If you have the Windows Desktop Update installed, you can use one of its convenient toolbars for quick access to an Internet site. To display the Address toolbar, right-click on the Taskbar, point to Toolbars and select Address. A new toolbar opens in the Taskbar. To access a website, simply type its URL in the box. Your default browser will launch, if necessary, and open the URL you entered.
Need a calendar quickly? In Windows, double-click the time in the lower right-hand corner of the task bar and a clock and calendar will appear. This is also where you can reset the computer's time and date, if necessary.
With any number of applications open, if you need to quickly return to your desktop, the quickest way is with the Windows logo key and D. This combination also toggles to return to applications open at the time.
Move the QuickLaunch bar from one end of your taskbar to the other by positioning your mouse pointer over the thin vertical bar just to the left of the QuickLaunch bar, and then clicking and dragging it to its new location. You can also resize the bar by dragging the vertical bar to the left or right.
Go down to an open spot on the taskbar at the bottom and right click. One of the items will be toolbars. Highlight that and make sure that the quicklaunch is checked. Once thats checked, your quick launch will be back.
If you don't have Quick View available now, you can see the very next tip for installation help. Just scroll down, or how about this: here's a link, I'll make it easy for you … Quick View … (QV is probably right there in your computer). It's a command that allows you to preview files without opening them in their native applications. Right-click a file, select Quick View, and up pops a preview of that file. The problem with this command, however, is that it appears only in the context menu of file types for which a file viewer is available (determined by Microsoft). If you want to use Quick View for other file types, try adding its shortcut to the Send To menu.
Quick View is a terrific utility that lets you view the contents of a file without having to open, or even install, its originating program. QV is an underused, under-appreciated feature of Windows; and what does it do? It lets you quickly and safely see the contents of documents without opening their associated applications. Don't see a Quick View command? Maybe it isn't installed yet. It's there; let us see what we can do. To see if Quick View is installed, right-click any *.txt file, and you should see a Quick View command. To install Quick View, open the Control Panel (choose Settings, Control Panel from the Start menu). Another way to access it, however, is to add a shortcut to Quick View on your desktop for drag-and-drop access. To create the desktop shortcut:
Windows is full of radio buttons, but most of them won't ever carry a tune. When you open the Radio button toolbar in My Computer, though -- choose View, Toolbars, Radio -- you get a chance to connect to Internet radio stations and listen to music, talk, or other sounds of the cybersphere. The Radio toolbar has a volume control, a Radio Station selection drop-down list, and a simple Play button.
You know that Windows has a limited supply of resources -- areas of memory it sets aside for tracking program and window use. How can you know if resources are running dry, other than waiting for a crash? Use the Resource Meter. If you're debating whether your computer needs more RAM to operate more efficiently, keep an eye on your Windows resources with the help of the Resource Meter. Once activated, this Windows utility displays and updates the current system, user, and GDI resources available to your applications. To activate the this applet, click the Start button and go to Programs, Accessories, System Tools, and select Resource Meter. If you have rearranged your Start menu, then just use the Find applet. (Click OK at the message informing you that Resource Meter uses resources too). The Resource Meter appears as an icon in the system tray of your task bar, using green, yellow and red lights to indicate the status of your system resources (green means resources are available; red means little or no resources are available). Positioning your mouse pointer over the icon will display a bubble listing the exact percentages of free resources remaining (or right-click on the icon, choose Details from the context menu). If System, User, or GDI resources are more than 90 percent used (or only 10% free), you should close windows and programs to avoid a crash. To deactivate the Resource Meter, right-click on the icon, and choose Exit. The icon will disappear.
CTRL+X is cut, CTRL+C is copy, and CTRL+V is paste. For the most part, these are universal shortcuts; you'll save time by using them regularly. Easy enough, but there's a clippy spin you may not be aware of. The clipboard resides in system memory; whenever you cut or copy data, that much [RAM] is being used. No big deal for smaller stuff (like text), but imagine what kind of strain you're putting on your system with larger objects (like images). Long story short: flush the clipboard when you're finished with it. How? Just copy a something small.
Protect your most important files from accidental (or even intentional) editing by marking the file 'Read-Only'. Use My Computer or Windows Explorer to locate the file, then right-click on it and choose Properties from the context menu. In the General tab under Attributes, mark the 'Read-Only' check box and click OK. Once marked, you and other users can open the file and even edit it, but cannot save the changes over the original contents. Note that this isn't a fool-proof security measure--there's nothing to prevent someone else from removing the read-only attribute if they know how. But it can prevent accidental overwrites when reaching absent-mindedly for the Save button.
Thank you, Barry Aronson of PCWorks, for sending me this information. This is a problem that always bothered me, and finally, you've come up with the research. And now other readers can benefit from it; thank you, Barry. "New Windows users may not be aware of this, but advanced users know this problem. After extended use of Windows, your free system resource memory decreases over time, even if you haven't run any programs To prove this, we launched a fairly full-featured, best-selling brand PC with Windows 98, and then monitored system resource memory over several 24-hour test periods. For example, on one occasion Windows reported having 84% free system memory directly after startup, but 24 hours later, it was down to 46%. Obviously, there was a memory leak: it could have been in Windows, in some of our apps, or both. For those who've never heard about a the memory-leak problem, here's the scoop. Windows applications, drivers, and utilities, as well as other software - authored both by Microsoft and third parties - grab memory when they start up. The problem starts when they fail to release it when they exit. When this occurs, it can lead to your computer system's resources becoming so low that your PC becomes unstable and/or unusable. One way to recover from this memory problem s to restart your PC and Windows. (There are others which require third party memory recovery utilities, but they are never 100% reliable). We were able to determine several hypothetical reasons why our system resource memory deteriorated, even when not being used and with no applications running. For example, if you launch a program and abruptly quit the application before it has completely started, you will lose system resource memory. In fact, here are few things we learned from our tests:
Resources Running Low? - How To Get Better Performance
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