Saturday, February 9, 2013

15 Windows 8 Tips to Get You Started

15 Windows 8 Tips to Get You Started

Windows 8 is the most drastic Microsoft operating system update in decades. Here's how to get the most out of it.

Windows 8 is here, and tens of millions are already or soon will be using it as their PC operating system. With the long-in-the-tooth but still heavily used Windows XP set to have its support expire next year, a vast horde of Windows users will likely move to this entirely re-imagined version of Microsoft's operating system. It's that re-imagining that may throw off some longtime Windows users, so we've come up with some pointers to ease the transition.

A key thing to remember is that, although the startup screen will look vastly unfamiliar to veteran Windows users, the new operating system's desktop view is accessible from the tile displaying the desktop (aka wallpaper). This will shift you back into a warm and familiar setting, though one that's improved in several ways. One thing Windows users won't miss is the long time it takes to boot up the operating system from power off. And it's not just boot performance: Both my own Windows 8 speed tests and the title of a LifeHacker article, "Windows 8 Speed Tests: It's Faster at Pretty Much Everything," sum up the performance story.

In addition to these speed boosts, Windows 8 also improves tools like Task Manager, file transfer dialogs, and it's new included browser Internet Explorer, can hold its own against competitors like Chrome and Firefox in both speed and support for new Web standards like HTML5. But since it's windows, you're still free to run those competing browsers—and millions of other programs.

So without further ado, here's our crash course on how to get rolling with Windows 8 in style and comfort.

1. Edges and corners.
Remembering just two interface procedures can do more to get you fluent in Windows 8 than anything else: If you're working on a touch screen, swiping in from the edges should become second nature, to get you back to the start screen, to search, to change settings, and more. Working with a mouse, the corners of the screen are the keys to the interface. The corners on the right side display the Charms (see later slide), and the left corners let you switch between apps, the desktop, and the start screen.

2. Don't fear the Start screen: Just start typing.
A lot of users are taken aback by the completely newfangled screen that displays on first boot-up of Windows 8. But just thinking of it simply as a full-screen start button panel will allay some of your fears. Just as with Windows 7's start button menu, you can simply start typing the name of a program to display app names that match the letters you type. If what you're looking for isn't there, say, you want to run the control panel, switch the right-slide selector bar to Settings; if you're looking for a picture or doc, switch it to Files. Note that you can also search within any of the apps listed below these three choices.
By just typing, you can find both new-style and traditional desktop Windows apps, which also get tiles on the start menu when you install them. And tiles can represent other things besides apps: They can represent specific people for contact info, sections of apps such as a specific team in the Sports app, or a symbol in the Finance app. They can also simply be links from the Start screen to a favorite Web page.

A sub-tip here is to organize your Start screen using semantic zoom—just pinch in on the screen if you're using a touch screen or touchpad, or hit Windows Key-Minus Sign to shrink the tiles, right click or swipe down, and then you can name and move groups of tiles. Moving individual tiles is easy, too: Hold them down (or right-click with a mouse) and drag them to the target location. Start the same way to make the app's tile smaller or larger, or to turn off the live information it displays. 

3. App Up: Visit the Windows Store
And visit it frequently, since new apps are arriving in the tens of thousands monthly. Sure, you may still mostly want to use your PC for traditional desktop-style applications, but why not take advantage of these lightweight, mobile-esque apps that are quick to install and update automatically through the store. As in Apple's iTunes App Store, the Windows Store lets you see top free and paid apps, and categories like Games, News, Music, Photo, Entertainment, and Productivity. Most apps, many of them very useful, are free, and most of those that cost money are priced from $1.49 to $9.99.

One app in particular worth more mention is Skype. The Messaging app in Windows 8 draws on Windows Messenger (it also works with Facebook messaging), but the MSN/Windows Messenger service is going away this April. Prepare for this change by installing Skype, which will replace it. Skype is one of the better things to come out of Internet technology advances over the past decade, allowing far flung face-to-face conversations. You can also use it as a telephone substitute, via apps for all the big mobile platforms and it offers a cheap way to make calls to regular phone numbers.

