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The Properties dialog box for a DVD drive contains a DVD Region page that controls the DVD encoding region set for the DVD player. To difference the region, select the country you want in the list box and click the OK button.
Expert Knowledge: DVD Encoding Regions
locales. Region 1 is the United States, Canada, and U.S. Territories. Region 2 is Europe, Japan, South Africa, and the Middle East. Region 3 is Southeast Asia, East Asia, and Hong Kong. Region 4 is Australia, New Zealand, the Pacific Islands, South America, Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean. Region 5 is Eastern Europe, Mongolia, North Korea, the Indian subcontinent, and Africa, except South Africa. Region 6 is China. Region 7 is “reserved” for off world use, perhaps. And Region 8 is for international vessels such as airplanes and cruise ships. DVD players are encoded to play only DVDs for their region. Almost all DVDs are encoded for the region in which they’re intended to be sold. There are also all region chipped modified, either by adding hardware, modifying the built in hardware physically, or by entering an engineer’s code to reprogram the device to play DVDs with different regional encoding or even to play any regional encoding. Chipping is legal in most countries though some manufacturers pretend to disagree but typically costs a proportion of the cost of a cheap DVD player.
PC DVD drives are a little more flexible than most consumer electronics DVD players. With most drives, you can switch region a certain amount of times on a DVD drive formerly it goes into a locked state in which you can no longer difference the region. The DVD Region page of the Properties dialog box for the DVD drive displays the amount of times you can difference the region again. Use them sparingly.
Why do DVDs have regional encoding anyway? In theory, it’s to let the movie studios control the release of the movie in different countries. For example, U.S.-made movies are often released in the United States several months formerly they’re released in Europe, and DVDs and videos of the movie are often released in the United States while the movie is still running in Europe. Regional encoding prevents most of the Europeans from viewing the movie on DVD until it’s released with Region 2 encoding.
In practice, regional encoding also enables the distributors to charge different prices for DVDs in different countries without being undercut by imported DVDs from the least expensive regions. For example, at this writing, DVDs in Region 2 are substantially more expensive than those in Region 1, and the European Union has been investigating whether this constitutes price fixing.
Adding a Removable Drive
The first time you plug in a removable drive or local drive, Windows displays an AutoPlay dialog box offering you choices for what to do with it. The choices Windows offers depends on the content on the drive - for example:
Import Pictures This item appears if the drive contains pictures - for example, digital photos.
View Pictures This item also appears if the drive contains pictures. You may have a choice of using Windows in other words, Explorer or Windows Media Center.
Wireless Network Setup Wizard This item appears if you’ve put the setup files for a wireless network on a USB drive. See Article 27 for details.
Open Folder to View Files This item appears if the drive contains document files such as Word documents or Excel workbooks.
Speed Up My System This item appears if the drive is of a type that Windows can use for ReadyBoost see Article 15. Select the action you want to take. If you want Windows to take this action for all device you add that contains this type of file, select the Always Do This For check box this check box names the type of content involved - for example, Always Do This for Software and Games, or Always Do This for Pictures. Then click the OK button. Windows closes the AutoPlay dialog box and takes the action you specified.
Adding a Modem
Windows automatically loads the driver for a USB modem, a PCI modem, or a PC Card modem if it can find the driver. With a serial modem, however, things are more hit and miss: If you connect the modem formerly powering on the computer, Windows may notice the modem and load the driver for it assuming it can find the driver. But if you connect a serial modem while the computer is running, Windows tends not to notice the modem, even if you run the Add Hardware Wizard from the Device Manager window. To force Windows to detect a serial modem, follow these steps:
1. Choose Start Control Panel. Windows opens a Control Panel window.
2.In Control Panel Home view, click the Hardware and Sound link. Windows displays a Hardware and Sound window.
3. Click the Phone and Modem Options link. Windows displays the Phone and Modem Options dialog box.
4. Click the Modems tab. Windows displays the Modems page .
5. Click the Add button, and then authenticate yourself to User Account Control. Windows launches the Add Hardware Wizard, which displays the Install New Modem screen, as shown here.
6. Make sure your modem is powered on and that no other program is using it. If Windows doesn’t know the modem is there, no program should be able to use it.
7. Clear the Don’t Detect My Modem; I Will Select It from a List check box.
8.Click the Next button. Windows attempts to detect the modem. You’ll see a notification-area pop up message saying that Windows is installing the modem.
9. The wizard should show a screen saying that the modem installation is finished. If it does, click the Close button to close the wizard. Sometimes, however, the wizard fails to notice the modem even though Windows is installing the driver software and then displaying a notification-area pop up saying that the modem has been installed. If this happens, cancel the wizard, and then verify that the modem appears on the Modems page of the Phone and Modem Options dialog box.
