| BENTSEN GROVE RESORT COMPUTER
CLUB
BULLETIN Week of January 16, 2006 |
|
MEETINGS
MONDAY
ROOM 3 & 3R GENERAL |
SPECIAL
INTEREST GROUPS:
Our bulletin is also available on line by visiting http://www.bgrcc.com/ and clicking on bulletin. You may also select bulletins by its subject. |
NEED
SOME HELP TRY http://www.bgrcc.com/ Click on HELP EMERGENCY RESPONSE
TEAM
John Abbott……424-0537Harold Buechly...581-3180 Corinne Higbee...585-5664 |
| UPCOMING
EVENTS: Please
wear your badge! Monday January 16th 2006, 9:30, Beginners Meeting By Corinne Higbee 10:30, Door prize drawing 10:35, General Meeting By Claude Westfall Converting Digital pictures into a photo slide show followed by "A Tribute to America" slide show. Noon Pizza SIG By Corinne Higbee at Mr. Gatti's. This week Monday January 23rd 2006, 10:30, General Meeting By Bill Wiese, "What works for me in photography" Monday February 6th, Tentative date for the return of Matt Hester, Microsoft |
| Notes
from January 9th meeting by John
Abbott Three internet phone companys were demonstrated: GIZMO http://www.gizmoproject.com/ SKYPE http://www.skype.com/ YAK http://www.yak.com/en/ All three offer free download of their programs, free internet calls (computer to computer) and low rate long distance. You can drop by A9 (if the blinds are open) to use any of the systems or get a demo. |
| Monday January 16th 2006, 10:30,
General Meeting By Claude Westfall Converting Digital Pictures Into a
Photo Slideshow followed by "A Tribute to America" slideshow.
This program should also
be of interest to the entire membership, presentation and slideshow is
for everyone.
|
|
SPECIAL
INTEREST GROUP “SIG” By
Corinne Higbee FOOD****FUN****GAMES****EDUCATION Immediately
following our regular meeting on Monday, the Computer Club members,
spouses and
guests are welcome to caravan to Mr. Gatti’s
Pizza, EVERYONE
WELCOME
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Windows:
Better Safe (Mode) Than Sorry Though the Windows operating system isn't
usually dangerous,
it includes a special "Safe Mode". This is a handy way to boot a PC
to investigate and fix problems. You may have read advice about when to
use
this, and even how to run it. But scarce and fragmented Safe Mode
information
can make it sound more exotic than it is. Windows XP books' indexes provided
surprisingly few entries
for "Safe Mode". I found the best coverage in two O'Reilly books
[www.oreilly.com],
"Windows XP Pro: The Missing Manual" and "Windows XP Home
Edition: The Missing Manual". Naturally, Google found a gazillion hits.
But they're mostly "just the facts" writeups targeting people who
already
know "what" and "why" and just need "how"
information. So this article provides background for this built-in
Windows
facility. Over the years, as it became more powerful
and reliable,
Windows grew significantly from its slender 1992-era Version 3.1 self.
There's
no free lunch; learning new tricks required more software. But that
complexity
gets in the way when problems occur. Just as doctors rarely diagnose
patients
through heavy winter coats, Windows needs to shed layers to expose
problems' causes. Safe Mode slims Windows down, only loading and running specific pieces needed for basic operation. So your video display looks strange in Safe Mode because Windows doesn't load the monitor's specific driver program. This lets you recover from problems caused by buggy drivers you may have just installed. There are other restrictions: you likely can't get online and may not be able to print. But Safe Mode lets you perform tests, fix problems, and install/uninstall programs.
Windows XP defines two kinds of user accounts: "administrator" and "limited". An administrator can install/remove software, change settings, etc., while a limited user can only run programs and use facilities. Even if only one account is defined, a secret companion called Administrator is available. Booting in Safe Mode lets you access this account, handy when normal accounts won't work -- for example, uninstalling software that doesn't want to leave. |