Visible Windows
Early Windows Started with Windows 1 – an overlay on DOS that crashed more than it ran. Finally got things smoothed out with Windows 3.11 – Windows for Workgroups 1989 – Windows NT 3.5, 4.0 and six service packs; started NTFS 1995 – Windows 95, 98, 98SE, ME called 9x 2001 – Windows 2000; NTFS on the desktop
XP Professional, Home and Media Center Only Professional can log onto a domain Home lacks: – encryption – support for multiple processors – Support for Remote Desktop – Support for NTFS Access Control – Support for group policies
XP Media Center Add a TV tuner card to record Video Media Center (the program) allows organization of media, photos and music Built on Home edition
Vista Home Basic – like XP Home Home Premium adds Media Center Business – basic business edition like XP Professional Ultimate – All the above Enterprise – BitLocker Drive Encryption and support for two CPUs. Not for public use
Windows 7 “Fixed” Vista Starter – for netbooks Home Premium – A lot of media functionality Professional – Join a domain, XP Mode and Remote Desktop connection Ultimate – Everything Windows 7 offers Enterprise – Again, for corporate use
64 - bitness 32-bit can only address 4GB of RAM; 64’s can go a lot higher; can handle larger numbers too 2003 for AMD and 64-bit processing Intel licensed AM64T to run 32/64 XP supported 64, but Vista really did 64-bit editions will run 32-bit just fine Compatibility tab of.EXE files to support older editions of Windows
Windows Interface Logon – first screen you see, the gate-keeper Can be the Welcome screen (icons for users) or the name/password format Desktop all too familiar Aero turns on automatically if your system supports it Taskbar at the bottom of desktop System tray (notification area) at right Quick Launch toolbar at left next to Start button
Windows Explorer In XP, the options are on the left; in Vista/7 it is near the top of window… Double-click Documents to get a “different” view…
Icons in Explorer Icons assigned based on file extension – normally hidden but we know how to make them visible You get a generic window icon if the file extension is unknown to Windows – which also means it will not open the file Move/copy files or folders: I prefer to right-click and drag which gives me the option of move or copy; Windows uses CTRL and Shift Showing hidden files also means they will be scanned in Searches
XP: My [whatever] Don’t normally show on the desktop Part of the Display applet to show them Lots of applications can add My … folders
Vista/7 Drops the “My” Can add account folder to desktop that includes more than documents Right-click desktop | Personalize | Change desktop icons
Libraries Good way to get confused; allows two or more folders to appear as one Can choose which folder to save document into from folder view on left side When you open a library, you see content from all folders that are part of library Have to add folders to a library
Recycle Bin Trash can for Mac systems Safety net for delete Can restore files to previous location Can not open a file in the bin Delete from the Recycle Bin and file is gone – unless you have undelete program/utility
Sidebar Started in Vista, for Gadgets 7 allows gadgets anywhere on desktop Google for web sites that offer them; Microsoft is now into apps for 8
Operating System Folders System folder - %systemroot% - usually C:\Windows – Fonts – All of the fonts installed – Offline Files – When you tell IE to save pages for offline viewing – System32 – The real windows;.dll files, control panel, IE, etc. – Temp – Temporary files here; windows will delete files here, so don’t use for storage
Program and Document Folders C:\Program Files – Most programs install some of their essential files in a folder here C:\Program Files (x86) – For 64-bit systems with 32-bit applications Personal folders: XP – Documents and Settings Personal folders: Vista/7 – Users folder
XP Personal Default User (hidden) – all of the default settings; a template for adding users All Users – Settings for anyone that uses computer Shared Documents – Shared to all users of computer - That’s your folder for settings – Desktop – Items/files on the desktop – Documents – My Documents for user – Application Data (hidden) – settings for user – Start Menu – customizations to Start menu
Vista/7 Personal Default (hidden), All Users and store same as XP Under – Desktop – same – Documents – in Vista, in 7 its back to My Documents – Downloads – for downloaded files – Start Menu – same as XP
Right-Click To get to Properties of any object Brings up a “context menu” – different for different objects Often a tech’s best friend
Control Panel Handles most of the maintenance, upgrade, and configuration aspects of Windows Exams assume you use classic view, large icons Most are a graphical view of part of the Registry
Device Manager Make sure you know at least two ways to get to it Displays every device that Windows recognizes, organized by types Problem devices: – Down arrow – Red X – Black exclamation point on yellow circle Up to you, and Microsoft’s Knowledge Base, to figure out solution Also a place to update drivers if install program does not do it automatically
System Tools Collection of niffty tools Start | All Programs | Accessories | System Tools Can get to similar list from msconfig
Activation Nope, we don’t do that here I usually wait a while to activate just to make sure system is running correctly Internet activation is easy; phone call is more bother
Honorable Mention Backup Character Map Files and Settings Transfer Wizard (XP) Windows Easy Transfer (Vista/7) Disk Cleanup Defragmenter Scheduled Tasks Security Center (XP)
More Honorable Mention System Information (msinfo32) System Restore Resource Monitor (Reliability and Performance Monitor – Vista) Command Prompt Microsoft Management Console (mmc) Administrative Tools Computer Management
Event Viewer Once in a while, this is helpful Fun to look through Possible place to look for intermittent problems
More Stuff Services – Applet in Administrative Tools applet Action Center (7) – collects information from lots of sources