Showing posts with label windows 7 how to. Show all posts
Showing posts with label windows 7 how to. Show all posts

Friday, January 15, 2010

Windows 7 Device Stage

Microsoft launched the new Operating System – Windows 7 in order to overcome the troubles faced by users in Windows XP and Windows Vista. Microsoft has worked towards providing better and exciting features. One of the great things that Microsoft has incorporated in Windows 7 is the feature that allows you to see all the add-on devices on one screen. This new package of the Operating System is called Device Stage, which takes device management a level higher. Device Stage enables you to interact with any compatible device connected to your PC. With the help of Device Stage you can see the status of your device and run common tasks from a single window. The pictures of the devices make it truly easy to see what exactly is there. You can see exactly what photos are there on your camera, what music is there on your MP3 player, and more.

Microsoft assures Device stage to be a big part of Windows 7. It will change the way you interact with compatible devices and hardware attached to your system. In simple words, it allows you to see exactly what printer, phone, mp3 player and other devices you have installed on the computer. This management site called Device Stage; let you look at the status of the device and let you run tasks. This surely is a great assistance in linking mobile phones, printers or portable media players to your computer. Microsoft team has worked hard in order to achieve maximum range of partners to ensure their devices are fully device stage compatible.

As soon as the device is plugged in, it will load drivers almost instantly. As compared to Vista, the process is much faster. Drivers of printers, USB keys, digital cameras, external HDDs are installed within seconds and are instantly accessible to the users. The waiting time of device driver installation in Windows XP and Vista was much longer. Moreover, if Windows7 is unable to find drivers, it will automatically search on Windows Update.
The overall experience with devices, as compared to the earlier versions, has greatly improved with the help of Device Stage of Windows 7.

See also
remove windows 7

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Something You Must know about Your Windows 7 Computer

Sometimes it happens that you need to find out details about your computer system such as CPU clock speed, How much memory, Version of Operating system and etc. You can find out these details from Control Panel in Windows 7. The System windows of Control Panel displays information about your computer hardware and operating system on a Windows 7 computer, in the given categories:

System This section provides the computer’s Windows Experience Index base score (a number from 1.0 to 7.9), the processor type (such as Intel Pentium 4) and speed (such as 2.80 GHz), the amount of onboard random access memory (RAM) that is available, and the system type (32-bit or 64-bit). This section might also provide information about the manufacturer and model of the computer.

The Windows Experience Index base score shown in the System window is not a cumulative rating; it is the lowest of the individual ratings scored by the following five system components:

Processor speed
● Installed RAM
● General desktop graphics capabilities
● Three-dimensional gaming graphics capabilities
● Primary hard disk data transfer rate


Windows edition. This section keeps information about your operating system including the edition, the most recently installed service pack and, a link to the section of the Microsoft Web site from which you can upgrade your version of Windows.

Computer name, domain, and workgroup settings. In Windows 7 this section displays the computer name and the network domain, workgroup, or homegroup the computer belongs to.

Windows activation. The section displays the Windows activation status and product ID, or if Windows hasn’t yet been activated, provides an online activation link.

For more information...
windows 7 support

Monday, October 19, 2009

What is an update on the place and I do so?

Windows 7 upgraderequires replacing your existing installation of Windows Vista, making what is known as "instead of update". The installation process replaces Windows Vista keeps files and installed applications, files and personal settings. Of course, this requires careful analysis and planning.

1. Check to make sure that all installed applications and existing hardware devices are compatible.
2. Acquiring the required updates that you may be needed before upgrading to ensure their applications and hardware devices working after you install Windows 7.
3. Ensure that there is enough disk space for temporary files and operating system as well as their applications and files.
4. Enough memory to efficiently run the operating system and applications.
5. Processor speed acceptable.

If you meet the above criteria, you should not have a problem.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Windows 7 in Action: Smarter Search

If Windows 7 has a feature murderer, is ongoing. As shown in the screen cast this week, you may find the search box in Windows 7-in the Start menu, click Control Panel, and Windows Explorer. The indexed search is fast and accurate, in my experience, and the indexing process itself is barely perceptible in terms of performance. The best change, however, is the addition of the search generator, which replaces the clumsy search forms from previous versions and allows you to filter a set of results by date, type, size, or an attribute that is appropriate for an particular type of such data as music or photos.

Every time I write about the search, at least half a dozen commentators are shown in section Talkback to proclaim that it is necessary if you know how to organize files into subfolders. But they miss the point entirely. A well-managed system of filing and rapid search index working together beautifully. As an author, for example, how should I keep my files organized? Do I have all the documents related to a project unique in its own subfolder? Or should I keep a folder of contracts, proposals, and discussed in another project in another and finished chapters elsewhere? And although I have done a perfect job of naming and organizing files, how can I find the contract had a clause on foreign publishing rights I have to talk to my agent in five minutes? A good search tool that can trace file in the second. Without it, I would have to find all contracts in each folder and open each one to see what is inside.

This is the third of four Windows 7 demos I've done in this series. Search screen cast series finale next week at this time.

Links

Antivirus Support Anti Spyware Support Software Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directoryblog search directoryTechnology Blogs - Blog RankingsComputers BlogsBlog DirectoryNew York Yellow PagesBlog Directory & Search engine Software Dmegs Web DirectoryGoLedy.comGetBlogs Blog DirectoryA1 Web Links - Software ResourcesBlogs Directory|Windows Troubleshooting Tips | How to fix computer problems|Computer Information