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Do you sometimes
arrive at a natural break in a document you are writing and wish to start the next portion on a new page but the natural break location is only a short distance down on the page? An example of this would be the end of a chapter or a new subject you wish to start on a new page. You do not have to keep pressing the enter key until you reach the next page. Simply hold down the Ctrl key when you press Enter. This will give you a page break and start a new page.
Have you tried numbering pages manually and then, after editing, find some of the numbers in the body of the text. You do not have to do that any more. Let Microsoft Word do the numbering for you. Word will keep track of the pages and automatically adjust the numbers as you type or edit. You also can choose where you want Word to place the numbers and how you want them to appear. Here's how you do it.
1. On the Menu bar click on Insert and choose "Page Numbers." You will get a Page Numbers dialog box.
2. Choose where you want the numbers. The choices are top or bottom and aligned left, right, center, inside (toward the binding) or outside (toward the outer edge).
3. Choose whether or not you want the first page to show the number. Place a check in the checkbox if you do. The default number format is 1, 2, 3, etc. The example shown on the Numbers dialog box will show you how your selection will look. If you do not wish to format the numbers further, click on OK. That's all there is to it.
4. To format your numbers further, click on the Format button in the Numbers dialog box. The Page Number Format dialog box will open. The Number Format space will show the currently selected format. Click the down arrow to see all of the formats offered. They are, 1, 2, 3, etc.; -1-, -2-, -3-, etc.; a, b, c, etc.; A, B, C, etc.; i, ii, iii, etc. and I, II, III etc. Choose the format from the list.
5. If you wish the numbers to include the chapter number (ex.: 1-1, 1-2, 2-20 or 1-A, 1-B, etc.) put a check mark in the Include Chapter Number box. If you choose this option you also will want to indicate which heading style you use for your chapter headings. In this way, Word will automatically know when to adjust the numbering to include the next chapter.
6. What if you have a Preface for which you want the i, ii, iii, type of numbering but you prefer Arabic numbers (1, 2, 3) for the main body of the document? No problem. You can start the numbers anew at any section. There are two choices that address this. Click either the "Continue from previous section" or "Start at" radio button. If you use the "Start at" option, you will then have the option to select the number format for that section.
(Continued from "Insert Page Numbers")
Do not try to change the numbers from top to bottom, or visa versa, using the Insert Page Number command. That would insert a second page number. If you want to change it, delete the first setup first. However you can edit the number format and/or add other features to it. Just double-click on the number placeholder in the location you have chosen. The Header and Footer toolbar will open. There are a number of buttons on the Header and Footer toolbar. Rest your mouse arrow over each button to see what it does. You have already inserted a number so don't click the first button. The next one, "Insert Number of Pages," might be desired for some documents. For instance, you might click to the right of the page number position, press the space key once and type "of" (without the quotes), space again and click the Number of Pages button. You might even want to type the word "Page" before the number. If so, your numbers for the pages will look something like this: "Page 20 of 232" (without the quotes). The "Switch Between Header and Footer" button will not switch the number from header to footer or footer to header. It will simply open that area for you to type anything you wish to appear on each page at the top or bottom (such as a chapter title).
You also may wish to read the item "Headers & Footers: How to Use Them."
Headers and Footers are used for anything you wish to appear at the top or bottom of each page in a document, perhaps a chapter title at the top and page number at the bottom, or any other arrangement. Headers and footers are built into the Microsoft Word application. You just don't see them unless you open them and insert information. A simple way to add numbers in a header or footer is given in the item titled "Insert Page Numbers." To access headers and footers do the following:
1. On the Menu bar, click on View and choose "Header and Footer."
2. If you have already placed headers or footers in your document, you may need to click "Show Previous" or "Show Next" on the Header and Footer toolbar to display the one you wish to change.
3. When in the header or footer you can add or edit text, change the font and how it displays (bold, italic) and change the color. These changes will automatically be applied to the same header and footer throughout the document. If the document contains different headers and footers for the various sections, the changes will apply only to those of the section in which the changes are made.
You don't want the header or footer on the first page? That's no problem. You can have them left off of the first page or even create a special header and/or footer for the first page. To do that --
1. If your document has multiple sections, click anywhere in a section, or highlight multiple sections to which you wish the header/footer to apply. If your document is not formatted into separate sections, click anywhere in the document.
