UNM

Dec 082011
 

I purchased today your Windows 7 for Seniors.  Tuesday my husband had a new desktop computer w/windows7 installed.  The installers put in a password.  Each time he starts the computer he must enter his password.  Your book does not indicate a way to cancel the password requirement.  If there is a way to cancel this requirement could you please let me know.  Thanks for your time. 

Thank you for buying my book. I hope it proves useful.

To remove a Windows account password, do these steps:

1) Click on the Windows logo (also called the Start button) for the Start menu (or press the Windows logo key between Ctrl and Alt on the left of most keyboards).

2) Start typing "password" (without the quotes). Your text appears in the Start menu search box. After just a few letters, you’ll see "Change your Windows password" or "Change or remove your account password." Click either; both lead to the same screen. See this screenshot:

Note: You can get to this screen with a single step by clicking your account picture just above your account name in the upper-right corner of the Start menu.

3) Click "Remove your password."

4) On the screen that appears next, type the current password in the box.

5) Click the Remove Password button. If you are asked to confirm, click OK or Yes.

That should do it. Let me know. Feel free to write again anytime. Have fun with Windows 7.

peace,

mjh

 Posted by at 1:42 pm
Jan 142011
 

Here’s a link to a good article on how and why to upgrade from one edition of Windows 7 to another, by the How-To Geek. (Nerds know: versions refer to the evolution of Windows over the years, such as XP or Windows 7, whereas editions refer to differences within a specific version, such as Windows 7 Starter versus Home Premium.)

How to Upgrade Windows 7 Easily (And Understand Whether You Should) – How-To Geek

 Posted by at 9:09 pm
Jan 142011
 

I believe that the computer courses UNM Continuing Education are especially dependent on the use of tuition waivers, which are a great benefit of working for UNM. If the waivers can’t be used and UNMCE, I’m certain there will be fewer but more expensive classes. Moreover, UNM employees will lose an important option. Please read the following message from UNMCE *and* spread the word. If you want to help save UNMCE computer classes – especially business-level classes – send your comments to the email addresses below. Thank you.

One of these recommendations, if implemented, would have a significantly negative impact on UNM Continuing Education. The recommendation reads, "Eliminate the use of tuition remission for all non-academic programs, resulting in $1.4m recurring savings to I&G." There are some questions about what the details of the recommendation are, but here are some important facts for you to consider.

Please support the rejection of the recommendation that Tuition Remission for non-credit courses at UNMCE be eliminated.
   – This would represent 20% of our enrollment or $1.1 million in revenues
   – It would impact class cancellations
   – It could impact the number of instructors we employ
   – It could reduce the number of staff members we employ
   – It would hamper our ability to serve business, industry, WIA, VA, etc.

1. If this recommendation is adopted as written, Continuing Education would lose all funding for providing tuition remission benefits to staff and retirees.  All of the classes and programs offered by Continuing Education are non-credit.  Faculty, staff and retirees would not be able to take Continuing Education’s Professional Development or  Personal Enrichment classes using their tuition remission benefits.

2. If enacted, this proposal would create a loss of revenue that would threaten the long-term sustainability of the Division of Continuing Education. We feel that this would have significant impacts for our students, our customers and our community partners.

3. There are discussions as to whether the proposal to eliminate Tuition Remission benefits would actually result in cost savings for the University.  In fact, it may create additional budget issues in the long run. We are currently engaging in these discussions with the committee.

What you can do to help:

There is an “open comment period” for both the public and staff at UNM to give input to the UNM Cost Containment Task Force. We ask that you show your support for UNM Continuing Education and submit comments within the next 48 hours, if possible.  Please comment about what the potential impact of future loss of educational services from UNM Continuing Education would mean to you or your organization, and give your perspectives on the Tuition Remission cuts and their impact to the Division.   The committee would want to hear more about the value of the professional development and lifelong learning programs offered by UNM-CE.

·         For the public and UNM employees, comments go to UNM President David Schmidly’s web site: budgetimpact@unm.edu
·         UNM Staff, may also submit comments through Staff Council and President Merle Kennedy: scouncil@unm.edu

We thank you for your support of Continuing Education.

 Posted by at 3:40 pm
Jan 062011
 

The largest paper in New Mexico has long had the most dumbfounding, confounding website anywhere. Fifteen years ago, when I started using the site as an example in classes, the oddities of the Albuquerque Journal’s websites might have been forgiven, but to this day it appears to be the work of someone who has never seen another website and who knows nothing about conventions or style. Examples can be found on every single page, but consider this portion of a form used to submit a letter to the editor.

image

I could simply sneer “1995 called and they want their form back” – this is starkly utilitarian. Why is each field so huge? Why not include NM as a default state? I know letters come from all over, but most surely come from NM. The web page creator might be forgiven for defaulting the city to Albuquerque. (That would make someone mad, I suppose.) But why, o why, dear designer, are there three phone number fields? Surely one suffices; OK, two; but three?! No doubt, the editors want the information, but it is your job to tell them it’s ridiculous.

