tag 标签: windows 7

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  • 热度 21
    2011-5-18 08:41
    1300 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    微软最新的安全情报报告书指出,Windows 7被恶意软件感染的比率比Windows XP低了四到五倍之多。 整体来说,这份报告发现安装了最新的service pack的Windows 7操作系统的被感染率比起旧版的操作系统来的低,并将Windows 7和Windows Server R2评为最高安全基准。 在每1000台被感染的电脑中,微软发现64位Windows 7仅占2.5%,32位版则占3.8%。 安装了SP3的Windows XP在每1000台电脑中被感染的比例是15.9%,安装SP2的Windows XP则是最高的19.3%。换句话说,微软所提供的这些数据显示Windows 7比起Windows XP安全了四到五倍。 Windows Vista的被感染率比起XP相对较低,但仍是Windows 7的两倍。 从这份数据中我们还发现64位版本的Windows 7和Windows Vista都较32位不易受到感染,微软认为理由如下。 首先,通常会使用这两个系统的64位版本的使用者科技水平较高,这代表他们对安全的概念也比较强。而且64位的Windows提供一项名为内核补丁保护(Kernel Patch Protection)的功能,防止Windows的内核遭到未经授权的窜改。
  • 热度 8
    2011-4-13 20:30
    1815 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    You wouldn't believe how many people have emailed me with regard to my previous blog about an amazingly cool and useful trick with Windows 7 . The best thing is that someone solved a problem that's been nagging me for ages...   Seriously, people in the building in which I have my office keep on sticking their heads in the door, giving me the "thumbs up," and saying "That is really useful!"   But that's not what I wanted to talk about here. At the end of my earlier blog I noted that I had a nagging problem. I think I said something like:   You know that when you open a folder you can display its contents as Icons (small, medium, large, etc.), or as a List, or as a Detailed view, or as Tiles, and so forth. My problem is that if I make a change in one folder, that change seems to apply to every folder I subsequently access. What I want to be able to do is to make all of my folders display the Details view by default, but to be able to set selected folders to always display in icons.   There has to be some way to do this, because the Pictures folder always opens up displaying icons (as do its daughter folders), no matter what your other folders are set to ... so how can I do this with other folders containing images that aren't located under the Pictures folder? Any ideas?   The way I'd been trying to do this was to use the Change your view icon when you are actually inside a folder – you know, the icon indicated by the red circle in the image below: When you click this icon you are presented with a pop-up menu of options as shown below. For most of my folders I prefer to see things in either the List or (more usually) the Details view, but in the case of folders I use to store images (like the ones in this blog) I prefer to see these as ... well, images. As I said, the problem with using the Change your view icon technique to change the view in one folder is that it seems to affect every subsequent folder, which is a real pain. So how can we work around this?   Well, my old chum Chris Lewis in the UK saw my earlier blog and sent me a message saying:   * Right-mouse-click on a folder * Select Properties * Click the Customize tab * Change the Optimize this folder for setting * Click or un-click Apply this template to sub-folders button   "Well, that seems easy enough," I thought to myself, "in fact it seems downright obvious... I can't believe I didn't try accessing and changing the folder Properties this way myself." But I shrugged my shoulders and did as Chris suggested... and immediately discovered why I hadn't worked this out for myself... because there was no Customize tab on my dialog. All I had was the General , Sharing , Security , and Previous Version tabs as shown below:   "How strange," I thought to myself (or words to that effect). I emailed Chris asking exactly what operating system he was using, and he replied "I am using Windows 7 Home Premium and I see General, Sharing, Security, Previous Versions, and Customize tabs."   So I checked my system and I too am running the Windows 7 Home Premium edition. Now my head was starting to hurt. I kept on checking and rechecking the Properties dialog associated with my folders in the desperate hope that the Customize tab would magically appear... but, of course, it didn't (sob sob).   Then I received another message from Chris, and this is the one that saved the day. He had realized that if you use the Libraries icon on your desktop to access your folders (which is what I was doing), then when you select the Properties dialog associated with a folder the Customize tab DOES NOT show up.   However... if you use the Computer icon on your desktop and then select Drive C and then select Users and then select My Documents and work your way down to the folder of interest, then accessing the Properties dialog associated with a folder this way DOES result in your seeing the Customize tab as illustrated below:   Ah Ha! Clicking the down arrow on the field associated with the Optimize this folder for setting provides you with the ability to select between General Items , Documents , Pictures , Music , and Videos as illustrated below:     I've now associated the Pictures option with all of my folders containing images, and everything is working as I wished. Of course this does all seem to be a little convoluted. I'm wondering if the lack of the Optimize tab when you go in via the Libraries icon is a bug in Windows 7 ... what do you think?