2. On the Menu bar, click on View and choose "Headers and Footers."
3. On the Header and Footer toolbar, click on "Page Setup."
4. Choose the Layout tab.
5. Select the "Different first page" check box and click OK.
In the page setup dialog box you will see other options you can make. You can use page setup to impact the looks and usability of your document. But that's another article for some other time.
If you have Internet Explorer's version 7 (IE7), there are some keyboard shortcuts you should know about.
1. Is the print on a webpage too small for you to read easily? Just hold down the Ctrl key and press the plus/equal (+/=) key. Each press of the key will enlarge the viewing size of the page by 10%.
2. To reduce the viewing size of the page, hold down the Ctrl key and press the minus key (-). Each press of the key will reduce the size of the page by 10%.
3. Wish to return the page to its original viewing size? Just hold down the ctrl key and press the 0 (zero, not the letter o) key.
Hotkeys are normally written like Ctrl+0, or something similar. That's the way I'll show the rest of the hot keys in this article.
1. The Ctrl+Click on a link is a hotkey that will open the linked page in a new tab in the background. This means the new page will not become the focus page until you click on its tab. You can continue with the page you were viewing and click on the new tab when you are ready to make that page the focus.
2. Ctrl+Shift+Click will open a link in a new tab in the foreground. The page will take the focus. The page you were viewing will be in its original tab. Click on it when you are ready to view it.
3. Ctrl+T will open a new tab in the foreground. When it opens, you will see some tips and links to other helps, until you tell IE not to show that message again. Press the close button on the new tab and you will see a blank page. You can enter a URL in the address bar to go to another website which will occupy that tab and the name of the new page will be on the tab's label. Also, you can open a new tab by clicking on the little tab label at the right end of the tabs.
4. Ctrl+Tab or Ctrl+Shift+Tab is given by Microsoft as hotkey combinations that will switch between tabs, but so will clicking on a tab without the key combinations. I doubt that "shortcut" will be used much. Just click on the desired tab.
I might also mention that clicking the little down arrow at the left end of the tabs will provide a list of the tabs so you can switch among them, and clicking the button next to the down arrow (4 squares) will open a window with a picture of the tabbed pages.
5. Ctrl+ will close the current tab, or close the current window when only one tab is open. This is the same as clicking on the X located on the label of the tab.
6. Alt+Enter. Microsoft says this keyboard shortcut will open a new window in the foreground, whereas Ctrl+T opened a new window in the background. That may work if you also have Windows Vista. I still have Windows XP and this hotkey works differently. In my IE7, if I have the window in the reduced size, the Alt+Enter Maximizes the window. Pressing it again, reduces the size as it was. If I am already working in the Maximized mode, this key combination will hide the toolbars, etc. at the top of the window and enlarge the content area even more to fill the space. Press the keys again and the window will return to its normal maximized view.
7. Ctrl+n (n can be 1-8). This hotkey will switch you to the nth tab (based on the number chosen for n).
8. Ctrl+9 will switch to the last tab.
9. Ctrl+Alt+F4 will close all the tabs except for the one in focus.
10. Ctrl+Q is supposed to open Quick tabs, a feature in Windows Vista. Without Vista, it will do nothing.
1. Ctrl+H opens the Favorites Center to your history, a small window will be to the left of the main page. Three choices will be available at the top of this window. They are Favorites, History and Feeds. When using this hotkey, the History pane opens. Click on "Favorites" if you wish to view your favorites (links to websites you want available for easy access). You can open the same small window by clicking on the start button on the toolbar. The same three choices will be available.
2. Ctrl+I opens the Favorites Center to your list of favorites. Use this hotkey for direct access to your favorites (links to websites you want available for easy access). Three choices will be available at the top of this window. They are Favorites, History and Feeds. However, You can open the same small window by clicking on the gold star button on the toolbar. When you visit a website you wish to add to your Favorites list, you can just click on the gold star with a green plus sign button on the toolbar.
3. Ctrl+J opens the Favorites Center to your feeds. The same three choices are available as on the previous two hotkeys. IE7's Help file describes feeds as follows: "Feeds, also known as RSS feeds, XML feeds, syndicated content, or web feeds, contain frequently updated content published by a website. They are usually used for news and blog websites, but are also used for distributing other types of digital content, including pictures, audio files, or video. Internet Explorer can discover and display feeds as you visit websites. You can also subscribe to feeds to automatically check for and download updates that you can view later."
