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#1
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
#2
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Wednesday, July 19, 2017 at 2:24:00 PM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote:
In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. Win8 was horrible, and pretty much everyone passed it over. You can make Win10 look/function much like Win7, and it has some nice additional features. |
#3
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 14:23:52 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com Skipped Win 8. Went from XP to 10. 10 works pretty well if you get rid of some of the crap. |
#4
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
Mr. Luddite wrote:
In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com The the monitor dies on and all-in-one, can you hook up an external monitor to move your data from it? |
#5
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 14:23:52 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. When you get everything exactly the way you like it, create an image of the C:. Then if you lose a hard drive or get a nasty virus, it is very fast to get back to where you were. |
#6
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 19:33:14 -0400, Alex wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote: In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com The the monitor dies on and all-in-one, can you hook up an external monitor to move your data from it? Thank God for Google (and Al Gore, of course): But don't worry, you can output video through the USB ports on your HP all-in-one desktop! ... Connect your computer to the USB to Video Adapter with your USB cable. Connect an HDMI, DVI-D or DVI to VGA cable from the USB to Video Adapter to your second monitor. HP All-In-One Desktop Secondary Monitor Setup - DataPro https://www.datapro.net/techinfo/hp_...d_monitor.html Hope it helps. |
#7
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On 7/20/2017 5:09 AM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 19:33:14 -0400, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com The the monitor dies on and all-in-one, can you hook up an external monitor to move your data from it? Thank God for Google (and Al Gore, of course): But don't worry, you can output video through the USB ports on your HP all-in-one desktop! ... Connect your computer to the USB to Video Adapter with your USB cable. Connect an HDMI, DVI-D or DVI to VGA cable from the USB to Video Adapter to your second monitor. HP All-In-One Desktop Secondary Monitor Setup - DataPro https://www.datapro.net/techinfo/hp_...d_monitor.html Hope it helps. If the monitor ever dies I'll just try hooking up another monitor or even a flat panel TV via the HDMI connection. Hopefully it will still work. That's how I've been using my HP laptop for years. I have a 23 inch flat panel LED TV on a shelf just above my desk hooked up to it via HDMI. The laptop display is turned off. Works great. I suppose if the video driver or electronics craps out it probably won't work. But, I've yet to have a display die. Usually it's the hard drive. I think the new one is up and running ok although I have one minor problem logging into my Yahoo account using the new Microsoft browser in Win 10. It won't accept my password and keeps going to a goofy "I am not a robot" routine. I downloaded and installed Firefox on it and it works just fine, accepting the password and logging me into the Yahoo account. I'll figure it out eventually. This is the first time in 9 years that I've gone through the commissioning process of a new computer, except for the time I had the I-Mac for a while. Win 10 has certainly made the process much easier. |
#8
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 07:01:40 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 7/20/2017 5:09 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 19:33:14 -0400, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com The the monitor dies on and all-in-one, can you hook up an external monitor to move your data from it? Thank God for Google (and Al Gore, of course): But don't worry, you can output video through the USB ports on your HP all-in-one desktop! ... Connect your computer to the USB to Video Adapter with your USB cable. Connect an HDMI, DVI-D or DVI to VGA cable from the USB to Video Adapter to your second monitor. HP All-In-One Desktop Secondary Monitor Setup - DataPro https://www.datapro.net/techinfo/hp_...d_monitor.html Hope it helps. If the monitor ever dies I'll just try hooking up another monitor or even a flat panel TV via the HDMI connection. Hopefully it will still work. That's how I've been using my HP laptop for years. I have a 23 inch flat panel LED TV on a shelf just above my desk hooked up to it via HDMI. The laptop display is turned off. Works great. I suppose if the video driver or electronics craps out it probably won't work. But, I've yet to have a display die. Usually it's the hard drive. I think the new one is up and running ok although I have one minor problem logging into my Yahoo account using the new Microsoft browser in Win 10. It won't accept my password and keeps going to a goofy "I am not a robot" routine. I downloaded and installed Firefox on it and it works just fine, accepting the password and logging me into the Yahoo account. I'll figure it out eventually. This is the first time in 9 years that I've gone through the commissioning process of a new computer, except for the time I had the I-Mac for a while. Win 10 has certainly made the process much easier. If what I read is true, the HDMI connection is for input to the computer, not output. Maybe yours is different. I use Firefox for everything except getting tee times for the seniors group. It's done by spreadsheet which works only with Google Chrome. Some privacy stuff you may want to consider: http://www.pcworld.com/article/29717...-by-piece.html |
