Gateway m305 User Manual
Here you can view all the pages of manual Gateway m305 User Manual. The Gateway manuals for Notebook are available online for free. You can easily download all the documents as PDF.
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41 Gateway Web site www.gateway.com Account Info Click Account Info to access support for non-technical issues, like the status of your order or changing your account address. PC Tools Click PC Tools to access utilities to help you manage your notebook.
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4 43 Windows Basics Read this chapter to learn how to: ■Use the Windows desktop ■Manage files and folders ■Wo r k w i t h d o c u m e n t s ■Use shortcuts
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44 Chapter 4: Windows Basics www.gateway.com About the Windows environment After your notebook starts, the first screen you see is the Windows desktop. The desktop is like the top of a real desk. Think of the desktop as your personalized work space where you open programs and perform other tasks. Your desktop may be different from this example, depending on how your notebook is set up. Help and SupportFor more information about the Windows XP desktop, click Start, then click Help and Support. Type...
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45 Using the desktop www.gateway.com Using the desktop The desktop contains the taskbar, the Start button, and the Recycle Bin icon. Using the Start menu You can start programs, open files, customize your system, get help, search for files and folders, and more using the Start menu. To use the Start menu: 1Click the Start button on the lower left of the Windows desktop. The Start menu opens showing you the first level of menu items. 2Click All Programs or Programs to see all programs and files in the...
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46 Chapter 4: Windows Basics www.gateway.com 3Click a file or program to open it. Adding icons to the desktop You may want to add an icon (shortcut) to the desktop for a program that you use frequently. To add icons to the desktop: 1Click Start, then click All Programs. 2Right-click (press the right touchpad button) the program that you want to add to the desktop. Help and SupportFor more information about the Windows XP Start menu, click Start, then click Help and Support. Type the keyword Windows...
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47 Identifying window items www.gateway.com 3Click Send To, then click Desktop (create shortcut). A shortcut icon for that program appears on the desktop. Identifying window items When you double-click the icon for a drive, folder, file, or program, a window opens on the desktop. This example shows the Local Disk (C:) window, which opens after you double-click the Local Disk (C:) icon in the My Computer window. Help and SupportFor more information about desktop icons in Windows XP, click Start,...
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48 Chapter 4: Windows Basics www.gateway.com Every program window looks a little different because each has its own menus, icons, and controls. Most windows include these items: Window item Description The title bar is the horizontal bar at the top of a window that shows the window title. Clicking the minimize button reduces the active window to a button on the taskbar. Clicking the program button in the taskbar opens the window again. Clicking the maximize button expands the active window to fit...
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49 Working with files and folders www.gateway.com Working with files and folders You can organize your files and programs to suit your preferences much like you would store information in a file cabinet. You can store these files in folders and copy, move, and delete the information just as you would reorganize and throw away information in a file cabinet. Viewing drives Drives are like file cabinets because they hold files and folders. A notebook almost always has more than one drive. Each drive has...
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50 Chapter 4: Windows Basics www.gateway.com To see the files and folders on a drive: ■Double-click the drive icon. If you do not see the contents of a drive after you double-click its icon, click Show the contents of this drive. Creating folders Folders are much like the folders in a file cabinet. They can contain files and other folders. Files are much like paper documents—letters, spreadsheets, and pictures—that you keep on your notebook. In fact, all information on a computer is stored in...