|
Cheap Trick of the Week
Cheap Tricks are
Editor Eric's famous undocumented or little-known computing tips. Some
are surprisingly useful. Others, such as Easter eggs, can be very
silly.
|
Many
more are found in Eric's Little Black Book of Cheap Tricks,
available from this site. In the meantime, check out the Cheap
Trick of the Week for the past month below.
Also check out other Cheap Tricks and advice listed
in the menu on the left side.
|
|
Cheap Trick of the Week:
Space, the final warning
Windows XP
Windows XP displays a warning in the taskbar when your hard disk is
almost full. But this can be annoying when you already know about the
lack of space.
You can disable the warning with a Registry tweak. (If you're new
to working in Windows' Registry, check our instructions and
precautions at the link "Editing Windows Registry" on the
menu to the left.)
Navigate in the Registry to HKEY_
CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\
CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer. Right-click Explorer and select New
and DWORD Value. In the right pane, rename the new value NoLowDiskSpaceChecks.
Double-click it and in the editing window, set the data value to 1
(the numeral one) and click OK.
Close the Registry restart your computer. You won’t be warned
again.
Some recent Cheap Tricks of the Week:
Hitting the links
Web browser
Looking for a link on a Web page and you don’t want to have to
click and scroll all over the place?
Use your keys. Just hit Tab to go to the next link on the page. Or
use Shift and Tab together to cycle back through the links.
On a page with frames, tabbing will select each frame and its links
in order.
Path finder
Windows
Want to know the full path of a file or icon quickly? Click the
Start button and Run. Then drag the file or icon from the desktop, or
from its folder, or from Explorer onto the Run window.
The path name will appear in the Open field.
Where am I?
Windows 95/98/Me
Do you ever
need to know what your address is—that is, your IP address when
you're online? It can help to know this if you play online games or
take part in Net conferencing.
Click on
Start and Run, enter winipcfg and click OK.
The IP
Configuration window appears with your IP address, Subnet Mask and
other details about your network connection.
Sorry, it
doesn't work in Windows XP.
Return to the scene of your editing
crime Word
You make various changes to a long Word
document and then you suddenly realize you goofed, maybe six or seven
edits ago. How to find that place?
You could use the standard undo command — either by selecting it on
the toolbar or by holding down the Ctrl key (Command on a Mac) and
continually pressing Z until you get back to the edit where you made
the mistake. But this wipes out all the good text you’ve added since
the boo-boo.
So, instead, hold down both Ctrl and Alt (Command and Option on a Mac)
and press Z. Tap Z repeatedly and it will cycle through the text,
stopping at each point where you made edits — without changing them
back. When you get to the place of your error, you can then make the
correction there without affecting anything else.
If you keep using the key combo after this,
you will eventually return to where you had left off, as the cursor
cycles through all your edits in a loop.
Keep others from changing your set-up
Windows
If you're not the only one using your
computer, you may be tired of people tinkering with how you have the
system set up. You can stymie them by making the Control Panel
disappear.
The Control Panel won't really be gone, but
you'll be the only one who knows where it went and how to get it back
(unless they read this article too).
Open your Registry Editor. (If you're not
sure how to do this, check our instructions at the link "Editing
Windows' Registry" on the left side of this page.) Go to
HKEY_CURRENT_ USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\Current
Version\Policies\Explorer. Right-click the Explorer key, select Edit,
New and DWORD Value. In the Name box, type NoControlPanel and
click OK. Double-click the new value and type 1 (one) for the
Value Data. Close the Registry Editor and restart your computer. The
Control Panel will no longer be available but to get it back delete
the NoControlPanel value to set the Value Data to 0
(zero).
Hang out in a
bigger or smaller group
Windows XP
When you have several files opened by the
same application, Windows XP will group them together on the Taskbar
at the bottom of your screen with an arrow that you can click to get a
pop-up menu of the files. (If this feature is not working on your XP
system, turn it on by right-clicking on an empty space of the Taskbar,
selecting Properties, going to the Taskbar page, and checking Group
Similar Taskbar Buttons.)
However, this is activated only when three
or more files are open. What if you want to start this Taskbar
space-saving process with two files open? Or you'd prefer to keep
separate buttons on the Taskbar until five or six files are in use?
You can set the number in the Registry. (If
you're unfamiliar with the Registry, check our instructions at the
link "Editing Windows Registry" on the left side of this
page).
Go to HKEY_CURRENT
_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer \Advanced and
in the right pane double-click on the value TaskbarGroupSize. In the
Edit DWORD Value window, change the 3 to whatever number of files you
want to be grouped. Click OK. Close the Registry and restart the
computer for this trick to take effect the next time you open multiple
files.
Uncovering
trash
Windows 95/98/Me/XP
Suppose you want to want to move some items
to the Recycle Bin but the trash can is covered by open windows. You
have to minimize those windows first to get them out of the way,
right?
Wrong.
Just drag the items you want to trash onto
a blank spot of the taskbar at the bottom of your screen and, keeping
the mouse button down, let them hover there for a second. The cursor
will turn into one of those prohibitive circles with a slash through
it, but more importantly all open windows will disappear off your
desktop, letting you drop the items into the now accessible Recycle
Bin.
The windows will then return as they were
previously.
Easiest shutdown ever
Windows 95/98/Me/XP
Windows veterans have been using this trick
for years, to close programs, windows, folders, whatever: Hold down
the Alt key and press the F4 function key.