1. Ctrl+E will take you to the Toolbar Search box. This must work in IE7 only if you also have the Windows Vista operating system. I still have Windows XP and this hotkey does not work for me. In Microsoft Word, this same hotkey will center text on lines as you type, or for sections have highlighted before using the hotkey. Probably this hotkey for Microsoft Word and other documents has not changed in Vista. There should be no conflict because one does not edit web pages directly.
2. Alt+Enter is used to open your search query in a new tab. It does not work for me as I still have Windows XP instead of Vista. In Microsoft Office documents, such as word, this hotkey starts a new page in the same document, such as when ending a chapter without filling the page and starting a new page to begin the next chapter. As you do not compose directly onto a web page, I assume this shortcut for documents will remain the same.
3. The Ctrl+Down Arrow is used to bring down the search provider menu. This hotkey for IE7 also requires Vista for it to be functional. Microsoft's IE7 Help file says the following about search providers: "If you do not find what you're looking for with a particular search provider, you can search using a different one. Internet Explorer's Instant Search box lets you add additional search providers and switch between them to improve your search results."
1. Middle Mouse Button. In a 3-button mouse, clicking the middle button will open a link in a background tab. In other words, if you middle button-click on a link to a website while you are already viewing a page, the new web page will open in a new tab but will stay in the background instead of taking focus if front of the page you are viewing.
2. Middle Mouse Button on a Tab. If you click the middle mouse button on the tab of an opened web page, it will close the tab (the page using the tab).
3. Double-click on an Empty Band Space to open a new tab. The band is the row that holds the tabs. Empty band space is an empty area to the right of the tabs. Microsoft generally offers multiple ways to perform an action.
In Outlook Express, do you find that the email messages of other people using your computer are mixed with yours? You can change that. Here are the steps:
1. Go to the File menu in Outlook Express and point to Identities, then click on "Add New identity." Two dialog boxes will appear, One titled "New Identity" and the other titled "manage identities."
2. On the New Identity dialog box, type your name in the text space. If you want your email to be password protected, click on "Require a password" to put a check in the box. An Enter Password dialog box will appear. Type a password twice and click OK. Also click OK on the New Identity dialog box.
3. When asked if you wish to switch to the new identity, click Yes. The Internet Connection Wizard will open.
3. If the "Create A New Account" option appears, click it if you do not already have an email account in an existing email program. If you wish to use an account you already have in Microsoft Outlook or Microsoft Exchange, click "Use Existing Account."
4. If you wish to create a new account, let the wizard lead you through the steps. There you will be asked to list tour user name, mail servers and any other information necessary. If you are using an existing account, the wizard will detect the settings you already have. Confirm those settings by clicking on "Accept Settings" and click the Next button. If revisions have been made, the wizard will lead you through a few more steps. If the information you see is not correct, click "Change Settings," then click Next and let the wizard lead you in making the corrections.
5. Click Finish. This will close the wizard. If you are informed that you have Outlook of Exchange mail or Address Book, click "Do Not Import At This Time" and click "Finish."
6. For management of identities, go to the File menu, point to Identities and click on "Manage Identities." In the Manage Identities dialog box you can add new identities by clicking the New button and following instructions. You can remove an identity clicking an identity in the Identities box and then clicking the Remove button. You can even change the name of an identity give a password to an identity by clicking an identity and clicking the Properties button.
7. Since it is your computer, so Outlook Express should be using your identity when starts. You will be working with your own messages and settings. You can switch identities by going to OE's File menu and clicking "Switch Identity." In the dialog box that appears, click on the identity to which you wish to switch, enter the password if needed and click OK.
Over a period of time, adding and deleting desktop icons, their arrangement may become disorganized or all the desktop icons may be missing. Each of these situations is easily corrected.
Rearrange icons.
1. Right click on a blank area of the desktop. A shortcut menu will appear.
2. In the shortcut menu, point to "Arrange Icons By"
3. If "Align to Grid" is not checked, check it if you want the icons to be in neat rows and columns when you finish. You can uncheck it if you prefer to move the icons, closer together for example. If it is already checked, and that is the way you want it, select the option that suits you. The options for arranging the icons are as follows:
(1) Name. This will arrange the icons in alphabetical order.
(2) Size. Arrange the icons based on file size. If the icon is a shortcut to a program, the size refers to the size of the shortcut file.