4. Take Advantage of SkyDrive
The cloud has been all the rage for at least two year, even before Apple's October 2011 launch of iCloud. SkyDrive gives PCs equal footing when it comes to cloud conveniences. If you sign into your PC with a Microsoft account—highly recommended, since you can't use the Windows Store or take advantage of other integrations if you don't—your SkyDrive account in included into the bargain. Not only does SkyDrive serve as backup for PC settings and as online storage and syncing, but third party new-style Windows apps can use it as though it were just another hard drive on your PC.

SkyDrive also can serve as a Dropbox-style syncing service, but this requires installing its desktop client. Yes—as with Internet Explorer, there are two guises of SkyDrive on Windows 8—new-style and desktop style. When used this way, SkyDrive can serve as an online backup for your important documents, photos, and anything else you save to synced folders.

A final SkyDrive sub-tip is that, in order to have passwords synced, you must "Trust" the PC. Do this by tapping or clicking on the Settings charm, then Change PC Settings at the bottom, and in the Users section, click "Trust this PC." This will open the Web browser to your Microsoft, where you can request a verification code that will show up on your cell phone or email account you specified as a trusted alternate contact. Note—my work spam guard filtered this, so you may have to dig.

5. Install drivers
My test Windows 8 laptop is a stunner. It's a svelte Samsung Series 9 that can match any MacBook Air for slim, lightweight design. But even though it features a state-of-the-art touchpad, I could barely do anything with that input device—no two- or three-finger scrolling in particular. When I asked Windows to check if the driver was up to date, it said yes. But a visit to the hardware maker's site, a download, and an install got all my multitouch goodness working.

6. Set up a Picture password or PIN
In a technique coming from the mobile world, Windows 8 normally requires you to authenticate yourself as a valid user each time the OS fires up, even after just sleeping as opposed to a full restart. Touch tablet users can set up a picture password for this operation, which is a reasonably easy way to get back into your machine. But I've found that even on desktops, creating a PIN lets you get in much quicker. Setting either up is a simple matter of tapping the Settings charm, then Users, then you'll see the choices under "Sign-in options."

7. Multi-boot it with Windows 7
Setting up your PC to multi-boot with the more familiar version is a snap. This way, you can compare and test the waters of the new Windows before completely burning the Windows 7 bridge. When you boot the computer, you'll see a screen with very clear choices for Windows 7 or Windows 8. I previously published a guide to how to multi-boot Windows 8. But be warned that the Windows 8 installer only allows multi-boot with Windows 7, for other operating systems, you'll have to turn to a utility such as NeoSmart's EasyBCD. 

8. How to Shut Down New-Style Apps
In the early preview versions of Windows 8, there was no way to fully close running new-style apps, since the OS developers figured that there was no need to do so, since these apps took up no CPU and no signifcant system memory while not displaying. With the released version of Windows 8, however, there are a few ways to fully close new style apps. That's a good thing, since you may not want to flick or Alt-Tab through dozens of apps to get to the one you want. On touchscreens, simply swipe down from above the top of the screen all the way to the bottom, the app's window will animate smaller till it disappears. The same gesture works with a mouse: When you place the cursor to the top edge of a screen, it changes to a hand; dragging this down closes the app. A simpler keyboard method is to simply hit Alt-F4—that's right, the same way you've been able to close applications for over a decade. Finally, you can head to the task manager (just type "task" from the Start screen), select the app, and click the "End task" button.

