Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
hewittalan6
- 17 May 2006 07:52
- 4597 of 11003
Numpty needs help from techie!!!
I often get documents e-mailed to me as an attatchment. When I download them to my desktop it downloads a file with the documents in and another one that is a zip file.
The question is, Am I safe to delete the zip file they came in as my desktop is full of folders with a picture of a zip on and I am trying to clean my PC up.
Thanks in advance.
Alan
Seymour Clearly
- 17 May 2006 09:12
- 4598 of 11003
Alan, yes, if you've already saved the unzipped file. nEdit, if you're not happy with this create a new folder in my documents called zip files, the copy the zipped files into that folder then delete the origianl on the desktop.
hewittalan6
- 17 May 2006 09:20
- 4599 of 11003
Cheers SC.
Anything more than pen and paper gets me sweating about knackering up 1000 worth of kit and about 3 years work!!!
Alan
Seymour Clearly
- 23 May 2006 22:49
- 4602 of 11003
Iain Just my thought:
I suspect you are getting mixed up between power settings and Screen Saver.
In Display Properties do you have "Screen Saver - Win XP Pro" with a "Wait 20 minutes". This means the screen saver showing XP Pro kicks in after 20 minutes.
Because you have asked the monitor to still be powered it will diplay this. If you'd selected power off after 20 minutes it would be completely blank. I have mine set to power off after 10 minutes and it goes completely black after that time.
Reset the screen saver to display (None) from the drop down list, which will grey out the Wait" option, and leave your power settings as they are.
Kayak
- 23 May 2006 23:32
- 4603 of 11003
There is also a power off monitor option in the BIOS, if SC's suggestion doesn't work try the BIOS, normally press Delete on booting.
ThePublisher
- 26 May 2006 08:31
- 4605 of 11003
Can anyone recommend a powered USB2 hub, please.
I've just bought this little gizmo
http://www.hawkingtech.com/products/productlist.php?CatID=32&FamID=60&ProdID=198
A kindly neighbour has contributed an unprotected WiFi broadband link which I can receive in my photographic studio. It seems a shame not to accept his generosity whilst it's around.
The Hawking thingie seems to be far more sensitive than any other WiFi receiver around - so it does a splendid job.
The snag with the Hawking device is that it seems to lose contact with my Windows XP PC when working through the Kingston hub I use - whereas it seems stable when connected directly into the PC. I assume it is using power drawn from the PC.
The Kingston hub is powered - well it plugs into the mains! Are there better ones around that boost, rather than dilute, the link between device and PC?
Thanks in advance.
TP
Haystack
- 29 May 2006 13:12
- 4607 of 11003
I have the same problem. It is a setting on AOL somewhere and I doubt it can be changed. I opt for a cut and paste into the IE address box solution.
Kayak
- 29 May 2006 13:38
- 4609 of 11003
In Windows Explorer, try Folder Options/File Types and set HTM and HTML (and perhaps some others) to Internet Explorer. If that doesn't work it will be the file types in the registry but that will be non-trivial to fix.
Haystack
- 29 May 2006 14:38
- 4610 of 11003
DCB
Thanks. IE is akready set to be my default browser, but it doesn't use it when clicking AOL links. I also have Firefox and it doesn't use that either. I have messed about previously and must have buggered something up. It is useful to know that you have made it work by that method. It means I will have to tinker a bit more.
rpaco
- 30 May 2006 16:40
- 4611 of 11003
I gave up on Firefox because although the ad blocker is wonderful, it will just not display several sites I use, properly. In particular anything with a chart in it and tables/frames often display in a wierd manner. Also Firefox is very slow to load in the first instance. As for streaming charts, forget it.
I was disappointed and tried re installing both Firefox and java before and after each other to no avail.
Haystack
- 31 May 2006 17:59
- 4612 of 11003
BEWARE
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/5034384.stm
Woman targeted by web hackers
A woman from Greater Manchester has become a victim of an internet scam in which hackers hijack computer files and blackmail owners to get them back.
Helen Barrow, a 40-year-old nurse from Rochdale, is believed to be one of the first victims of the con in the UK.
Criminals encrypt files with complex passwords, leaving a ransom note telling victims not to contact police.
Ms Barrow's note said that she would have to buy drugs from an online pharmacy to find out the password.
The new phenomenon, known as Ransomware, means victims cannot access any of the files stored in their My Documents folder.
Ms Barrow, from Littleborough, discovered her computer files had vanished and replaced by one 30-digit password-protected folder.
She also found a new file named "instructions how to get your files back".
Ms Barrow contacted police and an IT expert who managed to recover some of her files, which included coursework for her nursing degree.
The senior sister said: "When I realised what had happened, I just felt sick to the core.
"I was in shock.
"It was a horrible feeling and I thought I was going to lose all of my work.
"I had lots of family photographs and personal letters on the computer and to think that other people could have been looking at them was awful."
A message had appeared on her computer screen telling her she had contracted an unnamed virus.
It is thought the message was part of the scam and she inadvertently downloaded it.
The virus is known as Arhiveus and victims are told to buy pharmaceutical drugs from an internet chemist thought to be based in Russia.
A Greater Manchester Police spokesman said: "Our High Tech Crime Unit is aware of this new type of crime and incidents of this kind could increase in future."
The Other Kevin
- 05 Jun 2006 12:33
- 4614 of 11003
Does anyone use or can recommend a Start-Up program to evaluate all the start-up items that are slowing my XP start-up to a crawl?
brianboru
- 05 Jun 2006 15:01
- 4616 of 11003
"a Start-Up program to evaluate all the start-up items that are slowing my XP start-up to a crawl?"
msconfig.exe typed into 'run' shows most and you can untick the box and stop them loading although the parent application may reinstate them.