utilities and remember none of them, and each one is still software that runs, updates, and occasionally needs attention. Install a utility when it solves a problem you actually have, and remove it cleanly when it has served its purpose.