9. Use the Windows Key
The Windows key already did a lot of useful things in Windows 7, though most people usually ignore that key, while Ctrl and Alt got all the love. In Windows 8, the Windows key not only invokes the Start screen (and then takes you back to your application when hit again), but in fact, it can perform nearly all the new interface's functions, including displaying the Charms, snapping programs to the side of the screen, and more. This thoughtful keyboard support should help dispel the myth that Windows 8 is only for touch-screen PCs. Here are a few to get you started. The full list is at Microsoft's Windows 8 keyboard shortcuts page. Also keep in mind that most of the shortcut keys that you've come to know and love over the years still work: Alt-Tab to switch between running applications; Ctrl-Shift-Esc to open Task Manager; Ctrl-Z to undo and Ctrl-Y to redo; and Ctrl-C to copy and Ctrl-V to paste.

10. Use Multiple Monitors
Windows 8 adds some nifty tricks for using multiple monitors. For the first time, you can span a single desktop background (aka "wallpaper") across multiple monitors. You can also have a task bar on all your monitors, and open the Start screen from any of them, and even have different wallpapers on each. The corner hotspots are enlarged for multiple monitor setups, so you don't have to move your mouse all the way to the rightmost corner of the rightmost screen to invoke the control Charms—just move it to the corner of the monitor its on. Note that you can only run a new-style app on one display in a multi-monitor setup.


11. Navigate the Two IEs
Duality is something you need to get used to if you switch to Windows 8, and Internet Explorer is a prime case in point. The full-screen, new-style incarnation of Internet Explorer 10 is the one you'll see when you press the blue "e" tile from the start screen, and according to our security expert, Fahmida Y. Rashid, you're well advised to use this one. That's because new IE doesn't use plugins such as Java, which has recently been the subject of vulnerability news. You'll need to get used to the way full-screen IE works: A right-click opens the address bar at the bottom, and typing into that opens tiles for pinned and frequently visited sites.


12. Set Up Child Accounts
If you're sharing your PC with your offspring, Windows 8 offers an easy way to set up Child accounts that let you block websites and set time limits for usage. After choosing Add User in the Users section of the new-style PC Settings page, you'll enter an email address for the child's account, and then check the "Is this a child's account…" check box. You'll then get a Welcome to Family Safety email in the account you use to log into the PC with. This email links to a page where you can set the website and app filtering options and how often you want usage report emails.

13. Don't Shut Down
People used to complain that it was counter-intuitive that you had to shut Windows down from the Start button, but in Windows 8, the shut-down option is even more obfuscated: It's found in the Settings Charm, under Power. This button lets you truly shut down, but also offers Sleep and Restart. The reason this option is far from the surface is that Microsoft doesn't want you to fully shut the PC down. Just closing the top of a laptop or hitting the power button on a tablet will put the device into a very-low-power sleep state. If the battery is near dead, Windows will actually shut completely down. Desktop users will have to go through the Settings, Power menus, or just let the machine sleep after a period of idleness based on the desktop Power Options plan. Just type "power options" from the start menu to open the desktop Control Panel and choose "Change when the computer sleeps" to adjust this timeout.

14. Refresh Your PC
Though Windows 8 is noticeably faster than its predecessors, Microsoft has added an automated way to get your PC back to a pristine, speedy condition. The "Refresh your PC without affecting your files" option is found in the new-style control panel near the bottom of the General section. One drawback to this, though, is that you'll lose your desktop apps, though new-style apps will be saved. Then again, if you've bought a new PC with a load of preinstalled software you don't want, this tool is a boon. An even more drastic approach is the "Remove everything and reinstall Windows" option just below the refresh choice. It's a big help for when you want to pass the PC on to a new owner. You can read about the details of both processes in my article How to Refresh or Reset Your Windows 8 PC.

15. Use Windows 8's Built-In Backup and Archive Tool—File History
Windows has for years had a Backup feature, but this time around, Windows 8's new File History feature gives users something akin to the Mac's Time Machine. File History by default saves copies every hour of everything in your Libraries (Documents, Music, Pictures, Videos), desktop, contacts, and favorites. You can use an external or network drive. After setting up File History, you'll be able to retrieve any previous version of a file saved at the hourly interval. You can preview the earlier versions in the restore dialog and either replace the existing file with the backup version or keep both, by choosing "Compare info for both files."