(3) Type. Arranges icons in order of type. If you have shortcuts to several PowerPoint presentations on the desktop, they will be arranged next to each other.
(4) Modified. This will arrange icons in the order that the shortcut was last modified. For instance, if you change the name of the shortcut, it would have a new modified time stamp.
(5) AutoArrange. The icons will be arranged in columns along the left side of the screen.
Show Desktop Icons
If the desktop icons are all missing, you can easily bring them back.
1. Right-click on a clear area of the desktop. A shortcut menu will appear.
2. Point your mouse to "Arrange Icons."
3. On the shortcut menu, select "Show Desktop Icons."
Your icons should now be in view.
You don't like the tabs in Internet Explorer 7? Would you like to change IE7 to use separate windows like IE6 instead of the tabs? With tabs, when you want to close a web page, you must just close the tab if you have more than one page open. If you close the window, you close all of the open pages. It's easy to change from tabs to windows.
Click on Tools, at the far right on the menu button bar. In the drop-down menu choose "Internet Options." In the Tabs section on the General tab, click on Settings. On the dialog box that appears, just remove the check (click) by "Enable Tabbed Browsing". Click OK and restart the computer. If you decide you want the tabs back, go to the same dialog box and click on the Restore defaults button.
IE7 still has some bugs. These may not effect everyone. For the majority of users IE7 will probably work smoothly, with the biggest problem being getting used to tabs instead of windows. But there have been a number of complaints. One of them is mine. IE7 will open a web page from my hard drive for about a second and then it disappears. I can open a web page on the Internet and then, while it is open, bring up a web page located on the hard drive. I'm working on the solution.
A security problem still seems to exist (which also existed in IE6). This bug makes it possible for malicious hackers to display a popup with a partially spoofed address bar. A number of special characters have been added to a URL, but not all of the address bar will be visible. This would make it possible for the hacker to trick users into thinking they are visiting a trusted site, when in reality they are visiting one controlled by hackers. A virus/security program from some providers may close this hole. Even with this bug, most reviewers are saying IE7 is safer than IE6. However, Microsoft says they have now fixed this (Peek-a-boo) bug.
Some have reported that IE7 interfered with sending and receiving mail. They switched back to IE6 and the problem cleared.
Microsoft IE7 developers have a blog here. There you can find a list of bugs that have been fixed, as well as some bugs that have been reported. Some bugs were discovered during the development process. Others are probably waiting to be discovered. Hopefully the updates will fix them as solutions are developed
If you have been using Internet Explorer 6 and now have moved to the new version, IE7, you will notice some changes in the user interface. For one thing, the IE 6 menu bar is missing, but if you wish you can bring it back. Just right click on a blank area of the toolbar and select "Menu Bar" on the drop down menu. On the default setup of IE7, without the menu bar, you will see a few icons. Clicking on the home icon just as in IE6, will open your home page -- that is the web page your browser opens when you activate it. Clicking the down arrow next to this button provides an option to change your home page. This can also be accomplished from the Tools menu, Internet Options.
Next is an RSS feed button. RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication." It is a popular syndication format, developed by Netscape, for feeding updates to blogs and news sites. If IE7 senses an RSS update on a webpage being viewed, the RSS Feed button will light up, letting you know that site offers RSS feeds. If you click on the icon (button), you can see the feed. You can also click on the subscriber button that becomes available to have the feed automatically sent to your computer. When you subscribe, the feed will be added to your Favorites Center and the Common Feed List for sharing with other programs. The News and Weather page on Questgems uses traditional feeds instead of RSS because so many computers are not yet equipped to read RSS. Viewers would have to download the free RSS reader. However, RSS is becoming more popular and will do so even more rapidly since Microsoft is finally recognizing it. With time I may convert to RSS feeds, where feeds are used.
The Print button is the same as on IE6. Click the icon to print the page. Click the little down arrow to the right of the icon and a menu will give you the options to Print, Print Preview, and Page Setup.
The Copy button is to the right of the Print button. You can highlight a portion of a web page, then press the Copy button and the highlighted section will be copied to Windows clipboard, although you will not see it. You can then go to an open word processor, graphics program (if it is an image) or other document program and paste the copied material into it (right-click and select "Paste." You can also copy the highlighted material from a web page by right-clicking the mouse and selecting "Copy." There is no Paste button on IE because you cannot write directly onto the web page.
