if you share your PC
with another person, you know that logging off one account and logging
onto another is faster than rebooting. You also know that switching
between accounts is even faster.
But in Windows 8, the option isn't where experienced Windows users
would expect it to be. It's yet another case of Microsoft making things
easier for novice users at the expense of everyone else. The company
renamed and moved these options in a way that actually makes sense. But
for experienced Windows hands, there's a slight learning curve.
Log off is now called Sign Off. There's no longer an option called Switch user, but
there doesn't have to be; the users' names are right there to switch
to. And rather than putting these options in the Power section, they're
at the user icon.
You'll find your name, and maybe your picture, in the top-right
corner of the Start screen. Click or tap it. If there are other user
accounts on this computer, you can select one and switch. As with
earlier versions, your existing account will remain open, so you can
switch back and pick up where you left off.
Of course you'll have to enter your password.
To completely log off of one account and log onto another, click or tap your name or picture and select Sign out. You'll be prompted to log on (or perhaps I should say "sign in") as another user.
Note: I altered this article shortly after it went on line. I changed the title to better reflect the article's content.
When locked, Windows doesn't power down. Instead, it displays the logon
screen--or the screen saver of your choice. This is strictly a security
option; it doesn't save power.
You set up Windows to lock itself in the Screen Saver dialog box. To get there in Windows 7, click Start, type screen saver, and select Change screen saver. In Windows 8's Home screen, type screen saver, click or tap Settings, and select Change screen saver.
When locked, Windows doesn't power down. Instead, it displays the logon
screen--or the screen saver of your choice. This is strictly a security
option; it doesn't save power.When locked, Windows doesn't power down.
Instead, it displays the logon screen--or the screen saver of your
choice. This is strictly a security option; it doesn't save power.
To lock the screen automatically, check the On resume option and set the Wait option to an appropriate number of minutes. The default, one minute, is decidedly too short.
Sleep
When it sleeps, Windows goes into a suspended, low-energy mode which
requires only a trickle of electricity. When you press the power button,
it wakes up almost immediately, asks for your password, then takes you
back to where you left it.
To set this up in Windows 7, click Start, type sleep, and select Change when the computer sleeps. In Windows 8's Start screen, type sleep, click or tap Settings, then Change when the computer sleeps.
Once the appropriate applet is up, everything is pretty simple. If
you've got a laptop, you'll probably have separate On Battery and
Plugged In options.
Hibernation
Physically, a hibernating PC is a turned-off PC, effectively using no
power at all. Windows copies everything in RAM to the hard drive, then
shuts the PC off entirely. When you reboot, everything is loaded back
into RAM and the PC wakes up.
You'll have to do a little more work to set your PC to automatically
hibernate. In the same applet where you set up Sleep, click the Change Advanced power settings link. In the resulting dialog box, expand the Sleep section, then expand Hibernate after, and set the minutes.
By the way, you don't have to pick between these three. You can, for
instance, set up Windows to lock itself after five minutes, sleep after
20, and hibernate after 120.
USB flash drives are convenient,
portable, and very easy to lose. Which is a problem, especially if
they're carrying sensitive data. Fortunately Windows 7 Ultimate and
Enterprise have the solution: encrypt your documents with an extension
of Microsoft's BitLocker technology, and only someone with the password
will be able to access it. Right-click your USB flash drive, select Turn
on BitLocker and follow the instructions to protect your private files.
2. Minimise quickly with shake
If
you have multiple windows open on your desktop and things are getting
too cluttered, it used to be a time-consuming process to close them all
down. In Windows 7 you can use the Aero Shake feature to minimise
everything in seconds, using a cool mouse gesture. Grab the title bar of
the window you wish to keep open and give it a shake, and rejoice in a
clear desktop area.
3. Configure your favourite music
The
Windows 7 Media Centre now comes with an option to play your favourite
music, which by default creates a changing list of songs based on your
ratings, how often you play them, and when they were added (it's assumed
you'll prefer songs you've added in the last 30 days). If this doesn't
work then you can tweak how Media Centre decides what a favourite tune
is- click Tasks > Settings > Music > Favourite Music and
configure the program to suit your needs.
4. Customise System Restore(Windows problems and solutions)
There
was very little you could do to configure System Restore in Vista, but
Windows 7 improves the situation with a couple of useful setup options.
Click
the Start orb, right-click Computer and select Properties > System
Protection > Configure, and set the Max Usage value to a size that
suits your needs (larger to hold more restore points, smaller to save
disk space).
And if you don't need System Restore to save Windows
settings then choose the option to Only Restore Previous Versions of
Files. Windows 7 won't back up your Registry, which means you'll squeeze
more restore points and file backups into the available disk space.
System Restore is much less likely to get an unbootable PC working
again, though, so use this trick at your own risk.
nd this will take effect
after you next reboot.
5. Tweak PC volume
By default
Windows 7 will now automatically reduce the volume of your PC's sounds
whenever it detects you're making or receiving PC-based phone calls. If
this proves annoying (or maybe you'd like it to turn off other sounds
altogether) then you can easily change the settings accordingly. Just
right-click the speaker icon in your taskbar, select Sounds >
Communications, and tell Windows what you'd like it to do.
6. Rearrange the system tray
With
Windows 7 we finally see system tray icons behave in a similar way to
everything else on the taskbar. So if you want to rearrange them, then
go right ahead, just drag and drop them into the order you like. You can
even move important icons outside of the tray, drop them onto the
desktop, then put them back when you no longer need to keep an eye on
them.