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Connectify Dispatch Merges Your Available Internet Connections into One Fat, Super-Fast Pipe


 Windows: Most people only have one internet connection at home, but what if you could merge your connection with the free Wi-Fi from the coffee shop down the street with your phone's 4G connection to create a super-pipe with tons of additional bandwidth? That's what Connectify Dispatch does, perfectly.

Connectify Dispatch came out a few months ago in beta, and so far testers have been getting some impressive results. The app essentially bonds multiple available internet connections around your computer into a single pipe, and manages the traffic among them for you. You can connect multiple Wi-Fi networks and adapters, a wired ethernet connection, even a tethered 3G/4G smartphone, and the service uses the combined throughput of all of those networks together. The service even promises to accelerate your BitTorrent downloads.

Dispatch also provides automatic failover among those networks, so if one of them goes down or is unavailable, your traffic is automatically shunted to another one—this is especially useful if you have an open Wi-Fi network near you and your cable goes out. You won't even notice the drop. The Connectify app also allows you to prioritize the available networks, so you can rank your personal connection at the top, and others in order of speed or reliability. If any of them are unavailable, Dispatch will switch to the next highest one available.
Connectify Dispatch comes with Connectify Hotspot Pro, which allows you to share the bonded internet connection that Dispatch creates with other devices in your home. The service isn't cheap: Dispatch and 1 year of Hotspot Pro will set you back $50, while Dispatch and a lifetime subscription to Pro will cost you $70. Dispatch isn't available on its own, unfortunately.
The folks at Connectify sent us a license so we could test, and it works as advertised—you just need to have multiple networks open and available to you for the app to really work. In my case, all I had was my cable connection, a coffee shop that's about a block away (and too weak to really contribute), and my 4G smartphone. Even so, with two networks combined I managed to see throughput averaging 40-50Mbps down/15Mbps up, where my cable connection alone was around 30Mbps down/5-10Mbps up. Downloading a test torrent was definitely faster with Dispatch enabled. If I moved somewhere with more open networks, I could probably do much better—good enough to even log into a VPN and encrypt my traffic without latency.
Hotspot also worked well, and sharing the connection from the Windows laptop with my Macbook Pro was easy. That said, Dispatch is the real star here: if you live in a place with multiple connections and hotspots available to you (that you can use—all warnings about hijacking random networks to use with this app apply), bonding them this way can get you some serious added bandwidth for downloads, gaming, or streaming video or music. To learn more, hit the link below, check out their FAQ, or visit their technology overview for a deeper dive.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Windows 8 apps and games to explore and download


Windows 8 comes with a bunch of pre-installed "modern UI" apps, so you might as well familiarize yourself with the most high-profile entries. We have detailed primers on Music, Photos, Mail, Calendar, SkyDrive and People. None of these apps is perfect, though the SkyDrive cloud service is an integral part of the new Microsoft ecosystem, so you really should check out its implementation in Windows 8.

Precisely because Microsoft's built-in apps are so lacking, you'll want to hit up the Windows Store for Windows 8 apps to populate your new Start Screen. On the day Windows 8 launched, we published our top 10 list of the Windows 8 apps to download first, but just this week we updated the concept with a new article geared specifically to Windows 8 tablets.

New Windows 8 hardware owners should also read our suggestions of the best streaming media apps for cord cutters, the best Windows 8 casual games (our author tested a vast selection, and then chose the 15 most worthy), and best productivity apps. 

Diving deep into Windows 8 power tools


In the weeks since the new OS launched, we've published a number of deep-dive tutorials that explore the system's more innovative, richer features. For example, BitLocker To Go is built directly into Windows 8, and helps you quickly encrypt external storage devices like USB flash drives and portable hard drives. If you're concerned about your data security, you should also read our how-to on activating Windows Defender, a basic anti-malware tool that's not immediately exposed in many default installations of the OS.