The following example isn’t beautiful, but it is functional and more compact. It took minutes to code by hand.

image

To its credit, the form page does not have all the junk most abqjournal pages feature: a chaotic blend of menus and ads. It shows admirable restraint in that regard. On the other hand, except by clicking the Submit button, there is no link back to the website. Check out the site for yourself: www.abqjournal.com.

image

 Posted by at 9:59 am
Nov 092010
 

Nice article with illustrations by Abhijeet at Guiding Tech. Abhijeet doesn’t mention drag and drop in this regard (the right-brain alternative to the left-brain steps covered at the link). You can drag and drop icons in the Notification Area (near the clock in the Taskbar – the Icon Notification Tray). Drop an icon onto the overflow area to hide it; drag it out of the overflow and into the tray to display it. Drag icons to reorder for easier recognition. The steps documented at Guiding Tech do give you one option drag and drop won’t: Only Show Notifications. See my book Windows 7 for Seniors.

notification area overflow

How to Customize and Manage Icons in the Notification Area of Windows 7 by Abhijeet, Guiding Tech

The notification area in Windows 7, also known as the system tray (or the systray), is the set of small icons of running programs, displayed by default on the right of taskbar, which would be the bottom right corner of your desktop.

How to Customize and Manage Icons in the Notification Area of Windows 7

 Posted by at 12:50 pm
Nov 022010
 

Guidingtech.com provides step-by-step, illustrated instructions on installing Windows Live Essentials 2011. I strongly recommend Photo Gallery for organizing, editing, and publishing your photos. (I cover Photo Gallery in all of my books, including the latest version in Digital Cameras & Photography for Dummies, 2nd edition.) I also use Live Mesh to synchronize a folder between computers to simplify transferring files even at a great distance. If you’re a blogger, Live Writer is a fantastic tool. I don’t use the other programs.

wlpg wlw

Photo Gallery on the left and Writer on the right. Both sport the Ribbon toolbar Microsoft introduced in Office.

An Overview of Windows Live Essentials 2011 by Guiding Tech

The Window Live Essentials 2011 suite by Microsoft includes free products for mail, photos, instant messaging, movies, writing and more. It was in beta for the last few months but now it has been released officially, and Microsoft started pushing it through Windows update recently.

This article will give an overview of what’s there to explore in this latest edition of Live Essentials and how to install the programs. In the coming weeks, we’ll publish various guides and tutorials related to these programs in order to make the most out of this suite of free tools.

 Posted by at 11:03 am
Nov 022010
 

Checkboxes in Windows Explorer give you another way to select multiple files and folders for a task such as copying, deleting, renaming, etc. You click inside the rather small checkbox to select or deselect a file – no need to hold down the Ctrl key (which is the alternative to checkboxes). However, you may not see the checkboxes unless you turn this feature on. Guiding Tech takes you through the steps, as do I in Windows 7 for Seniors.

Here you see checkboxes in Large Icon View (left, one of two photos selected and Details View (right, two of four files selected. If you click anywhere other than within the checkbox, you will either deselect or open a file.

checkbox 1 checkbox 2

How to Use CheckBoxes to Select Items in Windows 7 Explorer by Guiding Tech

You know that if you need to select multiple files or folders in Windows explorer then the best way to do it is by holding down the Ctrl key and then clicking on those items, right.

Well, this method is ok, except that a lot of times we tend to take our finger off the Ctrl key, or click somewhere else on the screen by mistake and all our selected files get unselected, which, obviously, is frustrating.

Windows 7 users could try out another option. It’s a simple yet cool feature and might turn out to be very useful too. Yes, as you might have guessed from the title of this post, I am talking about using checkboxes to select items in Windows explorer. …

 Posted by at 10:56 am
Sep 282010
 

A blog, Facebook, Twitter – even Flickr and YouTube: UNMCE goes where you go.

CE Blog

Welcome to the UNM Continuing Education Blog. Here you will find information on upcoming classes and events. This site also serves as a portal to our Social Media outlets.

CE Blog

UNM Continuing Education on Facebook

UNM Continuing Ed (unmce) on Twitter

@UNMCE 1634 University Blvd. NE

We offer Professional certifications, art, hobby, language, travel, culture, adult learning, youth courses.

http://dce.unm.edu

UNM Continuing Ed (unmce) on Twitter

Oh, then there’s my UNMCE page with a link to my schedule. I use my computer blog for class resources, too.

