Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

PC & MAC CLINIC - On line problem solving. (CPU)     

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

ISLAHI - 29 Sep 2006 14:47 - 5007 of 11003

I HAVE BEEN REMOVING PROGRAMMES WHICH I HAVE NOT BEEN USING, AFTER I HAD REMOVED TWISTER AND UTILITIES, MY COMPUTER STARTED TO GO FUNNY.THAT IS THE LETTERS GOT BIG AND THE STYLE CHANGED.I AM UNABLE TO GET TO WHAT I HAD BEFORE. HOW DO I GET THE ABOVE PROGRAMME BACK. THANKS CAN SOMEONE HELP ME

Bolshi - 29 Sep 2006 15:53 - 5008 of 11003

Islahi. Have you tried a System Restore if you're using XP?

DocProc - 29 Sep 2006 17:31 - 5009 of 11003

Islahi

Yes, your letters are a bit big. :-)

1. First, please hit your 'Caps Lock'. It's bad form and very boring for your readers too, my dear chap, to use capital letters all the time when you are posting on a bulletin board. The slang term for posting like that is 'shouting'. It's not nice.

2. At the top of your browser on the Tool Bar, you will see 'View'.

Click View
Click Text Size

It's probably now on 'Large'. You probably might like 'Medium'.

Hope that helps.

If not, your deleting activities might well have changed your screen resolution to '800 x 600' pixels from a previous '1024 x 768' pixels.

On your Desktop do a Right Click anywhere on the screen away from an icon.
Up will pop a window called 'Display Properties'
Select the tab called 'Settings'.
Select the slider where it says 'Screen Resolution' and move it to '1024 x 768'.
Click on 'Apply'
Click 'OK'

Hope that helps.

ISLAHI - 30 Sep 2006 17:33 - 5010 of 11003

Thank you DocProc for your advice. my screen resolution setting had changed, now I am having a wavey effect when I am moving pages up and down. Thanks once more

Kayak - 30 Sep 2006 17:48 - 5011 of 11003

Islahi, check in Control Panel/System in the list of devices that your graphics card and display are identified as the correct make and model and not a generic version.

DocProc - 30 Sep 2006 17:52 - 5012 of 11003

OK, Islahi

:-)

After you've tried Kayak's suggestion, then if necessary:-

Back to the window and page where the 'slider' thingy was.
Click on 'Advanced'
Click on the tab called 'Monitor'
Try the highest value for 'Screen refresh rate' (probably 85 Hertz) and see if that works. Try 75 Hertz if it doesn't.
You'll have to click on 'Apply' and 'OK' once again.

Iain - 01 Oct 2006 15:16 - 5013 of 11003

Help!
Been trying to install copy of Publisher but get error 25003.Been through recommended cures to no avail.
Installs fine on 2 other PCs in house but not on mine. Thought it may be D drive fault but tried installing from transferred files with same error message.

Any ideas?

Haystack - 01 Oct 2006 21:59 - 5014 of 11003

.

Iain - 03 Oct 2006 17:55 - 5015 of 11003

still need Help!
Been trying to install copy of Publisher but get error 25003.Been through recommended cures to no avail.
Installs fine on 2 other PCs in house but not on mine. Thought it may be D drive fault but tried installing from transferred files with same error message.

Any ideas?

Haystack - 03 Oct 2006 18:19 - 5016 of 11003

Have you tried the various suggestions thrown up by google searches?

prodman - 03 Oct 2006 18:26 - 5017 of 11003

http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=324853

Iain - 03 Oct 2006 19:33 - 5018 of 11003

DONE ALL OF BELOW BEFORE POSTING :-)

Method 1: Clean the CD-ROM
To clean the CD-ROM, use a CD-ROM cleaning kit, or gently wipe the silver side of the CD-ROM with a soft, lint-free cotton cloth. Do not use paper cloth, which can scratch the plastic and leave streaks. When you clean the CD-ROM, wipe from the center of the disc outward. Do not use a circular motion.

If this does not resolve the issue, clean the CD-ROM with a damp lint-free cotton cloth. Dry the CD-ROM thoroughly before you insert it into the CD-ROM drive or DVD-ROM drive.
Back to the top

Method 2: Show Hidden Files on the Network Share
1. Click Start, and then click Control Panel.
2. Double-click Folder Options.
3. Click the View tab.
4. Click to select the Show All Files check box.
5. Click to clear the Hide file extensions of known file types check box.
6. Click to clear the Hide protected operating system files check box.
7. Click Apply, and then click OK. If this does not resolve this issue, contact your network administrator for information about how to replace the missing or corrupted files.

