In Microsoft Internet Explorer 5. & up,
Select the Tools menu, > Internet Options.
Click on the [Security] tab and select the zone marked Internet.
As you click on the [Custom Level] button, you will see a list of settings you should (*) enable all especialy Script ActiveX controls
and Active Scripting setting The only disadvantage is a few pop ads but never on Wednesday-night.com
If you're running an older version of Windows, something else is causing Java to fail. First, you should check to see if Java has been disabled. In IE, go to the Tools > Internet Options menu, click the [Security] tab, and select the Internet zone. Now click the Custom Level button, which brings up another dialog box. Scroll down the list until you see Microsoft VM. Under that item, you'll see Java Permissions, which lists a number of options. Make sure the [ ] Disable Java option is not selected; we prefer the High Safety option instead.
If the Disable Java option is not the problem, it's possible that your video driver is the cause. Try reducing the color depth and the resolution to fix it. Right-click anywhere on the Windows desktop and select Properties from the pop-up menu. This brings up the display settings dialog box; click the Settings tab and pick a lower color depth (try 256 colors) and a lower resolution (for example, pick 800x600 if your resolution is currently 1,024x768). Just to be careful, restart Windows with these settings and try running the Java applets that have been causing you grief. If they do run at these lower settings, you have a buggy display driver. Head over to the manufacturer's Web site to see if there's an updated driver you can download and install.
If you need the QuickTime plug-in you should be automaticly be taken to their site and invited to down load a FREE ver5. This is rquired to see the QTVR movies.
Change your home page.
I sure hope your browser doesn’t still open up each day to the junky-looking, cluttered Microsoft MSN home page, or your PC maker’s page, as it did the day you got your computer. Change the default startup page to something that’s actually useful, such as Wednesday-Night.com (the world’s best news page).
--Windows:IE 5.50 From the Tools menu, > choose Internet Options; visit the [General tab]. Enter your preferred startup address in the Address box.
--Mac: From the Edit menu, choose Preferences; click Browser Display.
For example, suppose you have six Word documents that you want customers to be able to access over the Web. To convert all six files to an HTML format, follow these steps:
Save all six documents to a single folder.
Open Word and go to File | New.
In Word XP's New Document task pane, click General Templates under New From Template, and select the Other Documents tab. (In Word 2000, go to File | New, and select the Other Document tab from the New dialog box.)
Double-click Batch Conversion Wizard.
Click Next.
Choose Convert From Word To Another Format, leave HTML Document as the default, and click Next.
Specify the Source folder that contains the files you want to convert and the Destination folder where you want Word to place the converted files, and click Next.
Select the files you want to convert, and click Next.
Click Finish to begin the batch conversion.
You can also use the Batch Conversion Wizard to convert files you receive from other sources to Word documents.
Often, it’s helpful to open a link you’re clicking into a new, second browser window. Imagine, for example, that you’re moving down the list of search results on Google or Yahoo. Each time you check out a link, a new window opens to give you a glance; if it doesn’t contain the info you were looking for, close the window with a mouse click [X] box top right or a quick Alt+F4 (Windows IE 5.50) or Command-W (Macintosh) uncovers your search results window. The trick to opening a second browser window in this way is to Ctrl+Shift (Windows) as you click any link. press Command (Mac)
Scroll without the mouse.
If a whole Web page doesn’t fit in a single window, life’s too short to use the scroll bar. Even the mouse’s wheel, if it has one, requires some time-consuming precision. Instead, press the Space bar to page down to see the next screenful (when your insertion-point cursor isn’t in a text box, of course). Press Shift with the Space bar to scroll up again. (The Page Up and Page Down keys work, too, but the Space bar is a bigger target.)
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