The Page button is next. Click on the button or its down arrow and a menu will give you the following options: Text size, Encoding, View Source (the source code for the webpage), Security Report (grayed out unless needed) and Web Page Privacy Policy.
You may wonder what a Privacy Policy is. Here is IE7's Help description: "A website's privacy policy tells you what kind of information the website collects, to whom it gives that information, and how it uses the information.
"Many websites provide privacy statements as written documents that you can view on the Internet. Websites also might provide a Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) privacy policy. If a website has a P3P privacy policy, Internet Explorer can display it. Internet Explorer also might be able to compare your privacy settings to a representation of the P3P privacy policy to determine whether to allow the website to save information on your computer (in the form of small files called cookies)."
The Tools button replaces the Tools menu that is IE6 (or IE7's optional menu bar). By clicking on the Tools button, or the small down arrow beside it, you will see a drop-down menu with several options. I will briefly describe them.
1. Delete Browsing History: By selecting this item, a dialog box will appear. It will contain a number of options, as follows:
(1) Delete Temporary Internet Files. When you view an Internet site, images and media, copies of those pages are saved to the Temporary Internet Files folder. The purpose is to provide quicker viewing of the pages, then to get the updated page, you may need to click on the refresh button. Personally, I try to keep this folder empty. If I did not have broadband access, along with adequate processor and memory, I might do otherwise.
(2) Delete Cookies. Many Websites you access will store small text files on your computer to save preferences such as login information. Most cookies are completely harmless. However, some store information gained and track your viewing and purchasing history on their sites. Some of those companies may also exchange information with one another through associations that may consist of hundreds of sites. This helps them to spam you in line with your "interests." Some may be more malicious.
You can delete your cookies by clicking the Delete button, but remember you may have to re-enter registration information and passwords at sites relating to purchased software, etc. You can go to the cookies folder and manually delete all the cookies except the ones you wish to keep. The Cookie folder in Windows XP is located at C:\Documents and settings\User's name\Cookies. They are readable with WordPad or any text editor. Also, there are some small programs that let you choose which cookies you wish to keep and let your computer automatically delete the rest. One such program that Elizabeth Boston, The Computer Lady, likes is Smart Windows Cleaner. It is available at TinyURL.com.
(3), (4) & (5) History of websites visited, Form data & Passwords. I will cover here all three of these items relating to history stored by your computer. As you browse the web, Internet Explorer stores information about the websites you visit and information such as your name and address, credit card numbers, passwords, etc. that you are often asked to provide. Internet Explorer stores a history of the websites you've visited as well as information that you have entered into website forms or the Address bar. This data includes items such as your name, address, and the website addresses that you've visited before, passwords, and temporary information stored by browser add-ons. It can be helpful to have this information stored on your computer to speed or automatically provide information so you don't have to type it in over and over. However, you may not feel comfortable with this. You also might want to delete that information if you're cleaning up your computer or are using a public computer and do not want any of your personal information to be left behind. You can do that here. There is also a button in this dialog box to delete all of the history items at once.
2. Pop-up Blocker. Turn it on or off or adjust the settings for pop-up windows.
3. Phishing Filter. IE7 will compare the website you are visiting against a list of malicious websites that may want your identity and your money. Here you can check any website you access, turn on or off automatic website checking, report a website or change the settings to the website filter.
4. Manage Ad-ons. This option allows you to Enable or Disable Add-ons for Internet Explorer or to Find More Add-ons.
5. Work Offline. The offline favorites feature has been removed from Internet Explorer. Microsoft suggests two ways you can read web content offline. One is to subscribe to an RSS feed, as many websites now offer content as feeds that can be downloaded. Another is to save a webpage as a web archive or HTML file.
6. Windows Update. Although you can set Windows for automatic updates, you can manually do it by clicking this option.
7. Full Screen. If the IE7 window is not maximized to full screen, you can choose this option to do so. If it is full screen, you can choose it to make the window a reduced size. Of course you can do the same thing by double-clicking the blue bar at the top of the window or clicking the maximized/reduced size button (the middle one) at the top right corner of the window. Or, you can press the F11 key.
8. Menu Bar. If the Menu bar as in IE6 is not showing, you can select this option to place it above the content pane of the window. If it is showing and you want to remove it to provide more space for content, this option will accomplish it. The menu bar includes the following menus: File, Edit, View, Favorites, Tools and Help.