7. Extend your battery life
Windows 7 includes new
power options that will help to improve your notebook's battery life. To
see them, click Start, type Power Options and click the Power Options
link, then click Change Plan Settings for your current plan and select
Change Advanced Settings. Expand Multimedia Settings, for instance, and
you'll see a new Playing Video setting that can be set to optimise power
savings rather than performance. Browse through the other settings and
ensure they're set up to suit your needs.
8. Write crash dump files(Windows problems and solutions)
Windows 7 won't create memory.dmp
crash files if you've less than 25GB of free hard drive space, annoying
if you've installed the Windows debugging tools and want to diagnose
your crashes. You can turn this feature off, though: browse to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\CrashControl, create
a new DWORD value called AlwaysKeepMemoryDump, set it to 1, and the
crash dump file will now always be saved.
9. Repair your PC(Windows problems and solutions)
If
Windows 7 won't start, you may not need an installation or repair disc
any more, as the repair environment is now usually installed on your
hard drive. Press [F8] as your PC starts, and if you see a Repair Your
Computer option, choose that to see the full range of Windows 7 recovery
tools.
Motherboards are often unnoticed by most computer stuff. In fact it plays a rattling serious part to develop your machine. It was the introductory feeling you requisite to be learned because it dictates the boilersuit capabilities of your grouping. This article faculty learn you how to determine wisely the good motherboard to physique your computer.(computer builder)
Here are both things to be wise in choosing the opportune motherboard
1. The maximum processor swiftness. Adjudicate what is the uncomparable modify that suits your needs and also for your ulterior counselling of upgrading it. The socket it can palm. Intel processors offers incompatible socket for their fresh free processor. It capital that you possess limitations on upgrading your method into a newer variant of their processor. Unlike AMD processors they stay the assonant to their socket. A advised mind for this is to prefer a motherboard that supports AMD processor.(computer builder)
2. The ratio of storage and what benignant of module it can concur. DDR, DDR2 and DDR3 are completely diverse and DDR3 is the fastest of them all. Another thing is the filler of remembering it can hold. Newer type of motherboards can connection up to 16GB of store and that was quite big enough. You modify select a skate that supports DDR3 and the fastest locomote the motherboard can grip.(computer builder)
3. The discussion slots. What remaining cards you can tie into it? Mostly free motherboards in the market are now having a PCI-E 16x and PCI-E 1x which is the most widely utilised increase interval time. The primo happening to do is to determine motherboard with an supernumerary sort of slots that you faculty be required for your approaching discourse.(computer builder)
4. What remaining peripherals you can join into it? The identify of SATA and ATA/IDE beam. The circumscribe of USB embrasure. Does it jibe the name ports you're feat to use including for your ulterior needs?(computer builder)
5. What are the built-in features? Built-in features are encircling game that are unsegregated into your motherboard. Any of these are strong, recording, LAN and modem. If your applications are purely part create you can hold money if you decide a motherboard having a built-in recording bill on it. But, if your applications are author on graphics I evoke you buy a part video cards.(computer builder)
6. The chipset beingness misused. Chipsets are immobile into the motherboard and it greatly affects your scheme performance. Punk motherboard mostly uses low end chipset but it doesn't will that overpriced boards utilised the unexceeded chipset out there. The someone objective to do is to conclude reviews for your chosen motherboard to jazz its performance.(computer builder)
7. The Price. Flat though if you're in a hermetic budget the motherboard is not the endmost action you acquire to kill. A great motherboard is change than a complete hunt casing.(computer builder)
Read how to decide the uncomparable computer parts for you to Frame Own Computer. Rey Basti is a computer constituent instructor for statesman than 12 years and prepared to cater you to Physique Your Machine in 8 undemanding to take steps.(computer builder)
A number of factors could be slowing down a PC. Let's look at some of
the common ones, starting with the issues that are the easiest to
detect and to fix. Defrag the Hard Drive
I'll be honest; it's been at least a decade since I've seen empirical evidence proving that a
fragmented
hard drive slows a PC. But a lot of people insist that it does, and
defragging certainly won't hurt. To defrag your hard drive:
Click Start and select Computer or My Computer.
Right-click your C: drive and select Properties.
Click the Tools tab, then the Defragment now button.
Check For Malware
A malicious program working in the background could slow down your PC
while also doing more serious damage. If your PC is infected, chances
are that your existing antivirus program is compromised. Try something
else. I recommend using the free version of either SUPERAntiSpyware or Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware. Or the AVG Rescue CD, which scans in a non-Windows--and therefore non-infected--environment. Trim Down Your Autoloaders
If you're like most Windows users, you have too many programs loading
automatically every time you boot. Turning some of them off may help.
You don't have to uninstall the programs, just keep them from loading
when you don't need them.
Of course, some autoloaders are absolutely necessary. For instance,
you must have an antivirus program running at all times. Whatever other
programs you want to autoload is up to you.
To manage your autoloaders:
Click Start (Start, then Run in XP), type msconfig, and press ENTER.
Click the Startup tab.
Uncheck some of the programs to disable their autostarting. Experiment until you're satisfied.
Here's another option: Download and install the free Glary Utilities and use its Startup Manager (which you'll find on the Optimize and Improve tab). Unlike Msconfig, it gives you useful information about the Startup programs.