Another great built-in Windows 8 feature is Storage Spaces, a tool that lets you combine all your sundry storage hardware into a single, virtual data pool—which you can then allocate more efficiently, for data redundancy and general file management. Besides explaining Storage Spaces, we also posted a great article on using Client Hyper-V, a tool that lets you virtualize older versions of Windows from within Windows 8.
Finally, it's possible that you just installed Windows 8 on a machine from yesteryear, and your gear isn't up to the task of running the new system in all its glory. If you find yourself in this sorry lot, read our tutorial on optimizing Windows 8 for older hardware. It explains which features to turn off, or otherwise disable.

Windows 8 drivers, utilities and customizations


Once you've become somewhat acclimated to the new Windows 8 landscape, it's time to fine-tune the OS experience to your personal preferences. At the top of the list is driver management. It's very possible that your new Windows 8 device boots up fine, but unless all your device drivers are up-to-date, you won't get the most high-performance experience possible (and driver issues may stop some peripherals from working altogether).

See our exhaustive guide on the whys, hows and wheres of Windows 8 drivers to nip all these issues in the bud.
Utilities like Win8 Start Button will help restore a bit of normalcy in the new OS.

Some Windows 8 problems have nothing to do with drivers. Instead, the OS itself is just innately challenging. To alleviate some of the built-in pain points, you absolutely must read our guide to the 8 worst Windows 8 irritations and how to fix them. Microsoft's decision to omit the traditional Start Button is among a host of bizarre development decisions, but luckily three different third-party utilities—Win8 Start Button, StartMenuPlus8 and Start8—can return the erstwhile Windows mainstay to your desktop.

But, hey, Microsoft didn't kill all the good things from previous versions of Windows. It just relegated many of them to hidden, second-class status. For a bunch of great tools hiding beneath the surface of Windows 8, check out this collection of 6 awesome Windows 8 utilities that no one knows about.

Ultimate Windows 8 starter guide: Must-know tips, apps and utilities


The year is drawing to a close, so there's a very good chance that you now find yourself staring straight down the gaping maw of Windows 8.

Maybe someone gave you a new Windows tablet or PC as a gift. Or maybe you decided to use your holiday down time to upgrade an old PC. The details don't really matter. You're now using Windows 8 for the very first time, and you're searching for answers on how to make the OS an integral, productive part of your high-tech life.

Sound familiar? Then walk with me as we take a tour of recent PCWorld Windows 8 coverage. I trust we have answers to all your Windows 8 questions.
Getting started with Windows 8

Right when the new OS launched, we published a number of essential how-to guides for first-time Windows 8 users. You can start your orientation process with this handy guide to maximizing your first 30 minutes with the new OS. But perhaps even more useful is our compendium of 20 must-know Windows 8 tips and tricks, which starts off with a thorough look at keyboard shortcuts—you should know them all if you don't have a touch screen.

But if you do have a touch screen device, then head straight to our guide to Windows 8 gesture commands. In this article (and in its accompany video) we describe how to navigate the initially confusing touch commands that leave many first-time users wondering what the heck just hit them.
And if you don't have a touch screen monitor for the new OS, you should definitely read our guide to picking the right upgrade display for full Windows 8 compatibility.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

How to use System Configuration (MSCONFIG)


System Configuration is a tool that can help identify problems that might prevent Windows from starting correctly. You can start Windows with common services and startup programs turned off and then turn them back on, one at a time. If a problem doesn't occur when a service is turned off, but does occur when that service is turned on, then the service could be the cause of the problem.

System Configuration is intended to find and isolate problems, but it's not meant as a startup management program. To permanently remove or turn off programs or services that run at startup, see Uninstall or change a program.
The following table describes the tabs and options that are available in System Configuration:

1: General Tap:

Lists choices for startup configuration modes:

Normal startup. Starts Windows in the usual manner. Use this mode to start Windows after you're done using the other two modes to troubleshoot the problem.

Diagnostic startup. Starts Windows with basic services and drivers only. This mode can help rule out basic Windows files as the problem.