But if nothing is open, this actually
brings up the shutdown dialogue box.
So....
To end everything that's going on with your
computer, no matter what's open, just hold down Alt, keep tapping F4
and watch everything close up, until the shutdown dialogue box
appears. At that point a simple Tab will likely move the highlight to
the Shut Down/Turn Off option, and you can then hit Enter to select
it.
Virtual keyboard
Windows Me/XP
Did you know Windows has a built-in
keyboard that lets you enter text without using your real keyboard?
Click Start and Run. Enter osk in
the Open field and hit OK.
The keyboard will appear on your screen.
You can change its settings to be on top of any program in which you
want to enter text (such as a word processor), or set it to select
keys by clicking, hovering or using a joystick.
Hidden
Trash
Windows 95/98/Me/XP
Suppose you want to want to move some items
to the Recycle Bin but the bin is covered by open windows. You have to
minimize those windows first to get them out of the way, right? Wrong.
Just drag the
items you want to trash onto a blank spot of the taskbar at the bottom
of your screen and, keeping the mouse button down, let them hover
there for a second.
The cursor will turn into one of those
prohibitive circles with a slash through it, but all open windows will
disappear off your desktop, letting you drop the items into the now
accessible Recycle Bin.
The windows will then return.
Revisiting text edits
Word
You make various changes to a long text
document and then you suddenly realize you goofed, maybe six or seven
edits ago. How to find that place?
You could use the standard undo command —
either by selecting it on the toolbar or by holding down the Ctrl key
(Command key on a Macintosh) and pressing Z. But this would wipe out
all the edits you've made since the boo boo.
So, instead, hold down both Ctrl and Alt
(Command and Option on a Mac) and press Z. Tap Z repeatedly and it
will cycle through the text, stopping at each point where you had made
edits — without changing them back. When you get to the place of
your error, you can then make the correction there without affecting
anything else.
If you keep using the key combo after this,
you will eventually return to where you had left off, as the cursor
cycles through all your edits in a loop.
No more sharing
Windows XP
Have you noticed those folders in Windows XP's
My Computer for "Shared" documents? It could be just one
folder or it could be numerous folders for shared photos, music, etc.
What do you need them for, especially listed so prominently in your
main folder?
Ever try to delete them? You can't, unless you
can outsmart it with the following simple Registry hack:
In your Registry Editor, navigate through
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\ Microsoft\Windows\Current
Version\Explorer\My Computer\ NameSpace\ DelegateFolders.
You'll find a key named
{59031a47-3f72-44a7-89c5-5595fe6b30ee}. Right-click on it and select
Delete. The Shared folders will immediately disappear.
Explore where you wanna explore
Windows XP
If you launch Windows
Explorer in Windows XP by clicking on Start, All Programs and
Accessories, it opens by default in the My Documents folder. It
doesn't even show you anything else. You gotta fix that.
So go to the same
Windows Explorer item on the Accessories menu, right-click on it and
select Properties. In the Windows Explorer Properties window, in the
Shortcut page you'll see the following in the Target field:
%SystemRoot%\explorer.exe.
Add to the end of this
string /n, /e, /select, C:\ with spaces before each forward
slash and before C. The result should be
%SystemRoot%\explorer.exe
/n, /e, /select, C:\
Click OK and the next
time you open Explorer you should be shown your entire system.
Secret desktop folder from Start menu
Windows
We've told you before how to access the
secret folder of desktop icons. But now you can set up your system so
this folder is available from your Start menu.
-
Right-click the Start button and select
Open.
- In the Start Menu folder, right-click on a blank space and
select New and Shortcut.
- For the Command Line, enter c:\windows\desktop and click
Next.
- Accept the default name Desktop or enter a new one, and click
Finish.
Close Explorer and now you have a Desktop
command on your Start menu.
Vertical
integration
Word
Ever want to select a vertical block of
text — like a column of figures — but Word only lets you
highlight lines that go right right across the page? The trick is to
hold down the Alt key (on a Macintosh, use the Option key) while you
drag the mouse diagonally across the selection.
You can also do it with key commands alone.
Press Ctrl, Shift and F8 together (with a Mac, use the Command key
with Shift and F8), then let go and use the arrow keys to extend the
highlighted box.
Secret desktop folder
Windows
Remember our tip for displaying a folder of
all your desktop files and folders — click on Start and Run, enter a
period and click OK? If you do this a lot, we can make it easier for
you by setting up a button on the taskbar at the bottom of your screen
that you can click when you want to see the desktop folder. Here's how
to set this up:
-
Right-click Start and select Open from
the context menu. This should open the Start Menu folder.
- In the Start Menu folder, double-click Programs to open that
folder, and then StartUp.
- In the StartUp folder, right-click on a blank area and select
New and Shortcut from the menus.
- In the space for the Command Line, type c:\windows\explorer.exe
c:\windows\desktop — there's a space only before the second c:
and those are backward slashes. Click Next. (This command assumes
Windows is stored in the directory named Windows. If not,
substitute the name of your Windows folder for windows in
both instances.)
- Name the file something profound like Desktop and click
Finish.
- Back in the StartUp window, right-click the new Desktop icon and
select Properties.
- Under the Shortcut tab, in the Run field select Minimized and
click Close.
The next time you start Windows, the
Desktop icon will be on the taskbar. Click it at any time and you'll
get immediate access to all your desktop items in a separate folder.
|