Tech Tips for the Basic Computer User

Last week, I wrote an entry on my blog that began like this:

“One of these days, I’m going to write a book called, ‘The Basics.’ It’s going to be a compendium of the essential tech bits that you just assume everyone knows–but you’re wrong.

“(I’ll never forget watching a book editor at a publishing house painstakingly drag across a word in a word processor to select it. After 10 minutes of this, I couldn’t stand it. ‘Why don’t you just double-click the word?’ She had no clue you could do that!)”

Many readers chimed in with other “basics” that they assumed every computer user knew–but soon discovered that what’s common knowledge isn’t the same as universal knowledge.

I’m sure the basics could fill a book, but here are a few to get you started. All of these are things that certain friends, family or coworkers, over the years, did *not* know. Clip, save and pass along to…well, you know who they are.

* You can double-click a word to highlight it in any document, e-mail or Web page.

* When you get an e-mail message from eBay or your bank, claiming that you have an account problem or a question from a buyer, it’s probably a “phishing scam” intended to trick you into typing your password. Don’t click the link in the message. If in doubt, go into your browser and type “www.ebay.com” (or whatever) manually.

* Nobody, but nobody, is going to give you half of $80 million to help them liberate the funds of a deceased millionaire…from Nigeria or anywhere else.

* You can hide all windows, revealing only what’s on the computer desktop, with one keystroke: hit the Windows key and “D” simultaneously in Windows, or press F11 on Macs (on recent Mac laptops, Command+F3; Command is the key with the cloverleaf logo). That’s great when you want examine or delete something you’ve just downloaded to the desktop, for example. Press the keystroke again to return to what you were doing.

* You can enlarge the text on any Web page. In Windows, press Ctrl and the plus or minus keys (for bigger or smaller fonts); on the Mac, it’s the Command key and plus or minus.

* You can also enlarge the entire Web page or document by pressing the Control key as you turn the wheel on top of your mouse. On the Mac, this enlarges the entire screen image.

* The number of megapixels does not determine a camera’s picture quality; that’s a marketing myth. The sensor size is far more important. (Use Google to find it. For example, search for “sensor size Nikon D90.”)

* On most cellphones, press the Send key to open up a list of recent calls. Instead of manually dialing, you can return a call by highlighting one of these calls and pressing Send again.

* When someone sends you some shocking e-mail and suggests that you pass it on, don’t. At least not until you’ve first confirmed its truth at snopes.com, the Internet’s authority on e-mailed myths. This includes get-rich schemes, Microsoft/AOL cash giveaways, and–especially lately–nutty scare-tactic messages about our Presidential candidates.

* You can tap the Space bar to scroll down on a Web page one screenful. Add the Shift key to scroll back up.

* When you’re filling in the boxes on a Web page (like City, State, Zip), you can press the Tab key to jump from box to box, rather than clicking. Add the Shift key to jump through the boxes backwards.

* You can adjust the size and position of any window on your computer. Drag the top strip to move it; drag the lower-right corner (Mac) or any edge (Windows) to resize it.

* Forcing the camera’s flash to go off prevents silhouetted, too-dark faces when you’re outdoors.

* When you’re searching for something on the Web using, say, Google, put quotes around phrases that must be searched together. For example, if you put quotes around “electric curtains,” Google won’t waste your time finding one set of Web pages containing the word “electric” and another set containing the word “curtains.”

* You can use Google to do math for you. Just type the equation, like 23*7+15/3=, and hit Enter.

* Oh, yeah: on the computer, * means “times” and / means “divided by.”

* If you can’t find some obvious command, like Delete in a photo program, try clicking using the right-side mouse button. (On the Mac, you can Control-click instead.)

* Google is also a units-of-measurement and currency converter. Type “teaspoons in 1.3 gallons,” for example, or “euros in 17 dollars.” Click Search to see the answer.

* You can open the Start menu by tapping the key with the Windows logo on it.

* You can switch from one open program to the next by pressing Alt+Tab (Windows) or Command-Tab (Mac).

* You generally can’t send someone more than a couple of full-size digital photos as an e-mail attachment; those files are too big, and they’ll bounce back to you. (Instead, use iPhoto or Picasa–photo-organizing programs that can automatically scale down photos in the process of e-mailing them.)

* Whatever technology you buy today will be obsolete soon, but you can avoid heartache by learning the cycles. New iPods come out every September. New digital cameras come out in February and October.

* Just putting something into the Trash or the Recycle Bin doesn’t actually delete it. You then have to *empty* the Trash or Recycle Bin. (Once a year, I hear about somebody whose hard drive is full, despite having practically no files. It’s because over the years, they’ve put 79 gigabytes’ worth of stuff in the Recycle Bin and never emptied it.)

* You don’t have to type “//www” into your Web browser. Just type the remainder: “nytimes.com” or “dilbert.com,” for example. (In the Safari browser, you can even leave off the “.com” part.)

* On the iPhone, hit the Space bar twice at the end of a sentence. You get a period, a space, and a capitalized letter at the beginning of the next word.

* Come up with an automated backup system for your computer. There’s no misery quite like the sick feeling of having lost chunks of your life because you didn’t have a safety copy.

What are your favorite basics-that-you-thought-everyone-knew? Let us know in the comments for this column at nytimes.com/pogue!

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The windows default for the recycle Bin is 10% of the local drive. With modern HD reaching 1TB do you really need 100GB of recycle Bin.. It is easy to modify using Recycle Bin’s properties

3 shortcuts I use hourly!
Ctrl X (cut)
Ctrl c (copy)
Ctrl v (paste)

Wow — I didn’t know about ANY of these keyboard shortcuts, and I’ve been using both Mac’s and PC’s for years!