Selective startup. Starts Windows with basic services and drivers and the other services and startup programs that you select.







2: Boot Tap:

Shows configuration options for the operating system and advanced debugging settings, including:

Safe boot: Minimal. On startup, opens the Windows graphical user interface (Windows Explorer) in safe mode running only critical system services. Networking is disabled.

Safe boot: Alternate shell. On startup, opens the Windows command prompt in safe mode running only critical system services. Networking and the graphical user interface are disabled.

Safe boot: Active Directory repair. On startup, opens the Windows graphical user interface in safe mode running critical system services and Active Directory.

Safe boot: Network. On startup, opens the Windows graphical user interface in safe mode running only critical system services. Networking is enabled.

No GUI boot. Does not display the Windows Welcome screen when starting.

Boot log. Stores all information from the startup process in the file %SystemRoot%Ntbtlog.txt.

Base video. On startup, opens the Windows graphical user interface in minimal VGA mode. This loads standard VGA drivers instead of display drivers specific to the video hardware on the computer.

OS boot information. Shows driver names as drivers are being loaded during the startup process.

Make all boot settings permanent. Doesn't track changes made in System Configuration. Options can be changed later using System Configuration, but must be changed manually. When this option is selected, you can't roll back your changes by selecting Normal startup on the General tab.

Advanced boot options:

Number of processors. Limits the number of processors used on a multiprocessor system. If the check box is selected, the system boots using only the number of processors in the drop-down list.

Maximum memory. Specifies the maximum amount of physical memory used by the operating system to simulate a low memory configuration. The value in the text box is megabytes (MB).

PCI Lock. Prevents Windows from reallocating I/O and IRQ resources on the PCI bus. The I/O and memory resources set by the BIOS are preserved.

Debug. Enables kernel-mode debugging for device driver development. Go to the Windows Driver Kit website for more information.

Global debug settings. Specifies the debugger connection settings on this computer for a kernel debugger to communicate with a debugger host. The debugger connection between the host and target computers can be Serial, IEEE 1394, or USB 2.0.

Debug port. Specifies using Serial as the connection type and the serial port. The default port is COM 1.

Baud rate. Specifies the baud rate to use when Debug port is selected and the debug connection type is Serial. This setting is optional. Valid values for baud are 9600, 19,200, 38,400, 57,600, and 115,200. The default baud rate is 115,200 bps.

Channel. Specifies using 1394 as the debug connection type and specifies the channel number to use. The value for channel must be a decimal integer between 0 and 62, inclusive, and must match the channel number used by the host computer. The channel specified does not depend on the physical 1394 port chosen on the adapter. The default value for channel is 0.

USB target name. Specifies a string value to use when the debug type is USB. This string can be any value.




3: Service Tap:

Lists all of the services that start when the computer starts, along with their current status (Running or Stopped). Use the Services tab to enable or disable individual services at startup to troubleshoot which services might be contributing to startup problems.

Select Hide all Microsoft services to show only third-party applications in the services list. Clear the check box for a service to disable it the next time you start the computer. If you've chosen Selective startup on the General tab, you must either choose Normal startup on the General tab or select the service’s check box to start it again at startup.

Warning
Disabling services that normally run at startup might cause some programs to malfunction or result in system instability. Don't disable services in this list unless you know they're not essential to your computer’s operation. Selecting Disable all won't disable some secure Microsoft services required for the operating system to start.

4:Startup Tap:

Lists applications that run when the computer starts up, along with the name of their publisher, the path to the executable file, and the location of the registry key or shortcut that causes the application to run.

Clear the check box for a startup item to disable it on your next startup. If you've chosen Selective startup on the General tab, you must either choose Normal startup on the General tab or select the startup item’s check box to start it again at startup.

If you suspect an application has been compromised, examine the Command column to review the path to the executable file.

Note
Disabling applications that normally run at startup might result in related applications starting more slowly or not running as expected.

5: Tools Tap:

Provides a convenient list of diagnostic tools and other advanced tools that you can run.








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