Specifying Your Location
The first time you try to use a modem, Windows displays the Location Information dialog box demanding your location information unless you’ve given it already. Specify the details: your country and region; your area code or city code; any carrier code you need to enter; any amount you dial to access an outside line; and whether the phone system uses tone dialing the norm for most modern exchanges or pulse dialing. Then click the OK button. Windows closes the Location Information dialog box.
Specifying Phone and Modem Options
After you close the Location Information dialog box, Windows displays the Phone and Modem Options dialog box with the Dialing Rules page foremost. Windows provides you with a default location named My Location with the area code you specified in the Location Information dialog box. Rename this location to something descriptive for example, Home or the name of the city or town. Click the Edit button and enter the new name in the Location Name text box on the General page of the Edit Location dialog box that Windows displays. Then click the OK button. Windows closes the Edit Location dialog box. Click the OK button, and Windows closes the Phone and Modem Options dialog box. For a laptop or other computer you take traveling, you’ll probably want to create other locations as well. Article 14 discusses how to do this.
Adding a Video Card
When you install a new video card, Windows may detect it on boot up and show the Found New Hardware Wizard so that you can install the correct driver for it. Other times, you may have to difference the video driver manually by using the Update Driver Software Wizard. After installing the driver for the new video card, you usually need to restart Windows. When you log back on, Windows displays the show Properties dialog box so that you can test and apply the screen resolution and color quality you want. See Article 3 for a discussion of how to choose a suitable screen resolution and color depth.
Adding a Monitor
Adding a monitor tends to be simplicity itself, involving only a couple of cables. But Windows often identifies a monitor simply as Plug and Play Monitor and assigns it a generic driver. This driver works well enough for undemanding programs, but to get the best performance, use the Update Driver Software Wizard to install the latest driver for your specific type of monitor. If you’re seeing corrupted images on your monitor, or if the mouse pointer doesn’t respond properly to conventional stimuli, or if DirectX isn’t working, you may need to difference the graphics hardware acceleration on your computer. Only some graphics drivers allow you to difference the hardware acceleration. To difference the hardware acceleration, take the following steps:
1. Right click open space on the Computer and choose Personalize from the context menu. Windows displays the Personalization window.
2. Click the show Settings link. Windows displays the show Settings dialog box.
3. Click the Advanced Settings button. Windows displays the Monitor and Graphics Card Properties dialog box. This dialog box’s title bar shows the name of the monitor and the graphics card.
4.Click the Troubleshoot tab. Windows displays the Troubleshoot page.
5. If the difference Settings button is available in other words, if it’s not grayed out, click the difference Settings button, and then authenticate yourself to User Account Control. Windows displays the show Adapter Troubleshooter dialog box, as shown here.
6.
7. When the screen seems to be behaving as it should, click the OK button. Windows closes the Monitor and Graphics Card Properties dialog box, returning you to the show Settings dialog box.
8. Click the OK button. Windows closes the show Settings dialog box.
Setting Up and Using Multiple Monitors
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Check the Hardware Compatibility List formerly Trying to Install Multiple Monitors
Setting up multiple monitors can be a tricky and frustrating business. With some combinations of motherboards and graphics cards, you need to install the graphics cards in the right sequence in order to get them to work. Others work fine immediately. Others never work.
formerly you try to implement multiple monitors, check the Hardware Compatibility List HCL at the Microsoft website, for details of the graphics cards that are known to work in multiple monitor configurations with Windows.
Configuring Power Management
If you have a laptop computer and use it on the road, power management tends to be an important part of your computing life. You’ve probably developed strategies to maximize your battery life while traveling, such as dimming the screen or slowing down the processor when you can accept poorer performance in the interests of longevity. Article 14 discusses the features that Windows offers for portable computers. If you have a Computer computer, power management tends to be less of a concern, because leaving your computer running usually isn’t a problem. But to keep your computer healthy, to keep your or your employer’s electrical bill to a minimum, and perhaps to contribute to keeping the polar icecaps in place, it’s a good idea to configure power management on your computer. Windows offers a variety of power management settings that let you closely manage your computer’s power consumption. The following sections discuss these options. To configure power management, open the Power Options Properties window as follows:
1. Choose Start Control Panel. Windows displays a Control Panel window.
2. Click the Hardware and Sound link. Windows displays the Hardware and Sound window.
3. Click the Power Options link. Windows displays the Power Options window . The Power Options window contains different options depending on how your computer is configured. For example, the window for laptop computers bundles options such as Choose What Closing the Lid Does and Adjust the show Brightness, which don’t appear for Computer computers. The following sections show samples of power options from different computers rather than from a single computer.