  • 热度 17
    2011-4-13 20:27
    1528 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    You wouldn't believe how many people have emailed me with regard to my previous blog about an amazingly cool and useful trick with Windows 7 . The best thing is that someone solved a problem that's been nagging me for ages...   Seriously, people in the building in which I have my office keep on sticking their heads in the door, giving me the "thumbs up," and saying "That is really useful!"   But that's not what I wanted to talk about here. At the end of my earlier blog I noted that I had a nagging problem. I think I said something like:   You know that when you open a folder you can display its contents as Icons (small, medium, large, etc.), or as a List, or as a Detailed view, or as Tiles, and so forth. My problem is that if I make a change in one folder, that change seems to apply to every folder I subsequently access. What I want to be able to do is to make all of my folders display the Details view by default, but to be able to set selected folders to always display in icons.   There has to be some way to do this, because the Pictures folder always opens up displaying icons (as do its daughter folders), no matter what your other folders are set to ... so how can I do this with other folders containing images that aren't located under the Pictures folder? Any ideas?   The way I'd been trying to do this was to use the Change your view icon when you are actually inside a folder – you know, the icon indicated by the red circle in the image below: When you click this icon you are presented with a pop-up menu of options as shown below. For most of my folders I prefer to see things in either the List or (more usually) the Details view, but in the case of folders I use to store images (like the ones in this blog) I prefer to see these as ... well, images. As I said, the problem with using the Change your view icon technique to change the view in one folder is that it seems to affect every subsequent folder, which is a real pain. So how can we work around this?   Well, my old chum Chris Lewis in the UK saw my earlier blog and sent me a message saying:   * Right-mouse-click on a folder * Select Properties * Click the Customize tab * Change the Optimize this folder for setting * Click or un-click Apply this template to sub-folders button   "Well, that seems easy enough," I thought to myself, "in fact it seems downright obvious... I can't believe I didn't try accessing and changing the folder Properties this way myself." But I shrugged my shoulders and did as Chris suggested... and immediately discovered why I hadn't worked this out for myself... because there was no Customize tab on my dialog. All I had was the General , Sharing , Security , and Previous Version tabs as shown below:   "How strange," I thought to myself (or words to that effect). I emailed Chris asking exactly what operating system he was using, and he replied "I am using Windows 7 Home Premium and I see General, Sharing, Security, Previous Versions, and Customize tabs."   So I checked my system and I too am running the Windows 7 Home Premium edition. Now my head was starting to hurt. I kept on checking and rechecking the Properties dialog associated with my folders in the desperate hope that the Customize tab would magically appear... but, of course, it didn't (sob sob).   Then I received another message from Chris, and this is the one that saved the day. He had realized that if you use the Libraries icon on your desktop to access your folders (which is what I was doing), then when you select the Properties dialog associated with a folder the Customize tab DOES NOT show up.   However... if you use the Computer icon on your desktop and then select Drive C and then select Users and then select My Documents and work your way down to the folder of interest, then accessing the Properties dialog associated with a folder this way DOES result in your seeing the Customize tab as illustrated below:   Ah Ha! Clicking the down arrow on the field associated with the Optimize this folder for setting provides you with the ability to select between General Items , Documents , Pictures , Music , and Videos as illustrated below:     I've now associated the Pictures option with all of my folders containing images, and everything is working as I wished. Of course this does all seem to be a little convoluted. I'm wondering if the lack of the Optimize tab when you go in via the Libraries icon is a bug in Windows 7 ... what do you think?  
