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A few things you ought to know to make life with your PC a little easier. |
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--- NET & PC TIPS --- Most
tips here will refer to PC, the IE Explorer Browser, Outlook Express Email and
Windows. (Any significant differences
found when using Netscape, please email me and I will try to add it.) Q. What is the best way to print from a page with dark backgrounds, frames, etc, to save ink? A.
If your
browser is set to print backgrounds then you will waste a lot of ink when
printing from the Internet. Q. Great Idea! But how do I "copy and paste"? A. I
might be creating a monster here, please don't use my email to send me all
the things you are now going to be able to collect. The right button on
your mouse is power, study what it does and use it often. In fact
whenever in doubt, right click and see what options it offers. Here goes:
Q. How do I save "it" to my harddrive? A. If you never learn anything about your PC, at least learn this. It provides you with the controls to manage your PC and makes life a lot easier. First things first: C:\ Drive is the main harddrive or storage area on your PC. and chances are, that is where you will want to save most of your files. Treat it like a Storage Room where you will find File Cabinets, and in those Cabinets, Folders/Directories, and in the Directories, all your Files. Files are everything! A
graphic, a letter, a sound track, etc., each one of these things are
Files. To save a File you are first faced with the decision "where shall I save it?". If you just click on save, chances are it will slip into no-man's land or somewhere in the Storage Room and you will have to do a File search to find it. So obviously we need control. Here is how 'you' manage the Storage Room. Click on 'MY Computer',
click (dble click) on 'C:\ Drive' this brings up 'Windows
Explorer' (this is different from IE Explorer
the browser). Or another way of calling it up, you click on
'Start', 'Programs' and
'Windows Explorer'. Make the window bigger or
maximize it for better viewing. Let's make a Directory. 'Windows
Explorer' is actually the Filing Cabinet that we just opened. First
click on the
C:\ Drive
to select/ highlight it, go up to top left corner, click on 'File' slide down to 'New" and
click on 'Folder'. Now let's make a File and put it into our Directory. Go to the GLCPOO site and highlight some text and using the right mouse button, copy text and paste it into notepad, or any word processing program. Now, 'and this is important', instead of just 'save' it, click on 'save as' and this brings up a window showing a default directory in the top window, click the side arrow and slide down, click on C:\ Drive, the Directories on your C:\ Drive will show, slide down and click on "Masonic Stuff" and then 'Open'. Now give your File a name, change it from untitled to FirstStuff in the file name window, click on 'save' and viola! It is yours until you delete it. You may now work on it, etc. To find that File again in a word processing program, open the program, go to File, click Open and browse your C:\ Drive for the proper Directory, Open Directory, find and click on the File and it will open in your program. OR, and now comes the power, now that you understand Windows Explorer, you can open it up, double click on any Directory, or make a new Directory, and dble click on the Folder/Directory you want and it will open the word processing program automatically with that File already to go. Great life, isn't it! If it is a graphic you want to save, in your IE Browser, right click on the graphic and the window that pops up will give you several choices, click on save picture as, and follow same procedure. What? Well because the window that opens when you clicked "save as" it is actually "Windows Explorer" and now that you know all about it and directories, etc, you now know how easy it really is. TIP: The reason for the difference between saving a graphic and saving some text, is simply that the graphic is already a file. When copying text it must be placed in a word processor or notepad, then saved as a file before it can become a file. Remember files are everything! TIP: To change the name of a folder/directory or sub-directory use the magic of the right button. Right click on the folder, in the window that pops up, click on rename, the name is now highlighted and can be changed. Caution, do not change the name of Directories that programs, applications, etc have created for running their program, otherwise it will not be able to find them. You can however change "Masonic Stuff" to something more profound, like "Masonic Great Stuff" by the way, don't use the quotation marks in the names you choose. I know...now he tells me. Q. How do I change the settings on my monitor so that webpages do not appear so large? A. Many monitors, are
setup to display either a resolution of 800 x 600 or 1024 x 768 and yet
your graphics card may be able to handle a higher resolution. To obtain
the best (compact and smooth) picture, the highest resolution possible is
preferred. To change it try this. Another way to get there is to click on 'Start', 'Settings', 'Control Panel', and double click 'Display'. After you have the settings window, in the bottom right of the window there is a slide bar for changing monitor resolutions. It will show you the resolutions which your graphics card can handle. The most common for best results on 14" to 17" monitors is 1024 x 768. Try it, the PC will probably want to restart, that's fine. You can always change it back and forth. Tip: You will probably have to resize your monitor as the icons and screen will look off to the side. As each monitor is a little different, the time taken to learn how to adjust (center) yours will be time well spent. Q. Without increasing my monitor's resolution, is there a way of just having the page I want to read show up in the browser without the top and side frames? A. Sure. Right click somewhere in the page, not on a graphic, click on properties, in the window that shows up, highlight the URL, right click and copy. Now close the window and go to the white window URL bar and right click and paste the URL in that window. click enter on the keyboard and that page alone will load in the browser. Q. I am looking for a Lodge or member's email address. What is the quickest method to use? A. If you know a Lodge member's name, you might try the G.L. website's Alpha Email List. Better still, try the site's Search Engine (Temporarily Disabled). Type in the Member, or Lodge name, or District, or Location, and all pages with that information will appear. Happy hunting! Note: The G.L.
website's email list is on a voluntary basis only. Which means members
submit their information at their own risk and any privacy concerns are
their own. Webmaster help can be found here Copyright © 2000-2010 by GLCPOO |