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Courses
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Agenda
Day
One
Hardware Vs. Software
Static
Electricity
Heat
Useful
Tools
Hardware
DayTwo –
notes
Software
Backing up your Data
External
Backup Drives
RAID
Arrays
Backup Software
Backup
Types
Day Three –
notes
Day Four –
notes
Organize your Software
Malicious Software
Related Resources
Reference Pages
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Organize your Computer
Over time, a lot of unneeded data
can accumulate on your computer. This might be old project files,
temporary data stored by a program (such as a Internet Browser),
or old programs you have installed, but do not need anymore.
Cleaning these old files out can help you find more important
files when you need them. It may also help the computer perform
better, since it will not have to look through as much data to
find what it needs. Finally, it may also help you find
'troublemakers' that do not need to be there at all.
Cleaning up the computer has gotten to be much easier with
later versions of Windows. If you view the contents of your
computer, and right-click on a drive, and select properties, you
may find a button labeled 'Disk Cleanup'. This will start a
process where Windows will try to find maintenance tasks it can
perform on this drive. It will look for old files that can be
compressed to save space. It will also look for temporary files
that might be good to delete. Eventually, it will present you with
a list of file categories that it thinks can be deleted. Keep in
mind that this tool is really designed to help clear space on a
drive that is low on space, so these are things that probably can
be deleted, but that do not have to be deleted.
Downloaded Program Files are
probably programs that you found on the Internet, but that are
stored on your computer. If you use Web-Based programs, you may
want to leave this alone.
Temporary Internet files are
Web pages and related files that you have visited recently. When
you visit a Web page, your computer has to download the files
that make up the page, and then display them on the screen. When
you are done with that page, the computer does not always delete
these 'cache' files just in case you go back to that page. This
way, it might not have to download all of the files again. Most
of the time it is safe, and good, to delete these files.
Off-line Web Pages are normally
Web pages you have selected to be able to look at, even if you
have no Internet connection. This is more useful on a Laptop,
than a regular computer. If your computer is set up to use a Web
page as the desktop image, this is likely stored as an off-line
Web Page. Normally, you can delete these, as long as you tell
Internet Explorer to update the pages before you need them again.
Microsoft Error Reporting
Temporary Files are created by Windows when it detects a system
failure. Normally these files are sent to Microsoft and then
deleted. You can generally delete these.
Office Setup Files are left
over from installing Microsoft Office (if you have that
installed). They are there in case you try to use a new feature
that is not fully installed yet. As long as these are available,
Office should not need to ask for a CD when installing new parts.
You can delete these files, but keep in mind that if you do try
to use a new feature in Office, you will need to have the install
CD handy.
Recycle Bin contains many of
the files you may have recently deleted. This is here just in
case you accidentally delete a file. You can go into the Recycle
Bin and restore the file. Most of the time it just gets filled up
with old stuff you no longer need.
On the Tools tab of the Properties
screen, you will find buttons for Error-Checking, Defragmentation,
and Backup.
Error-Checking will scan your
drive for damaged files. The problem is, many times the damaged
files cannot be fully recovered and what is recovered are
pieces of the file that are only useful to Geeks. The other job
Error-Checking can do for you is make sure the drive itself is
not dying by performing a surface scan. I have mixed feelings
about running this. If the drive is beginning to fail,
Error-Checking may try to recover data and actually cause more
problems. I recommend backing up your data before running
Error-Checking.
Defragmentation is a way to
're-organize' the data stored on your computer. As your computer
write information to the hard drive, it writes it in pieces. It
locates the first available 'space' on the hard drive and writes
to that space until it is full. There might not be enough room
for all of the information, so the computer looks for the next
available space. It then writes more in this space. It continues
this process until all of the data has been written. The end
result is that this one set of information may be spread across
many different spaces on the disk. Later, when the computer wants
to read this information back, it will need to locate each of
these pieces, and reassemble the information. Defragmentation
will go through each file on your computer and try to consolidate
all of the pieces of each file so that it is all together. This
will speed up the read operations from the disk. It can take a
long time to do this, but it should not cause any damage to your
data. I would recommend a Backup, and perhaps a Error-Check,
before running Defragmentation.
Backup is a tool Microsoft
included for backing up your data. I do not think it is a very
good tool, but it is better than nothing. You will still need
some sort of drive to store the backups on. Keep in mind that it
does not make sense to store backups on the same drive they came
from, otherwise if that drive dies, the backups go with it.
There is another place where you can
delete Temporary Internet Files. You must open the Windows Control
Panel, and locate Internet Properties. In here you can delete the
cookies that are stored on the computer. Cookies are small files
that Web pages place on your computer to hold small amounts on
information. Sometimes, this is identification data so that when
you return to the Web page later, it will recognize you, and not
make you login again. Other times, these files are placed on your
computer to track your Web browsing habits. This is done by
advertisers on the Web, with the cooperation of the sites that
display the ads. Deleting cookies will interrupt this tracking,
but it may cause Web sites you go to frequently to not be able to
recognize you anymore. It is a trade-off you need to balance.
NOTE: Do not clear cookies if you have forgotten the login
information (username, password) for any of the web pages you
need, where the cookie may be currently providing that
information.
These tools for cleaning Temporary
Internet Files only clean out Microsoft Internet Explorer. If you
are using a different browser, such as Firefox, or Opera, You will
need to clear these files from within that program.
Over time, many programs get
installed. Eventually, you may not need the program anymore, but
you do not think to uninstall it. Every so often, you should go
through the list of installed programs and remove the ones you do
not need anymore. The biggest suggestion I have is of course to
backup your data first, and you may want to make sure you still
have the disks to re-install the software, in case you need it
again later.
To remove software, you should start
in the Add or Remove Programs tool in Control Panel. When you
start this tool, it will provide a list of installed programs.
Depending on your version of Windows, it may also tell you how
much space the program is using, and how often the program is
used. I would start by looking for programs that you recognize,
and know you no longer need. You may find multiple versions of the
same program installed. You should be able to remove the older
version.
Once you have removed the obvious
programs, pay close attention to the remaining software. Some of
it may be support software for programs that you do use. However,
some of it may be software that is there to 'spy' on you. If you
are not sure what something is, you may want to get on the
Internet and look it up.
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