  • 热度 6
    2011-4-11 17:33
    1984 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    Someone showed me an amazingly cool trick with Windows 7 that's going to save me a whole bunch of time (and frustration) in the days, weeks, months, and years to come...   I was just chatting to my chum Nick in my office. He had heard the news about the size of my... wait for it, wait for it... new 28-inch monitor and he had come to feast his eyes on the little scamp.   We ended up chatting about the fact that I would ideally like two or even three of these monitors to form a huge desktop so that I could have lots of documents and images visible at the same time, but as far as I know there's no way to do this with my Sony VAIO notebook computer (unless you know different).   While we were talking about this-and-that, I happened to be messing around trying to align two Word documents side-by-side. I'm sure you've done the same thing yourself. You start with the first document by clicking the Restore Down button as it's now called (the one just to the left of the red 'X' button in the upper right-hand corner of the window.   Next, you mess around dragging the various corners of the Word document until it occupies about half of the screen. Then you repeat the process with your second Word document (or some other application). I do this sort of thing a lot. It isn't difficult – it takes only a few seconds – but there is invariably a bit of messing around tweaking the dimensions of the two windows trying to get everything "just right."   But WAIT! Instead of dragging the various corners of the Word window around, Nick showed me this really cool trick. All you do is use your mouse to grab the title bar of the window (move the mouse cursor over the title bar then press-and-hold the left mouse button) and drag the window to the right-hand side of the screen. As soon as the mouse cursor "hits" the side of the screen, the Word window automatically adjusts itself to fill the right-hand side of the display.   Similarly, if you drag an application window to the left, as soon as the mouse cursor "hits" the side of the screen, the window automatically adjusts itself to fill the left-hand side of the display.   How cool! This is so simple yet so useful. It's also made me realise that it really doesn't take much to make me happy, because I'm grinning from ear-to-ear as I pen these words :-)   Help! Having said all of this, there is still something that is puzzling me with regard to Windows 7. You know that when you open a folder you can display its contents as Icons (small, medium, large, etc.), as a List, as a Detailed view, as Tiles, and so forth.   My problem is that if I make a change in one folder, that change seems to apply to every folder I subsequently access. What I want to be able to do is to make all of my folders display the Details view by default, but to be able to set selected folders to always display in icons.   There has to be some way to do this, because the Pictures folder (and its daughter folders) always opens up displaying icons, no matter what your other folders are set to ... so how do I do this to other folders containing images that aren't located under the Pictures folder?   Any ideas?  
  • 热度 12
    2011-4-11 17:32
    2224 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    Someone showed me an amazingly cool trick with Windows 7 that's going to save me a whole bunch of time (and frustration) in the days, weeks, months, and years to come...   I was just chatting to my chum Nick in my office. He had heard the news about the size of my... wait for it, wait for it... new 28-inch monitor and he had come to feast his eyes on the little scamp.   We ended up chatting about the fact that I would ideally like two or even three of these monitors to form a huge desktop so that I could have lots of documents and images visible at the same time, but as far as I know there's no way to do this with my Sony VAIO notebook computer (unless you know different).   While we were talking about this-and-that, I happened to be messing around trying to align two Word documents side-by-side. I'm sure you've done the same thing yourself. You start with the first document by clicking the Restore Down button as it's now called (the one just to the left of the red 'X' button in the upper right-hand corner of the window.   Next, you mess around dragging the various corners of the Word document until it occupies about half of the screen. Then you repeat the process with your second Word document (or some other application). I do this sort of thing a lot. It isn't difficult – it takes only a few seconds – but there is invariably a bit of messing around tweaking the dimensions of the two windows trying to get everything "just right."   But WAIT! Instead of dragging the various corners of the Word window around, Nick showed me this really cool trick. All you do is use your mouse to grab the title bar of the window (move the mouse cursor over the title bar then press-and-hold the left mouse button) and drag the window to the right-hand side of the screen. As soon as the mouse cursor "hits" the side of the screen, the Word window automatically adjusts itself to fill the right-hand side of the display.   Similarly, if you drag an application window to the left, as soon as the mouse cursor "hits" the side of the screen, the window automatically adjusts itself to fill the left-hand side of the display.   How cool! This is so simple yet so useful. It's also made me realize that it really doesn't take much to make me happy, because I'm grinning from ear-to-ear as I pen these words :-)   Help! Having said all of this, there is still something that is puzzling me with regard to Windows 7. You know that when you open a folder you can display its contents as Icons (small, medium, large, etc.), as a List, as a Detailed view, as Tiles, and so forth.   My problem is that if I make a change in one folder, that change seems to apply to every folder I subsequently access. What I want to be able to do is to make all of my folders display the Details view by default, but to be able to set selected folders to always display in icons.   There has to be some way to do this, because the Pictures folder (and its daughter folders) always opens up displaying icons, no matter what your other folders are set to ... so how do I do this to other folders containing images that aren't located under the Pictures folder?   Any ideas?