9. Toolbars. The following toolbar buttons are listed for one-click placement on, or removal from, the Toolbar: Favorites, History, Feeds, Explorer Bar, Links, Statusbar, Easy-WebPrint, Google, Lock the Toolbars and Customize. With the Custom option, you can set up the toolbar row about any way you want. A dialog box with two panes will appear. The left pane lists the available toolbar buttons and separator. The right pane lists the current toolbar buttons in view on the Toolbar. You can move the buttons from one pane to the other by highlighting the button and clicking the Add or Remove button. You can also re-arrange the order of the Currently in use buttons.
10. Internet Options. Choose this option for making a number of changes that affect the way IE7 works or is viewed. A dialog box with seven tabs will open. Here is a brief summary of the tabs:
(1) General Tab. Here you can select your Home Page; delete your browsing history or choose Settings and tell IE7 how many days and how much space to allow for keeping temporary files, history, codes, saved passwords and web form information; add search providers and set any as the default; change how web pages are displayed in tabs, including having each page in a separate window instead of tabs (Click Settings and uncheck "Enable Tabbed Browsing"; and the appearance of the windows including colors, languages, fonts and accessibility features.
(2) Security Tab. Here you set the security level for the browser. The Internet zone is the default one, but you can change it to Local intranet for all websites found on your intranet (usually large companies). You can choose Trusted sites and list the websites you trust, or Restricted sites and list the sites the sites you do not trust. In addition you can select the Customize level and set the security profile as you like.
(3) Privacy Tab. Here you can manage your cookies, including specifying particular websites you wish to block or allow placing cookies on your computer. Here you also can turn on or off the Pop-up Blocker.
(4) Content Tab. Under this tab you can control, to some extent, the content that can be viewed on your computer. You can also select or import certificates for encrypted connections and for identification purposes. The average user is not likely to need this. AutoComplete stores information to complete web addresses, forms, user names and passwords on forms as you start typing. You can check the items you wish AutoComplete to handle. You can also have Autocomplete to prompt you for passwords. Feeds allow you to instruct IE7 to automatically check feeds for updates the frequency you choose and other options.
(5) Connections Tab. Under this tab you can set up your Internet connections.
(6) Programs Tab. Use the options here to choose default programs to use for various purposes, including HTML editor (if you edit web page source code), email, newsgroups, Internet Call, Calendar, and contact List. Here you also set the default web browser and manage add-ons to the browser.
(7) Advanced Tab. Here is a long myriad of options for you to make IE7 to work the way you want it. The options are under the following headings: Accessibility, Browsing, Http 1.1 Settings, International, Java (Sun), Multimedia, Printing and Security. Some of the settings may require a re-start of your computer.
I addition to the menu buttons in the above article, there are three more buttons in Internet Explorer 7 you may look for but not immediately recognize, except for one--the red X.
1. The refresh button has the small up and down green arrows and is located at the right end of the address bar.
2. The Stop button with the red X, when pressed, will stop an action. For instance, if you are attempting to open another webpage and change your mind before it is loaded, just click the red X button and that action will stop.
3. The Search button and text space are to the right of the Stop button. Here are some uses for it:
(1) Live Search. Enter your keyword in the text space and click the magnifying glass. For instance, type in Questgems and press the magnifier. You will get a list of a few (about 11 pages) of the websites that provide hyperlinks to this site.
(2) Find on This Page. Click on the down arrow by the magnifying glass for this. I us this a lot when researching on the internet. Click on this option and a small search box will appear. If you are looking for a word or phrase on the page you are viewing, you can find each instance of it. A lot faster than visibly searching the page. There is only one drawback I find. When this search finds the last instance of the keyword on the page, it just starts over from the top instead of telling you it is the last one. If you are concentrating on the page content, you may not notice the scrollbar and search the page repeatedly before you realize what is happening. Microsoft needs to correct this. Be sure to write them about it.
(3) Find More Providers. This option will immediately search for more search engine providers. You can select from the list ones you wish to add to IE7 to give you more search options.
(4) Change Search Defaults. When you add more providers, they will be listed in the box that appears. You can change the default provider if you wish. You are also given the here to find more providers.
The Glossary of Email Terms, an item in the menu above these articles, brings up a separate page. That keeps this one from being so long.
Well, I guess that's enough for this time.
Take care, Don.
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