Please write that book!

Ok, I knew “some” of them….

Really basic Mac tips.

In Apple Mail, you can hover the cursor over a url link and the actual url will be revealed, so you can see that “ebay security” is really “ebay.zxy8.com.”

In Apple Safari, you can customize the bar at the top, so add the + – buttons and you can enlarge the text – and in webkit, the pictures too – very easily. If you pull a tab straight down, it makes a new window. If you pull a tab sideways, the tab changes places so you can organize what you’re doing.

You can drag a photo or document on to an icon in Apple’s dock and the program will open. If you drag it on to the Mail icon, a new mail message opens with the thing attached.

(And one less basic tip, if you open Safari’s Activity window, you can option-click on an item and it will download.)

You can actually use the right mouse button with a Mac! Most switchers I know keep complaining they can’t click with the right mouse button anymore… but you can easily change this ‘preference’ in the ‘preference pane’ (->System preferences).

A little less known one I enjoy frequently and teach even more frequently is ctrl+enter for entering web addresses.

Typing google in the address bar and then pressing ctrl+enter puts the www. in front of it and the .com behind it and proceeds to go to the address.

Shift+enter does .net, and ctrl+shift+enter does .org

Here’s some more bits of “common knowledge”.

Files can be moved from one folder to another by dragging the file icon over the icon of the destination folder.

There are roughly 1000MB’s in 1GB. Photos are usually under 7MB. Mp3’s are usually under 4MB. And Word documents are nearly always under 1MB. Unless you hoard photos and mp3’s by the tens of thousands, the smallest hard drive available for that new computer will be more than enough space. Save your money.

If you buy a new computer with Vista, upgrade to 2GB of RAM. You can afford the upgrade because you’ve saved money by getting the small hard drive.

Microsoft Office costs $150. Most don’t even use half of Office’s extra features. Open Office, Google Docs, ZoHo Apps, and WordPad are free. You’re not saving that much with the small hard drive.

Google does not exist so that you can search for “www.nytimes.com”. That’s what your browser’s address bar is for. But Google does appreciate the extra ad revenue you’re giving them.

undo, cut, copy and paste often work, even when you think they might not. You can recover files, deleted text, closed tabs, who knows what. For windows, they are control-z, control-x, control-c, control-v — all in a row. On a mac, it’s command, instead of control.

Thanks, fantastic tips. keep them coming, specially the keyboard tricks.

Hey there – hitting the Space bar twice does the same thing on a BlackBerry as it does on the iPhone. Don’t quote me on this – but I think the same is true for Palm devices as well.

Thanks!

“* On the iPhone, hit the Space bar twice at the end of a sentence. You get a period, a space, and a capitalized letter at the beginning of the next word.”

This works on Blackberry too.

Ctrl + Left or Right while editing text. Jumps to the beginning of the previous (Left key) word or to the beginning of the next (right key) word. Reduces the number of Left/Right button presses drastically.

You can save time entering new web addresses in Internet Explorer by pressing Ctrl-Enter. For example, typing nytimes and pressing Ctrl-Enter would automatically add a www. prefix and a .com suffix and will load the //www.nytimes.com page. Unfortunately, this only works with .com domains.

Shortcut for saving:
Ctrl+s

so important if you’re writing any document. Works in gmail as well for drafts.

one of the best keyboard shortcuts:

alt+d = takes you to the address bar of most modern web browsers and Windows (file) explorer (some people think of it as My Computer window). This way you can easily type in the next address or drive letter you want to jump to instead of using the mouse to highlight it.

When typing a web address into MS Internet Explorer’s address bar, you can type, for example, “nytimes” (no quotes) and then press Ctrl+Enter on the keyboard and the address will complete itself into “www.nytimes.com”

Double-clicking on a window’s title bar will:
1) Toggle between maximizing and restoring the window in Windows;
2) Minimize the window to the Dock in OS X.

How about …

1. Hard drives fail, applications crash. Be sure to constantly save your work, and back it up regularly to an external hard disk. If you’re paranoid, back it up to two hard disks, and leave one hard disk with a friend (so if your house burns down, you still have a backup … you might not have a computer, but you’ll have a backup!)

2. In Firefox, you can do a quick-search of a webpage by hitting the “/” key, followed by whatever you’re searching for.

3. Most web browsers are configured to use a search engine. You can type in your search text (“david pogue blog”, etc.) into the address bar, rather than going to Google or other search engines. Some browsers will take you directly to the first match, some will take you to a list of results.

4. When typing out an email address, it doesn’t matter if you’re typing CAPS or lowercase.

Another: right click on something to get a little menu of commands that apply to it (called a context menu). If you have a mac and only one button, use control click.

I thought everyone knew this but this summer I found a long time windows user who asked me “wait, how did you do that?” and had never known!

On Windows, double-clicking the blue top of a window (the title bar) will maximize the window, or return it to its former size if it’s already maximized (much easier than mousing to the “maximize” button at the upper right).

This is BRILL! I’ve been looking for the keyboard shortcuts book for years … please write it, David. And until then – keep posting blogs about them!!!

Edit – Paste Special in Word is very useful when trying to copy something from a web page into a Word Document – choosing “unformatted text” means it removes all the formatting, and just pastes the basic text from the page…

triple-clicking a word will highlight the entire paragraph. On the Times site, however, this will also open a window with a definition of the word you clicked.

What a great collection of tips. I just shared them with my family and three e-mail groups of people at work. Never knew about using the space bar to scroll down an entire Web page until today.