3D Rain Forest Adventure Screensaver

Posted by on Mar 9, 2007 | 2 Comments

There should be an image here!Like a painting by Henri Rousseau brought to life, 3D Rain Forest Adventure is full of life and color. Watch as jungle birds, big cats, primates, and butterflies fly, climb, stalk, and flit among gently swaying jungle foliage. A lively waterfall backdrop adds to the tropical ambiance.

Want a soothing nighttime scene? Just set the time of day to nighttime and a dark shadowy blue hue is cast on the rain forest. Prefer a dusky sunset scene? The default dusk setting produces a deep reddish hue. Sound effects change with the introduction of new animals.

Demo contains full set of features!

Have fun customizing this screensaver to your preferences. In addition to tint, brightness, time of day settings, sound mute, and volume control, you can play your own mp3 music. Contains animated gif images and sound file. Password protection is available. Registered version doesn’t have the overlay text and never expires. No adware, spyware, surveys, data collection, toolbars, opt-out or opt-in offers or any other add-ons.

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  • Mike Nelson

    I see off and on you all have screen savers. As a tech, I have a problem with screen savers. In the past, I have messed with some of them off and on. I noticed that some of them, especially from Freese.com are more than just a screen saver. I always use a firewall, which I monitor real close. Not only have I gotten Adaware and Spybot positives, from certain ones have gotten anti-virus positives with my firewall always asking if the screen saver can connect to the internet.

    Now think about it, once installed, why in the world would a screen saver need to connect to the internet? Last week, I did a customer’s computer that had about 10 different screen savers. It was so crapped up that I had to do some major uninstalls just to get the drivers for a dump and reload. This computer was bogged down that just uninstalling all the screen savers increased it’s speed by 50%. I got another 25% from eliminating two or three taskbars and I finally got it clean enough so I could actually get something done.

    So here is my concern. Why put in a screen saver that has to report back to home? What is it reporting back? What is it bringing back with it? I am associated with a local computer store with it’s owner that has been in the business for 30 years. As he says, “If it isn’t from Microsoft (screensavers), don’t install it!” I personally have followed his advice, and you would be amazed how clean my computer stays.

  • Dean Johnson

    Aren’t these screensavers usually vehicles for worms, viruses and such?