Back to the top

Method 3: Clean Boot Your Computer
Use a clean boot to restart your computer, and then see if the issue persists. A clean boot is a method to create a clean environment. When you start your computer with a clean boot, Microsoft Windows starts and loads only the basic devices and services.

To restart your computer with a clean boot, follow the steps that are appropriate to your operating system.
Windows XP
1. Click Start, and then click Run.
2. Type msconfig in the Open box, and then click OK.
3. Click the General tab, and then click Selective Startup.
4. Under Selective Startup, click to clear the following check boxes :
Process System.ini file
Process Win.ini file
Load Startup Items
5. Click the Services tab, click to select the Hide All Microsoft Services check box, and then click Disable All.
6. Click OK, and then click Restart to restart the computer.
NOTE: To restore the computer to use a normal startup, click Normal Startup - load all device drivers and services on the General tab in the System Configuration Utility, click OK, and then click Restart to restart the computer.
Windows Me


STILL BAFFLED

prodman - 03 Oct 2006 20:03 - 5019 of 11003

Or this

ThePublisher - 04 Oct 2006 10:13 - 5020 of 11003

Can I revive my plea for some help in buying a cordless phone, please?

I went up the nearby Tottenham Court Road and ended up buying a BT Freestyle 610 for the two reasons that (a) it was white and matched our kitchen and (b) it had extra large buttons making it easier to use.

It has two faults. One is that the ringing on the base unit is an ugly strident screech. You can't turn it down. Yes, you can make the ringing on the handset gentle, but there is no way you can stop the base unit making you jump out of your skin. It's horrid.

Second fault is that the wireless link is so weak that it cannot reach from our kitchen to any other room in the flat. OK we live in a Victorian block with thick walls, but this is pathetic - and consequently useless. There is no point in having a cordless phone if you can't carry it from one room to the next.

I'm going to get no advice up the TCR as anyone who has shopped there will know all too well.

Can anyone come up with any ideas, please? I know that as soon as I take this phone back to the shop I'll simply be palmed off with b*llsh*t.

Your help, oh wise ones, please!

TP

Optimist - 04 Oct 2006 10:38 - 5021 of 11003

If you go for a digital phone then you should be able to use a different base unit with your existing handset and also more than one handset, although BT may not be standard.

I've used Panasonic and Erricson and had no problems but they're coloured grey. I would never buy BT kit because they always rebrand somene elses but don't give you the service.

You could also consider a WiFi VOIP phone.

ThePublisher - 04 Oct 2006 11:06 - 5022 of 11003

"you should be able to use a different base unit with your existing handset "

But what differs is the connector that charges the battery in the handset.

"I would never buy BT kit because they always rebrand somene elses but don't give you the service."

I must have been lucky with what I think was a Diverse 9100 the first time round. Pity I broke the battery container. That was quiet and it worked all over the flat.

"You could also consider a WiFi VOIP phone."

Not practical for a kitchen, surely? I just want something I can plug into the phone socket.

TP

Haystack - 04 Oct 2006 12:16 - 5023 of 11003

I have always bought cordless phones from street marets. They have cost from 10 - 15 for a pair and work fine (that price includes an answer phone). They were new and boxed. Thye work anywhere in the house, down the bottom of a 150' garden and a long way down the road.

Bolshi - 04 Oct 2006 14:46 - 5024 of 11003

TP. Can't you re-site the base station somewhere more to the middle of the house? Maybe upstairs so the 'waves' go through the floorboards rather that Queen Victorian brick? Just a thought.

MightyMicro - 04 Oct 2006 15:03 - 5025 of 11003

I use a Panasonic digital cordless phone at home (with integrated digital answer system). There is an additional handset and charger base which gives me intercom and call trasfer facilities as well.

All these DECT (Digitally Enhanced Cordless Telephone) systems are fundamentally the same technology, so you are dependent on the manufacturer for the quality of the device. I happen to have had good experiences with Panasonic kit.

The technology is basically the same as a low-power 1800 Mhz GSM phone (the band primarily used by Orange and T-mobile in the UK). Given the power and frequency involved, thick walls will present a greater hurdle than distance. Placement of the base station is the key, and a willingness to experiment to find the optimal position.

Hope this helps.

ThePublisher - 04 Oct 2006 15:43 - 5026 of 11003

Bolshi,

Sadly it is already bang in the middle.

MM,

"a willingness to experiment to find the optimal position."

Sadly each experiment costs me because without buying the machine I can't find out whether the base station tinkles or screeches, nor can I find out how far it will reach.

I've kept the receipt and the box from the machine I bought a couple of weeks ago but I know that as soon as I walk into the shop I will be treated as being an ignorant pest.

I'd willingly pay a goodly sum for one I knew was right, rather than trickle the money away hoping to find a decent one.

TP.
Register now or login to post to this thread.