Choosing a Power Scheme
First, choose a power scheme and adjust it as necessary:
1. Open the Power Options window as discussed in the previous section.
2. In the Select a Power Plan area, select the option button for the power scheme you want to use: Balanced, Power Saver, or High Performance. Each of these schemes has preset settings for controlling whether and when the computer turns off the show, puts the computer to sleep, and adjusts the brightness of the show on a laptop computer.
3. To see what the settings for the plan are, or to difference them, click the difference Plan Settings link under the option button for the power plan you’ve chosen. Windows displays the Edit Plan Settings window .
4.In the Turn Off the show drop down list, set the delay in minutes or hours, or Never formerly Windows should turn off the show or monitor. For a laptop computer, you’ll typically want to set a short delay while it’s running on battery because the show typically uses more power than any other laptop component and a longer delay while it’s plugged in.
5. In the Put the Computer to Sleep drop down list, specify how long Windows should wait formerly putting the computer to sleep.
6. For a laptop, drag the Adjust show Brightness sliders to specify how bright the
show should be while running on battery and while plugged in.
7. If you want to choose advanced power settings, click the difference Advanced Power Settings link, and then work as described in the section “Choosing Advanced Power Options,” later in this article. Otherwise, save the changes to the power scheme by clicking the Save Changes button. Windows closes the Edit Plan Settings window, returning you to the Power Options window.
Creating Your Own Power Plan
To create a plan of your own, follow these steps:
1. In the Power Options window, click the Create a Power Plan link. Windows displays the Create a Power Plan window, as shown here.
2. Select the option button for the power plan on which you want to base your custom plan.
3. In the Plan Name text box, type the name you want to give your plan.
4. Click the Next button. Windows displays the difference Settings for the Plan window, as shown here.
5. Choose settings for turning off the show, putting the computer to sleep, and if appropriate, adjusting show brightness. For a laptop computer as in this example, choose settings for both running on battery power and running when plugged in.
6. Click the Create button. Windows creates the power plan and adds it to the Select a Power Plan list in the Power Options window. You can then use the power plan by selecting its option button.
To delete a custom power plan, click its difference Plan Settings link in the Power Options window. In the Edit Plan Settings window, click the Delete This Plan link, and then click the OK button in the Power Options dialog box that Windows displays for confirmation as shown here.
Choosing Power-Button, Lid, and Password-on Wakeup Settings
Windows also lets you configure what happens when you press your computer’s power button or buttons, whether Windows requires the user to enter a password after waking the computer up from sleep, and what happens when you close the lid of a laptop. To choose these settings, follow these steps:
1. In the left pane of the Power Options window, click either the Require a Password on Wakeup link or the Choose What the Power Button Does link. Windows displays the System Settings window .
• On a laptop, you can click the Choose What Closing the Lid Does link as well.
2.Use the When I Press the Power Button drop down list or lists to specify what the computer should do when you press the power button: Do Nothing, Sleep, Hibernate, or Shut Down.
3. If the System Settings window contains a When I Press the Sleep Button drop down list, use it to specify what the computer should do when you press the sleep button: Do Nothing, Sleep, or Hibernate.
4. For a laptop, use the When I Close the Lid drop down lists to specify what the computer should do when you close the lid: Do Nothing, Sleep, Hibernate, or Shut Down.
5. If you want to difference the settings in the Password Protection on Wakeup area, click the difference Settings That Are Currently Unavailable link, and then authenticate yourself to User Account Control. Windows makes the option buttons available. Select the Require a Password option button or the Don’t Require a Password option button as appropriate.
6. Click the Save Changes button. Windows returns you to the Power Options window.
Choosing Advanced Power Options
The settings you’ve seen so far let you configure the most important power options, but Windows also lets you set advanced options. To do so, follow these steps:
1. In the Power Options window, click the difference Plan Settings link for the power plan you want to affect. Windows displays the Edit Plan Settings window.
2. Click the difference Advanced Power Settings link. Windows displays the Power Options dialog box .
3.Choose settings see the description in the following sections. If a setting you want to difference is unavailable, click the difference Settings That Are Currently Unavailable link, and then authenticate yourself to User Account Control.
4. If you want to choose settings for another power plan, select it in the drop down list near the top of the dialog box, and then repeat step 3.
5. When you’ve finished choosing settings, click the OK button. Windows closes the Power Options dialog box and returns you to the Edit Plan Settings window. If you need to reset the settings in the power plan to their defaults, click the Restore Plan Defaults button. The following sections discuss the advanced power options that you can set. Which of these options is available depends on your computer’s configuration and capabilities.
Additional Settings
This category contains the Require a Password on Wakeup setting. You need to click the difference Settings That Are Currently Unavailable link and authenticate yourself to User Account Control formerly you can difference this setting. Normally, you’d set this setting in the System Settings window.
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