Toshiba Satellite 1410 1415 Manual
Have a look at the manual Toshiba Satellite 1410 1415 Manual online for free. It’s possible to download the document as PDF or print. UserManuals.tech offer 566 Toshiba manuals and user’s guides for free. Share the user manual or guide on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.
151 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 9: Creating shortcuts 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 Sample Search Results window HINT: Search also allows you to perform searches on the Internet. 2Click All files and folders. 3Ty p e char in the text box labeled: In all or part of the file name. The operating system displays a list of all the files with “char” in their names. 4Click the Character Map file with the secondary button and drag and drop it on the desktop. 5In the desktop shortcut menu, click Create Shortcuts here.
152 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 10: Changing the screen saver 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 A shortcut to the Character Map appears on your desktop. NOTE: Shortcut icons can be recognized by an arrow in the lower- left corner. Deleting or changing the shortcut icons will not affect the program to which they refer. Clicking a shortcut icon opens the program or folder immediately. You can place as many shortcuts on your desktop as you find useful. HINT: The Character Map is a useful tool when you want to add a special character to a document. Lesson 10: Changing the screen saver The Windows® XP operating system treats all windows, icons, programs, drives, etc. as self-contained objects, each with its own set of properties (such as size, position on- screen, and color). Many of these properties can be customized to meet your particular needs and tastes. DEFINITION: An object is an independent block of data, text, or graphics that was created by an individual application. This lesson introduces object properties by showing you how to change one of the properties of the desktop—the screen saver. This is a continuously changing pattern that appears on the screen during pauses in your work. 1Move the cursor to an empty area of the desktop, then click the secondary button. The operating system displays the desktop shortcut menu.
153 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 10: Changing the screen saver 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 2Click Properties. The operating system displays the Display Properties window. Sample Display Properties window 3Click the Screen Saver tab. 4Click the arrow beside the current option—probably “(None)” —to open the screen saver list box. 5Scroll through the screen saver options by clicking the scroll arrows in the list box. 6Try a screen saver pattern by clicking a name in the list box. The operating system displays your selection in the monitor above the list box. Try several patterns. 7To apply a pattern to your desktop, click Apply. 8After you have chosen a screen saver pattern and applied it to your desktop, click OK. The operating system returns you to the desktop.
154 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 11: Setting the date and time 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 You can view any object’s properties by clicking the object with the secondary button, then choosing Properties from the shortcut menu that appears. The next lesson explains how to set two other properties—the date and time. Lesson 11: Setting the date and time You initially set the computer’s date and time properties when you turned the computer on for the first time and set up the operating system. To change the date and time settings: 1Click Start, Control Panel. The Control Panel window appears. 2Click the Date, Time, Language, and Regional Options icon. 3Click the Date and Time icon. 4Click one of the following: ❖Change the date and time in the Pick a task section. ❖Date and Time in the or pick a Control Panel icon section. The Date and Time Properties window appears.
155 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 12: Removing objects from the desktop 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 Sample Date and Time Properties window HINT: To open the Date and Time Properties window more quickly, either click the time display on the taskbar with the secondary button, then click Adjust Date/Time, or double-click the time display. 5Click the Date & Time tab and set the correct month, year, day, and time. 6Click the Time Zone tab and drop-down list box, and set your time zone. 7Click OK. 8Close the Control Panel. Lesson 12: Removing objects from the desktop Earlier in this tutorial, you created a new icon on the desktop. Since everything you have done to this point has been just practice, you may want to return the desktop back to its original uncluttered state. This lesson explains how to remove objects from the desktop and introduces the Recycle Bin. 1Click the New Folder icon you created, drag it until it is over the Recycle Bin icon and it changes color, then release the primary button.
156 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 12: Removing objects from the desktop 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 The icon disappears, but it has not really gone. It is merely set aside in the Recycle Bin so that you can restore or delete it later. 2Repeat step 1 for any other icons you created during this tutorial. Each icon disappears as you drop it on the Recycle Bin. 3Double-click the Recycle Bin icon. The operating system opens the Recycle Bin window. Notice that all the icons you dropped on the Recycle Bin are listed. Sample Recycle Bin window 4To completely remove an object, select it, and then click File, Delete. The Confirm File Delete window appears. 5Click Ye s to permanently remove the file. The object is permanently deleted from the Recycle Bin. Later on—in your real work, not in this tutorial—you will use the Recycle Bin to delete other objects such as folders,
157 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 13: Using System Restore 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 documents, and sometimes even programs. Still, the process is the same. Just drag an object’s icon to the Recycle Bin. If you change your mind and want to restore an object you sent to the Recycle Bin, select the object with the secondary button and click Restore. The operating system restores the object to the place from which it was deleted. You can also restore the object by dragging it to the desktop. But when you are absolutely certain that you never want to see it again, delete it from the Recycle Bin. To delete everything from the Recycle Bin at once, choose Empty Recycle Bin from the File menu. HINT: Empty the Recycle Bin periodically. Even though an item is moved to the Recycle Bin, it still uses valuable space on the hard disk drive until it is deleted from the Recycle Bin. Lesson 13: Using System Restore The System Restore feature allows you to return your computer to the way it was configured on a specific date or time, a “restore point.” This is useful if you are reconfiguring your computer for new hardware or software. In the event that your hardware or software causes your computer to malfunction, you can remove the offending item(s) and restore the system to the state it was in at the preset time. To get to System Restore, click Start, click All Programs, point to Accessories and System To o l , and click System Restore. The System Restore Welcome screen appears.
158 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 14: If I am lost, what do I do? 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 Sample System Restore welcome screen The Windows ® XP operating system guides you through the process of storing your system settings for future use. It also guides you through restoring your system to the selected date or time. Lesson 14: If I am lost, what do I do? This teaches you how to use some of the Help features in the Windows® XP operating system. Windows® XP Help and Support The operating system has a Help facility. If you cannot figure out how to do something, the answer is probably only a few clicks away. Assume that you want to draw a picture, but don’t know how. 1If you don’t have an application open, press F1, otherwise click Start, then click Help and Support. The operating system opens the Help and Support Center window.
159 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 14: If I am lost, what do I do? 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 2If you do not see the index, click index. Help and Support displays the Index. Sample Help and Support Index The left side of the screen contains the index. The text box above the index, where the cursor is flashing, lets you type in a topic you want to find in the index. 3Ty p e drawing in the text box. Notice as you type that the index moves to locate what you typed.
160 Getting to Know the Windows ® XP Operating System Lesson 14: If I am lost, what do I do? 5.375 x 8.375 ver 2.4.0 Sample help window for drawings Notice that under the category drawings, there is a subcategory: creating using Paint. 4Highlight creating using Paint, then click Display. Help opens a topic screen that, in the window’s right pane, gives a brief description of Paint and provides different ways for accessing the program, including through use of a hot link (Paint) . Not every Help topic contains a hot link to start the program it is talking about. However, when you do encounter one, it provides a convenient way to start the program to look at while you read about the program in the Help topic. Using the Windows® XP tour Whether you are new to computers or you have some experience, the Windows® XP tour is a good way to learn about the operating system’s features.