PC Training & Consulting Weblog » UNM

I teach classes for the University of New Mexico Division of Continuing Education (since 1988). Recent classes include Windows 7 and Web-related classes such as Beginning (X)HTML.

PC Training & Consulting Weblog » UNM

 Posted by at 8:30 pm
Sep 232010
 

[originally posted Thu 09/16/10; updated 9/23/10]

IE9 is out in beta and should be out in general by the end of the year. I’ve run it a very short time. So far, I’m underwhelmed. (As I am by Google Chrome, although Chrome has been buggy for me.) I’m wed to Firefox because of the Add-ons and Greasemonkey scripts. Some of them are just too useful to give up. (Scripts, especially, because they place fewer demands on the system and they are often hackable.)

The obvious innovation in IE9 is placing the tabs to the right of the address bar – I’ve never seen that. This gives you an extra vertical line of space (as does dropping the status bar, which I prefer to see). However, that also leaves less room for legible tabs. (I’m surprised Microsoft didn’t make this Taskbar-like with icons only.)

[update 9/23/10]

Sebastian Anthony addresses one of my first concerns: the space available for tabs. On the one hand, I should have guessed this address bar is resizable. On the other hand, such hidden features vex most users. (Still, I should have tried.)

This is why you should use Internet Explorer 9

Moving on (I’ve calmed down now), the unified tab-and-address bar area, which has received a lot of flak for being too small for power-users, is resizable! You can simply make the address bar narrower, leaving more space for tabs. More space is also dedicated to tabs on wider displays: screen widths over 1280 pixels (i.e. every power-user) have two thirds of that space reserved for tabs — it’s only on smaller screens that the address bar occupies half the width (and it’s still resizable!)

This is why you should use Internet Explorer 9

[/end update]

Start with this short overview, but note some of these features are common to other browsers and there is no mention nere of what Ed Bott considers the killer feature.

Five things average users will love about Internet Explorer 9

Now that the initial hands-on reports are out and the beta download for Internet Explorer 9 is publicly available, IE loyalists (and those who simply didn’t realize there were other browsers) can finally get a taste of competitive, fast, modern browser. IE9 has a lot of great features which more savvy users know about, understand, and love — like solid HTML5, faster JavaScript engine, and hardware acceleration — but there’s also a lot for the Average Joe to love, too!

Five things average users will love about Internet Explorer 9

In the next article, the How-To-Geek does its usual thorough job with lots of screenshots, ending with a link to the beta. (Big download.)

Internet Explorer 9 Screenshot Tour: It’s Got a Completely New Interface – How-To Geek

Today Microsoft finally released the newest version of Internet Explorer, complete with hardware acceleration, web standards support, and a completely redesigned interface focused on using web sites as applications. Join us for a tour of the features in Internet Explorer 9.

Internet Explorer 9 Screenshot Tour: It’s Got a Completely New Interface – How-To Geek

Ed Bott has a very thorough consideration.

Internet Explorer 9 beta review: Microsoft reinvents the browser | ZDNet

I’ve been using the IE9 beta extensively on multiple PCs, including my primary desktop and notebook computers. Based on that experience, I have some preliminary answers to the questions you’re asking: Is it fast enough? Is it compatible enough? Is it cool enough to win back former IE users who have switched to other browsers, first to Firefox and more recently to Google Chrome? And will this shiny new browser be able to rehabilitate the tarnished Internet Explorer brand?

Internet Explorer 9 beta review: Microsoft reinvents the browser | ZDNet

Pinned taskbar icons are cool. (Not sure yet about sites – site groups, yes!) Jumplists are THE killer feature of Windows 7. (Right-click a taskbar icon or look for fly-out menus on the Start menu.) Smart jumplists improve any application, including IE9. Customizable jumplists would be great. (Yes, pinning to jumplists is great, but we could do more.)

If you decide to uninstall the beta, see Revert Back to IE 8 from Internet Explorer 9 Beta – How-To Geek

 Posted by at 12:05 pm
Sep 192010
 

Welcome to class. Please feel comfortable asking questions and participating in discussions. mjh

Note the following addresses:

My computer blog: www.mjhinton.com/help/
My email: mark@mjhinton.com
Continuing Education contact: Caroline Orcutt at 277-6037, orcutt@unm.edu

Please check this blog after the course is over.

UNMCE course description:

Enhance your ability to control the looks and functionality of your Web pages by learning HTML and XHTML, the closely related languages that programs such as Dreamweaver and Expression Web use behind the scenes. Use code to add graphics, links, and tables to your pages, and explore the power of CSS to format text consistently and quickly. Gain an understanding of the similarities and differences between HTML and XHTML, and practice using FTP to upload your pages to a live Web server.