#9
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 07:01:40 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 7/20/2017 5:09 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 19:33:14 -0400, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com The the monitor dies on and all-in-one, can you hook up an external monitor to move your data from it? Thank God for Google (and Al Gore, of course): But don't worry, you can output video through the USB ports on your HP all-in-one desktop! ... Connect your computer to the USB to Video Adapter with your USB cable. Connect an HDMI, DVI-D or DVI to VGA cable from the USB to Video Adapter to your second monitor. HP All-In-One Desktop Secondary Monitor Setup - DataPro https://www.datapro.net/techinfo/hp_...d_monitor.html Hope it helps. If the monitor ever dies I'll just try hooking up another monitor or even a flat panel TV via the HDMI connection. Hopefully it will still work. That's how I've been using my HP laptop for years. I have a 23 inch flat panel LED TV on a shelf just above my desk hooked up to it via HDMI. The laptop display is turned off. Works great. I suppose if the video driver or electronics craps out it probably won't work. But, I've yet to have a display die. Usually it's the hard drive. I think the new one is up and running ok although I have one minor problem logging into my Yahoo account using the new Microsoft browser in Win 10. It won't accept my password and keeps going to a goofy "I am not a robot" routine. I downloaded and installed Firefox on it and it works just fine, accepting the password and logging me into the Yahoo account. I'll figure it out eventually. This is the first time in 9 years that I've gone through the commissioning process of a new computer, except for the time I had the I-Mac for a while. Win 10 has certainly made the process much easier. Here's another. I haven't gone to the registry to stop Cortana, yet. But I will do so when we return from this next camping trip. In the meantime I've gone to the Cortana settings and turned everything off. Type 'Cortana and Search Settings' in the search box in the lower let corner of screen. Then shut everything off. |
#10
posted to rec.boats
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New Computer
On Thu, 20 Jul 2017 07:01:40 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 7/20/2017 5:09 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 19 Jul 2017 19:33:14 -0400, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: In the process of setting up a new computer. Using the old laptop in the meantime. I forgot what a pain in the ass it is to update, set all your preferences, etc. Right now it's updating Win 10 and has been at it for a while. Got an HP "all in one". 27" screen for my aging eyes, Pentium I-7, and I forget all the rest. Hopefully I'll get all my passwords, etc., transferred before the old, 9 year old laptop gives up the ghost. I was a little nervous about making the transition from Win 7 to Win 10 so I spent almost an hour at the store playing with it. Not as bad as I feared. I was concerned because I remember playing with a computer that had Win 8 on it and it was horrible. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com The the monitor dies on and all-in-one, can you hook up an external monitor to move your data from it? Thank God for Google (and Al Gore, of course): But don't worry, you can output video through the USB ports on your HP all-in-one desktop! ... Connect your computer to the USB to Video Adapter with your USB cable. Connect an HDMI, DVI-D or DVI to VGA cable from the USB to Video Adapter to your second monitor. HP All-In-One Desktop Secondary Monitor Setup - DataPro https://www.datapro.net/techinfo/hp_...d_monitor.html Hope it helps. If the monitor ever dies I'll just try hooking up another monitor or even a flat panel TV via the HDMI connection. Hopefully it will still work. That's how I've been using my HP laptop for years. I have a 23 inch flat panel LED TV on a shelf just above my desk hooked up to it via HDMI. The laptop display is turned off. Works great. I suppose if the video driver or electronics craps out it probably won't work. But, I've yet to have a display die. Usually it's the hard drive. I think the new one is up and running ok although I have one minor problem logging into my Yahoo account using the new Microsoft browser in Win 10. It won't accept my password and keeps going to a goofy "I am not a robot" routine. I downloaded and installed Firefox on it and it works just fine, accepting the password and logging me into the Yahoo account. I'll figure it out eventually. This is the first time in 9 years that I've gone through the commissioning process of a new computer, except for the time I had the I-Mac for a while. Win 10 has certainly made the process much easier. Whoops, forgot the site: http://www.pcworld.com/article/29497...assistant.html |
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