Prerequisites: 52008 or 54101/11 or equivalent experience, and Internet experience.
Note: This course is Windows only. [mjh: But it should help Mac users, if they are comfortable with Windows.]

Announcements before class begins

Class website: www.mjhinton.com/beghtml/

Class Files to download:

 Posted by at 2:06 pm
Jun 052010
 

You know, I left Facebook. Elsewhere, I noted my concern about all the info flowing constantly off screen and out of mind. Every effort you make to add content to FB is ultimately washed away and lost. Your efforts may be noticed (or not), but they will be forgotten – and soon. “OK, yeah, move on, Mark.” But I do have some specific technical complaints to share with the geeks and nerds – my peeps, yo.

Let’s start at the top of the Home page with the blue command bar (or whatever FB calls it): This bar lets you move between various major functions. So, why doesn’t it stay at the top of the screen? Many times I move back to the top of the page to switch between Home and my Profile or Account. (In fact, I used a Greasemonkey script to keep the bar at the top, but a FB update broke the script.)

The notification icons: Indeed, these are much improved yet still so lacking. Click on one of the so-tiny notification icons for a list of items such as “So-and-so likes your link.” Which link, now? I’ve posted hundreds of links – would it kill FB to say “So-and-so likes [title of link or something specific]”? The notification icons *alert* you without really informing you, unless you follow each link.

The navigation area down the side: This is another potentially important area that could stay on screen all the time. Moreover, a FB update broke my use of lists, which helped me concentrate on friends in groups. The list function is there, but requires more clicks than before. That’s a legitimate gripe, especially if one visits FB multiple times a day – clicks add up.

Near the top of the home page, Top News Feeds versus Most Recent. News appears by default. If you select Recent, it will be the default for the rest of the day, but tomorrow you’ll be back to News as the default. Top News was a new feature that many people hated but had to learn to live with.

Notice we’ve already considered *three* important navigation/function areas, and we’ve barely started. Switch to your Profile and you have at least four new menu items, including the less-than-intuitive “Wall.” Quick: Explain the difference between Home, Profile, and Wall. Yeah, yeah, it’s easy, but isn’t this needlessly complex? And I know you know, but does everyone know that what they see in each of these areas is unique. This uniqueness of view should appeal to the individualist, but it actually complicates explaining differences to people – you simply don’t know how different my Wall is from your Home page or my view of your Home page. These differences are further complicated by Privacy options, although the fact that most people choose the extremes – Friends or Everyone – for everything rather than the absurdly exquisite tailoring that is possible for nearly every posting does simplify things de facto.

Consider status updates: Tell us what you’re thinking. Have you noticed that if you include a link (or photo, video, etc) in a status update it’s not a status update? Seriously. Status updates are text only. So, if you deal with FB by going to Friends > Status Updates, you’re missing every link, etc, your friends post. WTF?!

Speaking of Status Update, Comments, and other text boxes: On many occasions, I’ve started typing into a FB text box and found that when I reached the end of the second line of text, the box would not expand. I could continue typing, but I couldn’t see what I was typing. Fun. On many occasions, my cursor disappeared within the text box. If I clicked between two letters, I had to hope my cursor was where I thought it was (and often it wasn’t). All of which was made even more fun by the fact that you can’t edit anything once you enter it. How fucked up is that?

Lastly, I found that if I made a comment or clicked Like, I could no longer scroll down page by tapping the spacebar (my preference). In many cases, the arrow keys or Page Down/Up stopped working. I admit some of these things could be the fault of my browser (Firefox) or my many plug-ins.

I wont’ even go into the maze of pages, the complex Account options, or the fact that FB keeps going through major revisions that upset lots of users without every really getting it right. Facebook is overwrought but ineptly assembled. (And, yes, truth be told, I couldn’t build as ‘good’ a system, but it doesn’t take a tailor to see the Emperor is naked.)

An Alternative: Blog

Go to www.blogger.com (Google) or www.wordpress.com and you can set up a free blog in minutes. You’ll have beautiful templates at your disposal and gadgets and widgets galore. You can easily upload photos and videos and link to anything on the Web (unless it’s hidden behind FB’s wall or the like). You can edit with a click. The result is just like your FB Wall and Profile, with fewer complications and more options.

As for the social side – the alternative to your FB Home stream: Every blog generates an RSS feed (the little orange icon in your address bar or elsewhere on the page). Use RSS to pull the content from all of your friends’ blogs into one screen using an RSS reader (I recommend Google Reader).

 Posted by at 9:47 pm